Profesionální české hudební soubory (smyčcová kvarteta)
The Professional Czech Music Company (A String Quartet)
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)
View/ Open
Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/7754Identifiers
Study Information System: 21331
Collections
- Kvalifikační práce [19148]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Perglerová, Marka
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Education
Discipline
Training Teachers of General Subjects at Lower and Higher Secondary Schools Czech - Music
Department
Information is unavailable
Date of defense
11. 9. 2006
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Pedagogická fakultaLanguage
Czech
Grade
Very good
Ve své práci budu sledovat vývoj smyčcových kvartet od prvopočátků k souborům mladým, současným. Mezi první nej významnější patří České kvarteto, následuje Smetanovo kvarteto, které společně vytvořily základnu pro další vývoj komorní hudby. Především díky těmto dvěma kvartetům mohou novodobá kvarteta navazovat na dlouholetou tradici komorní hudby. Zaměřuji se také na první učitele a umělce, kteří komorní hudbu vyučovali a zasloužili se o vzdělání komorních umělců. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
The main topic of this dissertation is professional Czech music ensembles, namely string quartets. The work deals shortly with the development of Czech string tradition. Firstly, it examines music and repertoire of classicism, which was the period when the quartet music appeared for the first time and started to develop gradually. It introduces the first teachers of chamber music of conservatoires in both Prague and Brno, and their pupils who spread further this tradition. Moreover, the work tries to portray the differences between the situations in the two biggest centres, Prague and Brno. This work presents also the music life o f 1900, and it predominantly provides some information on the music organisations at that time: Union for Chamber Music, Czech Association for Chamber Music or Juvenile Club. The most important ensembles of the first half of the twentieth century are introduced; among the discussed ones is The Czech Quartet, then The SevCikovo-Lhotskéf The Heroldovo, The Ondrickovo and The Zikovo Quartet. The ensembles that were active during World War Two are also mentioned, as well as the contemporary ones. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)