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  1. Orchester des Staatstheaters CottbusEvan Christ, conductorlive recording from January, 2016

    • Apr 17, 2017
    • 48.1K
    • Evan Alexis Christ
  2. Smykofonia: Dvorak by Antonin Dvorák. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  3. Antonín Leopold Dvořák (/ d (ə) ˈ v ɔːr ʒ ɑː k,-ʒ æ k / d(ə-)VOR-zha(h)k; Czech: [antoˈɲiːn ˈlɛopold dvoˈr̝aːk] ⓘ; 8 September 1841 – 1 May 1904) was a Czech composer. Dvořák frequently employed rhythms and other aspects of the folk music of Moravia and his native Bohemia , following the Romantic-era nationalist ...

    • Early Life
    • The Slavonic Dances
    • Musical Style & Nationalism
    • Family
    • International Acclaim
    • From The New World
    • Dvorák's Famous Works
    • Death

    Antonín Leopold Dvořák was born in the village of Nelahozeves near Prague on 8 September 1841. Bohemia was then part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Antonín's father was an innkeeper, but Antonín was determined to take an entirely different career path despite his father's wishes he either become a butcher like his uncle or continue the family busi...

    Dvořák's big breakthrough came in 1875 when he entered his 3rd and 4th Symphonies and won a prestigious music prize awarded by a jury which included the noted music critic Eduard Hanslick (1825-1904) and Johannes Brahms (1833-1897). The German composer became a strong supporter of the younger Czech composer, lamenting once, "I should be glad if som...

    Dvořák is regarded as a nationalist composer since, like Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), Edvard Grieg (1843-1907), and Jean Sibelius(1865-1957), amongst others, he blended the folk melodies and rhythms of his country with the symphonic techniques of Classical music. These Bohemian inspirations included the lively polka and the even livelier f...

    Dvořák became infatuated with one of his music pupils, Josefina Čermáková, who was the daughter of a Prague goldsmith, but his feelings were not reciprocated. The composer then turned to Josefina's younger sister, Anna. The couple married in 1873, Anna being already three months pregnant – Dvořák was a staunch RomanCatholic. The couple had three ch...

    Into the 1890s, Dvořák continued to win international acclaim for his work. In 1891, the composer was honoured with a doctorate from the University of Cambridge. In 1892, the composer visited the United States, taking up his new position as director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York, a post he held for three years and which involved...

    Undoubtedly, Dvořák's best-known symphony is his ninth, titled From The New World. It was completed in 1893. Appropriately enough, given its title, the work was composed while Dvořák was in his apartment in New York and in Spillville, Iowa, where he spent several summers with the large Czech community there. The work was in part inspired by (though...

    The most famous works by the composer Antonín Dvořák include: Nine symphonies Serenade for Strings (1875) Stabat Mater (1877) Moravian Duets (1878) Slavonic Rhapsodies orchestral works (1878) Slavonic Dances orchestral works (two sets: 1878 & 1886) Symphonic Variations (1887) Piano Quintet (1889) Jakobín - The Jacobin opera (1889) Requiem (1891) Du...

    In April 1895, Dvořák returned to Bohemia to take a teaching position at the Conservatory in Prague (he was awarded an honorary directorship in 1901). Still busy composing in his final decade, works of this period include several symphonic poems inspired by Czech folk tales from Erben's Kytice: Vodnik (The Water Goblin), Zlaty Polednice (The Noonda...

    • Mark Cartwright
  4. Antonín Dvořák proved that it was perfectly viable to use tunes and rhythms from folk music to write complex notated music – the sort that combined such tunes in conversation and opposition, transforming them in the process.

  5. Nov 5, 2020 · Antonín Dvořák - Symphony No. 9: New World Symphony. Beyond those handfuls of familiar symphonies, concertos and chamber works, however, much of Dvorak's output remains hardly heard at...