Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
sacred cantata after the Latin hymn attributed to Nicetas of Remesiana: 177: 102: 1892–93: Americký prapor: The American Flag: contralto, tenor, bass, chorus and orchestra: secular cantata after a poem by Joseph Rodman Drake: 178: 95: 1893: Symfonie č. 9 e moll „Z nového světa“ Symphony No. 9 in E minor "From the New World" orchestra ...
Before the performance in England, the cantata was first presented twice on 28 and 29 March 1885 in Plzeň under the composer's direction. The success of the performances at the Birmingham Triennial Music Festival on 27 August this year - involving a 400-strong choir, a 150-strong orchestra and with Dvořák on the conductor's podium ...
Antonin Dvořák / About the composer stabatmater.info; Dvorák, Antonín / Stabat Mater op. 58 / Klaviersatz von Antonín Dvorák Bärenreiter; Kenneth Woods: Explore the Score- Dvorak Stabat Mater kennethwoods.net 20 December 2015; Tess Crebbin: Dvorak and his Stabat Mater op. 58 — a Choral Masterpiece scena.org 1 April 2004
Antonín Dvořák composed over 200 works, most of which have survived. They include nine symphonies, ten operas, four concertos and numerous vocal, chamber and keyboard works.
Dvořák's birthplace in Nelahozeves Antonín Dvořák birth record 1841 (SOA Prague). Dvořák was born in Nelahozeves near Prague, in the Austrian Empire, and was the eldest son of František Dvořák [] (1814–94) and his wife, Anna, née Zdeňková [] (1820–82). [6]
Prior to the publication of the Slavonic Dances, Op. 46, Dvořák was a relatively unknown composer and was of modest means.Consequently, he had applied for the Austrian State Prize fellowship (German "Stipendium") in order to fund his composing work.
Title page of the first edition of A Hero's Song, published in 1899. A Hero's Song (Czech: Píseň bohatýrská), Op. 111, B. 199, also called Heroic Song for Orchestra, [1] is a symphonic poem for orchestra composed by Antonín Dvořák between August 4 and October 25, 1897.
Antonín Dvořák's String Quartet No. 8. in E major, Op. 80 (B. 57), is a chamber composition, written between 20 January and 4 February 1876 in Prague.. The work, originally marked as Op. 27, was composed shortly after finishing the Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 26, and before the beginning of the sketchings for the Stabat Mater cantata.