Vilém Petrželka Video
compositore, direttore d'orchestra, insegnante di musica, pianista, professore universitario, opinionista
- musica classica, opera
- Cecoslovacchia
Ultimo aggiornamento
2024-05-06
Aggiorna
Vítězslava Kaprálová Vilém Petrželka Zdeněk Chalabala Vítězslav Novák Václav Talich Bohuslav Martinů Charles Munch Nadia Boulanger Rafael Kubelík Orchestre Symphonique Bbc 1915 1930 1935 1937 1940
+••.••(...)) Czech From Wikipedia: Fille du compositeur Václav Kaprál, elle étudie entre 1930 et 1935 la composition avec Vilém Petrželka et la direction d'orchestre avec Zdeněk Chalabala au Conservatoire de Brno. Elle poursuit sa formation musicale avec Vítězslav Novák et Václav Talich à Prague +••.••(...)) et avec Bohuslav Martinů, Charles Munch, et Nadia Boulanger à Paris +••.••(...)). En 1937, elle dirige l'Orchestre philharmonique tchèque et un an après l'orchestre symphonique de la BBC pour la Sinfonietta militaire qu'elle a composée. Après l'invasion de la Tchécoslovaquie par l'Allemagne, elle décide de ne plus retourner dans son pays. Elle épouse l'écrivain tchèque Jiří Mucha. Avant l'entrée des Allemands à Paris, elle fut évacuée à Montpellier où elle mourut, sans doute de tuberculose. Malgré sa mort prématurée en 1940, Vítězslava Kaprálová créa un large corpus d'œuvres. Si elle avait vécu, elle serait sans conteste devenue l'une des plus grandes compositrices d'Europe. Rafael Kubelík était un grand admirateur de sa musique : il créa sa mélodie orchestrale Waving Farewell et joua plusieurs de ses œuvres. Rudolf Firkušný est l'un des interprètes de sa musique de piano, c'est pour lui qu'elle composa son œuvre pour piano la plus connue, Préludes d'avril.
Vítězslava Kaprálová Petrzelka Chalabala Steinman Novak Talich Charles Munch Nadia Boulanger Martinu Czech Philharmonic 1915 1930 1934 1935 1937 1938 1939 1940 1946 1948
Virginia Eskin - Piano 00:00 Maestoso 06:40 Theme and Variations Vítězslava Kaprálová +••.••(...)) was a Czech Composer. Her father was the composer Václav Kaprál. A child prodigy, she started composing at nine, and at fifteen she entered the Brno Conservatory where she studied composition with Vilem Petrzelka and conducting with Zdenek Chalabala and Vilem Steinman +••.••(...)). She continued her studies with Vitezslav Novak and Vaclav Talich at the Master School of the Prague Conservatory +••.••(...)), and further advanced her musical education at the Ecole normale de musique in Paris with Charles Munch +••.••(...)) and, according to some unverified accounts, with Nadia Boulanger (1940), while also studying composition privately with Bohuslav Martinu +••.••(...)). In 1937, Kapralova conducted the Czech Philharmonic and a year later the BBC Orchestra in her Military Sinfonietta, to much critical acclaim. Despite her untimely death in 1940, from what was misdiagnosed as miliary tuberculosis, Kapralova left behind an impressive body of work. Her music was much admired by Rafael Kubelik who premiered her orchestral song Waving Farewell and performed several other works; so did Rudolf Firkusny, for whom Kapralova composed April Preludes and Two Dances for Piano. In 1946, in appreciation of her distinctive contribution, the foremost academic institution in the country - the Czech Academy of Sciences and the Arts - awarded Kapralova membership in memoriam. By 1948 this honor was bestowed on only 10 women, out of 648 members of the Academy. Only one of the ten women was a musician - Kapralova. Kapralova's creative output includes her highly regarded art-songs and music for keyboard, music for cello and piano, violin and piano, a reed trio, a string quartet, two piano concertos, a concertino for clarinet, violin and orchestra, two orchestral suites, a sinfonietta, two choruses, and an orchestral cantata. Source from the Kapralova Society at kapralova.org ABOUT THE SCORE: The two-movement Sonata appassionata is Kaprálová’s first major piano work. What was already obvious to those present at its premiere in 1934, has been only confirmed by time: this is a composition of exceptional quality and without doubt one of the most remarkable works of the Czech piano literature of the first half of the twentieth-century. Despite its considerable merit, the composition was not previously published. This first, critical edition was made possible thanks to the Kapralova Society, an arts organization based in Toronto, Canada. Since the score is still in print, i can't share this piece socialist style i'm afraid. So if you really want the score, please purchase it at amos editio's website here : (http•••)
Non più?
Ogni giorno soclassiq cerca nuovi articoli, video, concerti e così via sulla musica classica e l'opera lirica, i loro artisti, luoghi, orchestre....
Vilém Petrželka ? Non abbiamo ancora raccolto molti contenuti su questo argomento, ma continuiamo a cercare.
o
- cronologia: Compositori (Europa). Direttori d'orchestra (Europa). Interpreti (Europa).
- Indici (per ordine alfabetico): P...