Encyclopedia, Difference between revisions of "Bedřich Smetana" - New World

From New World Encyclopedia
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===Early Years===
 
===Early Years===
 +
Smetana was known tohis family as Fritz, 11th child and first surviving son of a German-speaking family. Speaking Czech was regarded as low class. In 1831, the family moved furhter south where Mahler would be brought up 30 years later. When he arrived in Prague, there was a vigorous musical life int he city which had seen the first performances of Don Giovanni and La Clemenza di TIto. The Prague Conservatoire had been founded in 1811. Music was centred on church and theater. In 1826, the Society for the PErfection of Church Music in Bohemia was formed. Four years later, the Organ School was set up, whose alumni would include Dvorak and Janacek. The focus of Prague's theatrical and operatic life was the small THeatre of the nobility, the Estates THeater, where Don Giovanni was first performed and where Weber was director between 1813 and 1816. There were high-quality concerts: Liszt, Berlioz, Paganini, Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann performed in PRague int hemiddle of the century.  THere was a piano school run by Joseph Proksch, whose teaching methods were among the most modern in Europe.
 +
Katerina showed symptoms of tuberculosis. THree of thier four daughters died ininfancy, only Sofie survived.
 +
It is not clear whehter he had to leave Prague because the authorities suspected that he was too nationalistic. So many ladies wished to take lessons from him that he found it difficult to cope with the demand.
 +
 +
After he remarried, he started learning to speak Czech.
 +
 +
the Prague musicla world was divided between those who supported him, and perceived him as a modernist and a Wagnerian, and those who did not. His opponents were those who wanted a Czech opera developed on the lines of Italian opera with the sung voice predominating. Two critics were his adversaries: Jan Nepomuk Mayr nad Pivoda, who even tried to oust Smetana from the Provisional Theater.
 +
 +
Jabkenice - could not afford to pay his rent , did notlike the loneliness of the country but started a highly productive period of his life, depsite deafness.  ('deafness would be a relatively tolerable condition if only all was quiet in my head. (steen 702) MOst of his masterpieces, operas, string quartets, piano and vocal compositions come from this time.
 +
 +
 +
 +
 
Bedrich Smetana was born as the seventh child of a fairly wealthy man from the third marriage of Master Brewer Frantisek Smetana to Barbora Linkova. The family was constantly on the move, and young Bedrich went to high school in Jindrichuv Hradec, Jihlava, Havlickuv Brod, Prague and Plzen, where he graduated. Although he is the Czech Republic's national composer and wrote several operas in  
 
Bedrich Smetana was born as the seventh child of a fairly wealthy man from the third marriage of Master Brewer Frantisek Smetana to Barbora Linkova. The family was constantly on the move, and young Bedrich went to high school in Jindrichuv Hradec, Jihlava, Havlickuv Brod, Prague and Plzen, where he graduated. Although he is the Czech Republic's national composer and wrote several operas in  
 
Czech, as a child he was not taught the language. From a very early age he showed a great talent for music, which was encouraged within the family, and he played the piano at his first concert at the age of eight. Throughout his childhood, he also performed in a quartet at home, playing first violin, and his father second, although his father opposed to his son's formal musical training.  
 
Czech, as a child he was not taught the language. From a very early age he showed a great talent for music, which was encouraged within the family, and he played the piano at his first concert at the age of eight. Throughout his childhood, he also performed in a quartet at home, playing first violin, and his father second, although his father opposed to his son's formal musical training.  
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==Musical Nationalism of the 19th Century==
 
==Musical Nationalism of the 19th Century==
The period from approximately 1825 to 1900 is defined as Romanticism, characterized by the political turbulences in Europe,  
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The period from approximately 1825 to 1900 is called Romanticism. In Europe, this was the era of political turbulences and the revolt of nations  against the Austro-German influence. The Congress of Vienna held in 1814-1815 redraw European boundaries in a way that set off protests and rebellions. Politically, this reaction was labelled Nationalism, and its extent was such that it defined the period of Romanticism, both in emotion and thought, and consequently music as well.
he epoch from the French Revolution to World War I comprises what is known as the Romantic Era, and music this includes the years from approximately 1825 to 1900. During that span of time, political instability and turmoil turned Europe into the world’s goriest amphitheater of utter chaos and disruption, finally culminating in the ‘war to end all wars”. The Congress of Vienna, held during 1814-15 at the end of the Napoleonic wars, was an event in which the cruel redistribution of European boundaries was decided with disregard for the people it affected. Patriots who saw their political and cultural borders violated staged a series of rebellions and insurrections, some of which were triumphant. This kind of political feeling came to be known as Nationalism. Nationalism dominated feeling and thought to such a great extent in the nineteenth century that it became a decisive power in the Romantic movement. The tensions between subjugated nations grappling for democracy and their proud conquerors gave way to sentiment that could be express in the arts and music.
 
 
 
“Nationalism” constitutes a “belief which, in the course of the nineteenth century... became the governing idea without always being held by those in government... the belief that it was to his nation - and not to a creed, a dynasty, or a class - that a citizen owed the first duty in a clash of loyalties.” This political claim, fused with the idea that it was “the spirit of the people” (der Volksgeist) which provided inspiration in the arts and life, was the dominant attitude of the bourgeois nationalism of the nineteenth century.
 
 
 
Nationalism itself underwent a transformation in the nineteenth century, in that during the first half of the century, a “nationalist” was also a “citizen of the world”, but by the latter half of the century nationalism had turned much more aggressive, with the oppressing nations initiating this change. Unfortunately, the attitude of the oppressed was equally affected by this. As nationalism matured, in music the change is apparent in works written primarily after 1860. It is for this reason that serious consideration must be given to the fact that various types of political evolution were achieved in each country that in turn affected musical nationalism.
 
  
At this time in Europe, new nations such as Czechoslovakia, Poland, Norway, Finland and Hungary had been formed by the unification of old empires. In England and France, power had gone from the monarchy to democracy, while in Russia, the revolution had failed, leaving the Tsarist regime as strong as ever. It is interesting to observe that in politically strong nations such as Germany, France and Austria, composers took little interest in political themes and subject matter.
+
“Nationalism” constitutes a “belief which, in the course of the nineteenth century... became the governing idea without always being held by those in government... the belief that it was to his nation - and not to a creed, a dynasty, or a class - that a citizen owed the first duty in a clash of loyalties.” (http://hunsmire.tripod.com/music/nationalism.html)
  
Nationalism in music usually refers to the various national schools that consciously tried to separate themselves from the standards set in the Classical period by the French, Italian and especially the German traditionalists. This formation of a national school, conceived to differentiate itself from the pan-European tradition, was itself a pan-European tradition, as was the entire bourgeois nationalist movement of the nineteenth century. Although distinct national styles are discernible in music from the Renaissance onwards, it was not until the nineteenth century that Nationalism came to dominate Europe as a mode of thought.
+
Politically, nationalism comprises two stages: in the first half of the 19th century, nationalists regarded themselves as citizens of the world; later the reaction became more aggressive. This second stage is discernible in music in works composed after 1860 — music in each nation thus reflected the nature of the local conflict.  
  
During the nineteenth century the popular view was taken that folk music “is always and above all the music of a nation.” However, what makes this ambiguous and ill-founded is the fact that when one discusses folk music with references to “the people”, the expression “the people” usually refers to the lower strata of the population known universally as peasants, and also to the concept of “the nation” as a whole. However, nineteenth century nationalism was a phenomena of the bourgeois, not an expression of the peasant’s self-awareness. This use of folk music by the bourgeois was more to reassure themselves of the authenticity of their own patriotism as well as an appeal across the social barriers of the time. (For the nobility, it was not the national loyalties that counted, but dynastic ones.) For the bourgeois, national character was the “primary and essential quality of folk music... and that folk music expresses the spirit of a people.
+
Aesthetically, the music was marked by innovation and exoticism. The composers strove for unique, distinguishable music rather than imitation of what was out there. That is why they incorporated folk songs and dances, which were monodic, and this in turn forced them to come up with new harmonies. Exoticism stood for the borrowing of another country's idioms. Russian nationalists even abandoned western European idoms in favor of the cultural elements available in the vast [[TsarTsarist]] Empire.
  
In the nineteenth century, composers not only expressed themselves but chose the style in which to do it. In general, the Romantic composer was slow in discovering and using folk songs in their music. At first they were used in brief works, such as a peasant dance like a mazurka, but gradually became to be used in symphonic works, although the lush vivid orchestrations tended to mask their simplistic character. Because folk music is basically monodic, it resisted assimilation into the well-established formulas of major-minor tonality, and for that very reason it challenged composers to experiment with unusual harmonies. This in turn affected harmonies in music unconnected with folk-oriented music, and thus manifested itself into the mainstream of developments. This experimentation was itself a consequence of a specific, well-defined problem that was encountered by Romantic composers of the era, and was not the result of random factors.
+
Still, nationalism in music is perplexing, because some works considered as its masterpieces did not contain a single folksong, as Steen observed in Smetana's ''The Bartered Bride''. Since Nationalism is country specific by definition, its musical language is infused not only by national folk music and rhythms but, ultimately, it borrows inspiration from the nation's culture, language, habits, scenery, and the beauty of local color. (692)
  
Occasionally composers, attracted by another country’s national idioms, would for specific reasons use those idiom in their music for an effect. This practice is known as Exoticism and was a strong trend in the nineteenth century. Exoticism is “a search for new effects from the folk music of other lands and peoples, generally those considered to be less spoiled by civilization; this even led to the phenomenon of Russian nationalists who proclaimed their musical independence from western European models by exploiting the exotica of the peoples of central Asia who had recently been conquered by the Tsarist imperium.
+
===Nationalism in the Czech Lands===
 +
In the Czech Lands, this was a period of the [[Czech National RevivalNational Revival]]. There were two political movements: [[Pan-Slavism]] and [[Austro-Slavism]]. Science, literature and arts all strove to define the Czech Lands by searching for the national origin and moments of glory so as to prove that they are not superior to their [[Hapsburg]] masters. This era saw an unprecedented growth of patriotism and cultivation of the Czech language. The Czechs built their national theater in 1862, financed with donations from both rich and poor, and that became the stage for the promotion of the national identity. Smetana's first opera, ''The Brandenbrugers in Bohemia'', was written for it.
  
Another way nationalism made an impact in the music of the nineteenth century is from an aesthetic standpoint. The dominant principle was one of novelty and originality. The tradition of imitation was now condemned, and unfamiliar music was now considered by be authentic. However, with art music being confronted with the dillemma of having to abandon aristocratic and esoteric goals to become democratic and popular, the ideal of popularity came into direct conflict with the ideal of novelty and originality, which required a great deal of intellectual understanding and was not appreciated by the general public. Musical nationalism provided the “appearance of familiarity” so the composer could be original and artistic while the listener could identify with the music on a patriotic level.
+
In terms of music, Nationalism was the most evident in opera, which has absorbed European influences. Czech operas bore the signature of Italian opera, while symphonies and chamber music had borrowed from their German and Austrian counterparts.   
 
 
Paradoxically, folk music is not always local or regional in its coloring or character; some stylistic traits felt to be specific to a particular country are actually common to “national” music in general, as the study of folk music at the time was considered in each country only at a national, and not on a comparative level. As much as composers exploited peasant music for their nationalistic music, “the ‘spirit of the people’ that was thought to speak in the music of the ‘national schools’ was heard only by the educated, not the ‘people’ themselves.”
 
 
 
This period saw the advance of the National Revival in the Czech Lands. The greatest display of these revivalist tendencies in the spirit of Romanticism appeared primarily in Czech opera, which was a blend of European influences. In opera it imitated the Italians,a nd in symphonies and chamber music it echoed the styles of German and Austrian masters. In the second part of the 19th century, Europe was flooded by nationalism, which spurred patirotism and national consciousness and the serach for a national art. In 1862, the national theater was founded, financed with donations from rich and poor alike. The theater served as a platform for staging Czech drama and operas. Smetana's first opera, The Brandenbrugers in Bohemia, was written for it.
 
 
 
Nationalism in music -  Michael Steen asked the question of how can the language of music express as complete a subject as nationalism? Perphas by the use of folk music or rhythms associated with folk music and the language, he answers, but then disputes it by saying that The Bartered Bride does not contain a single folksong. (692) More probably, it ist hat composers draw inspiration from their people and the beauty of their country and use that inspiration to develop a personal style. (692)
 
 
 
Smetana was known tohis family as Fritz, 11th child and first surviving son of a German-speaking family. Speaking Czech was regarded as low class. In 1831, the family moved furhter south where Mahler would be brought up 30 years later. When he arrived in Prague, there was a vigorous musical life int he city which had seen the first performances of Don Giovanni and La Clemenza di TIto. The Prague Conservatoire had been founded in 1811. Music was centred on church and theater. In 1826, the Society for the PErfection of Church Music in Bohemia was formed. Four years later, the Organ School was set up, whose alumni would include Dvorak and Janacek. The focus of Prague's theatrical and operatic life was the small THeatre of the nobility, the Estates THeater, where Don Giovanni was first performed and where Weber was director between 1813 and 1816. There were high-quality concerts: Liszt, Berlioz, Paganini, Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann performed in PRague int hemiddle of the centuryTHere was a piano school run by Joseph Proksch, whose teaching methods were among the most modern in Europe.
 
 
 
 
 
Katerina showed symptoms of tuberculosis. THree of thier four daughters died ininfancy, only Sofie survived.
 
 
 
It is not clear whehter he had to leave Prague because the authorities suspected that he was too nationalistic. So many ladies wished to take lessons from him that he found it difficult to cope with the demand.
 
 
 
After he remarried, he started learning to speak Czech.
 
  
 
BOhemian Nationalism and the Czech Language
 
BOhemian Nationalism and the Czech Language
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With Franz Joseph crowned in 1867, Czechs expected more freedom, as Hungarians had, held demonstrations...  
 
With Franz Joseph crowned in 1867, Czechs expected more freedom, as Hungarians had, held demonstrations...  
 
the Prague musicla world was divided between those who supported him, and perceived him as a modernist and a Wagnerian, and those who did not. His opponents were those who wanted a Czech opera developed on the lines of Italian opera with the sung voice predominating. Two critics were his adversaries: Jan Nepomuk Mayr nad Pivoda, who even tried to oust Smetana from the Provisional Theater.
 
 
Jabkenice - could not afford to pay his rent , did notlike the loneliness of the country but started a highly productive period of his life, depsite deafness.  ('deafness would be a relatively tolerable condition if only all was quiet in my head. (steen 702) MOst of his masterpieces, operas, string quartets, piano and vocal compositions come from this time.
 
  
 
(grout palisca) bohemia had for centuries been in contact with the mainsteram of European music and her folksongs do not differ fromt hose of Western nations as musch as do the RUssian songs. the nationalism of Smetana and Dvorak is apparent in the choice of national subjects for program musica nd operas, and int eh infusion of their basic musicla language (smetana's derived from liszt, dvorak's more like brahms) with a melodic freshness and spontaneity, a harmonic and formal nonchalance, together with occasional traces of folklike tunes and popular dance rhythms. their most porminent national traits are fund in some of their operas: smetana's The Bartered Bride and The Kiss.  
 
(grout palisca) bohemia had for centuries been in contact with the mainsteram of European music and her folksongs do not differ fromt hose of Western nations as musch as do the RUssian songs. the nationalism of Smetana and Dvorak is apparent in the choice of national subjects for program musica nd operas, and int eh infusion of their basic musicla language (smetana's derived from liszt, dvorak's more like brahms) with a melodic freshness and spontaneity, a harmonic and formal nonchalance, together with occasional traces of folklike tunes and popular dance rhythms. their most porminent national traits are fund in some of their operas: smetana's The Bartered Bride and The Kiss.  

Revision as of 01:57, 22 January 2007

File:Smetana.JPG
Portrait of Bedřich Smetana

Bedřich Smetana March 2, 1824 - 12 May 12, 1884) is considered one of the greatest Czech composers of the 19th century and the country's first nationalist composer. Smetana stands for "cream" in English. He is best known for his symphonic poem Vltava (The Moldau), the second in a cycle of six which he entitled Má vlast (My Country).part of the Austrian Empire

little formal training but thrived in a musical family, playing in a string quartet at five and on the piano inpublic at six and composing by eight. It was all instinctual and musical theory was still a closed book to him at 17.

Life

The Smetana monument in Litomyšl

By the grace of God and with His help I shall one day be a Liszt in technique and a Mozart in composition. (stanley 172)

Early Years

Smetana was known tohis family as Fritz, 11th child and first surviving son of a German-speaking family. Speaking Czech was regarded as low class. In 1831, the family moved furhter south where Mahler would be brought up 30 years later. When he arrived in Prague, there was a vigorous musical life int he city which had seen the first performances of Don Giovanni and La Clemenza di TIto. The Prague Conservatoire had been founded in 1811. Music was centred on church and theater. In 1826, the Society for the PErfection of Church Music in Bohemia was formed. Four years later, the Organ School was set up, whose alumni would include Dvorak and Janacek. The focus of Prague's theatrical and operatic life was the small THeatre of the nobility, the Estates THeater, where Don Giovanni was first performed and where Weber was director between 1813 and 1816. There were high-quality concerts: Liszt, Berlioz, Paganini, Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann performed in PRague int hemiddle of the century. THere was a piano school run by Joseph Proksch, whose teaching methods were among the most modern in Europe. Katerina showed symptoms of tuberculosis. THree of thier four daughters died ininfancy, only Sofie survived. It is not clear whehter he had to leave Prague because the authorities suspected that he was too nationalistic. So many ladies wished to take lessons from him that he found it difficult to cope with the demand.

After he remarried, he started learning to speak Czech.

the Prague musicla world was divided between those who supported him, and perceived him as a modernist and a Wagnerian, and those who did not. His opponents were those who wanted a Czech opera developed on the lines of Italian opera with the sung voice predominating. Two critics were his adversaries: Jan Nepomuk Mayr nad Pivoda, who even tried to oust Smetana from the Provisional Theater.

Jabkenice - could not afford to pay his rent , did notlike the loneliness of the country but started a highly productive period of his life, depsite deafness. ('deafness would be a relatively tolerable condition if only all was quiet in my head. (steen 702) MOst of his masterpieces, operas, string quartets, piano and vocal compositions come from this time.



Bedrich Smetana was born as the seventh child of a fairly wealthy man from the third marriage of Master Brewer Frantisek Smetana to Barbora Linkova. The family was constantly on the move, and young Bedrich went to high school in Jindrichuv Hradec, Jihlava, Havlickuv Brod, Prague and Plzen, where he graduated. Although he is the Czech Republic's national composer and wrote several operas in Czech, as a child he was not taught the language. From a very early age he showed a great talent for music, which was encouraged within the family, and he played the piano at his first concert at the age of eight. Throughout his childhood, he also performed in a quartet at home, playing first violin, and his father second, although his father opposed to his son's formal musical training.

A deciding factor in his artistic development was studying under Josef Proksch in Prague, from 1843. Then he moved to Prague to study piano and theory with J. B. Kittl, director of the Prague Conservatory. After completing his studies, he worked four years as a music teahcer for the family of hte famous Count Thun. Then he founded his own private piano school in Prague, with the help of Franz Liszt, and began composing, and a year later married his teenage love Katerina Kolarova, a fine pianist.

Family Tragedies

The 1840s and 1850s were turbulent years in the life of his nation, of Europe, and his personal life, with European nationalist movements of 1848, political oppression, and the death of his second child, his beloved four-year-old daughter Bedřiska, coupled with his inability to establish himself on his home turf. When his third child died nine months later, he committed himself to composition, producing the Piano Trio in G minor. This piece is full of sadness and despair, making use of phrases that are cut short, possibly in resemblance to his daughter's own life.

Sweden

In an attempt to escape a place where everything reminded him of the loss of his daughter, Smetana decided to leave Bohemia, and in 1856 he moved to Goteborg, Sweden. Here he taught, conducted Sweden's Philharmonic Society, and gave chamber music recitals for five years. He achieved recognistion for his conducting, piano playing, and compositions. However, the northern climate accelerated Katerina's illness and she died in 1859. A year later he married again to the 20-year-old Bettina Ferdinandiova.

Back Home

After the easing of the political situation in the Czech lands, he hurried home,He did not settle in Prague permanently at first, and spent his time travelling back and forth to Gothenburg, before making Prague his home in 1863. In 1863, back in Prague, he opened a new school of music dedicated to promoting specifically Czech music. During this time, he composed his historical opera The Brandenburgers in Bohemia, whose first performance in 1864 was an instant success. This was followed in 1866 by perhaps his most famous opera, the comedy The Bartered Bride. The Bartered Bride was an instant and enduring success. It was in the same year that Smetana became a conductor at the Provisional Theatre, the first theatre in Prague to hold performances in Czech, , where he focused primarily on opera. The opera emerged from his awareness of his responsibility to his nation, and his firm belief in its future. He held this position until he went deaf in 1874 as a result of a long illness. Despite his catastrophe he managed to realize his long-held creative project: to celebrate his homeland and nation with a cycle of symphonic poems.

From 1875 he lived in small village of Jabkenice. As if plain deafness were not enough, Smetana also suffered from tinnitus, which caused him to hear a continuous, maddening high note which he described as the "shrill whistle of a first inversion chord of A-flat in the highest register of the piccolo. "Towards the end of the 1870s, Smetana's health continued to fail, and in 1883 he apparently suffered a mental breakdown, and was placed in a mental asylum in Prague, where he died shortly after his sixtieth birthday, on May 12th 1884. It is widely believed that in actual fact he died of syphilis.

In April 1884 came the day when Smetana was still composing and he wrote on a page of his score: "Final page." Then his creative powers left him for good. After that, it wasn't possible for Smetana to get the treatment he needed at home. On the suggestion of his physician, on April 22 he was transferred to the Prague Institute for the Mentally Ill in Katerinky. What was actually transported there was really only an empty shell, which was set free by death on a sunny May 12, at 4:30 in the afternoon.

The celebrated funeral began in Old Town Square, leading from the Church of Our Lady of Tyn, on May 15. It turned into a national occaision of mourning, with large crowds lining the path of the procession to say their farewells to the dead master. At the National Theater, fanfares greeted Smetana for the last time, then the procession headed for Vysehrad, where Smetana's body was laid to rest. On that day, Prodana nevesta (The Bartered Bride), the merriest of Smetana's works, was performed at the National Theater in tribute to the great composer...

Ina letter to the Czech nation, Franz Liszt wrote: "In haste I write to you, that Smetana's death has touched me deeply. He was truly a genius..."

Musical Nationalism of the 19th Century

The period from approximately 1825 to 1900 is called Romanticism. In Europe, this was the era of political turbulences and the revolt of nations against the Austro-German influence. The Congress of Vienna held in 1814-1815 redraw European boundaries in a way that set off protests and rebellions. Politically, this reaction was labelled Nationalism, and its extent was such that it defined the period of Romanticism, both in emotion and thought, and consequently music as well.

“Nationalism” constitutes a “belief which, in the course of the nineteenth century... became the governing idea without always being held by those in government... the belief that it was to his nation - and not to a creed, a dynasty, or a class - that a citizen owed the first duty in a clash of loyalties.” (http://hunsmire.tripod.com/music/nationalism.html)

Politically, nationalism comprises two stages: in the first half of the 19th century, nationalists regarded themselves as citizens of the world; later the reaction became more aggressive. This second stage is discernible in music in works composed after 1860 — music in each nation thus reflected the nature of the local conflict.

Aesthetically, the music was marked by innovation and exoticism. The composers strove for unique, distinguishable music rather than imitation of what was out there. That is why they incorporated folk songs and dances, which were monodic, and this in turn forced them to come up with new harmonies. Exoticism stood for the borrowing of another country's idioms. Russian nationalists even abandoned western European idoms in favor of the cultural elements available in the vast TsarTsarist Empire.

Still, nationalism in music is perplexing, because some works considered as its masterpieces did not contain a single folksong, as Steen observed in Smetana's The Bartered Bride. Since Nationalism is country specific by definition, its musical language is infused not only by national folk music and rhythms but, ultimately, it borrows inspiration from the nation's culture, language, habits, scenery, and the beauty of local color. (692)

Nationalism in the Czech Lands

In the Czech Lands, this was a period of the Czech National RevivalNational Revival. There were two political movements: Pan-Slavism and Austro-Slavism. Science, literature and arts all strove to define the Czech Lands by searching for the national origin and moments of glory so as to prove that they are not superior to their Hapsburg masters. This era saw an unprecedented growth of patriotism and cultivation of the Czech language. The Czechs built their national theater in 1862, financed with donations from both rich and poor, and that became the stage for the promotion of the national identity. Smetana's first opera, The Brandenbrugers in Bohemia, was written for it.

In terms of music, Nationalism was the most evident in opera, which has absorbed European influences. Czech operas bore the signature of Italian opera, while symphonies and chamber music had borrowed from their German and Austrian counterparts.

BOhemian Nationalism and the Czech Language Under the centralisationp[olicices of Empress Maria Theresa and Emperor Joseph II, Bohemia became a mere province of hte empire, administered from Vienna. Czech culture was eclipsed by German culture.

u/a - reason for nationalism - so that the world could not become the same yet while it was not ready for one culture (Babel Tower)

The German langauge was made compulsory in schools. Talented musicians went abroad. 19th c. - push for reform. German nationalism was manifested in cultural dominance. There was a saying that a German will as soon do a good deed to a slav 'as a snake will warm itself upon ice'. (steen 699)

THe Czech language was a crucial element of Czech nationalism and essential to the seurvival of Bohemian identity. Smetana's operas helped mould and uplift the language to reflect modern needs. In the 2nd half of the century, nationalism took off,. In 1860, relaxed laws were passed, Prague civic authorities started doing buisness in Czech , in 1862 education in Czech. A temporary 'national theaer' called the Provisional Theater, with around 800 seats, was hurriedly constructed in 6 months and opened in 1862. Smetana became conducter of the Czech CHoral Society and the first head of the music section of the Artists' Club, both founded at that time. The German-speiaking residents became nervous of being marginalized. at end-1840s, more than half the people of inner Prague were German-speaking; by the 1880s, less than 14%. In mid60s, the Prussians caught the Au8strians (dividing the rising Prussian Empire from the declining Hapbsburg Empire) at Hradec Kraloveand for a while occupied Prague.

With Franz Joseph crowned in 1867, Czechs expected more freedom, as Hungarians had, held demonstrations...

(grout palisca) bohemia had for centuries been in contact with the mainsteram of European music and her folksongs do not differ fromt hose of Western nations as musch as do the RUssian songs. the nationalism of Smetana and Dvorak is apparent in the choice of national subjects for program musica nd operas, and int eh infusion of their basic musicla language (smetana's derived from liszt, dvorak's more like brahms) with a melodic freshness and spontaneity, a harmonic and formal nonchalance, together with occasional traces of folklike tunes and popular dance rhythms. their most porminent national traits are fund in some of their operas: smetana's The Bartered Bride and The Kiss.

A Czech composer with thoroughly national tendencies was Leos Janacek, who after 1890 consciously renounced the styles of western Europe. Like Bartok he was a diligent scientific collector of folk music ad his style grew out of rhythms and inflections of MOravian peasant speech and song. (781)

Central European nationalists: Smetana, Janacek, Dvorak, Bartok Scandinavian: Grieg and Sibelius

Compositions

His first compositions included pieces for the piano, such as waltzes, bagatelles, and impromptus. But in 1863 he finished the singspiel Branibory v Cechach (Brandenburgers in Bohemia,with a libretto by Karel Sabina), which was a great success - and brought its author some much-needed finances. Described as a Bohemian rebellion against Teutonic invaders, the music is strongly Wagnerian but the Bohemian folk songs and dances are perceptible in it. Wiht the next three opearas—The Bartered Bride (conducted it himself.), Dalibor and LIbuse—he set the tone of Bohemia's musical theater.

The Bartered Bride

This is a comic opera in three acts. Yet, Smetana viewed his greatest and most popular opera with condescension, because he wrote it to silence the critics who dismissed his first opera as too Wagnerian and too pretentious. So the next opera was to be frivoulous and light, in stark contrast with his more serious and heroic pieces, which he felt were being neglected. W. J. Henderson said about it when it was first performed in America, "The chief charms of the opera are its incessant flow of melody, of fresh and piquant character, its bright and vivacious pictures of Bohemian life, its captivating dances, its excellent chracter sketches, its ismple yet unctuous comedy,a nd its admirable instrumentation. As a specimen of genuinely artistic comic operat it takes a commanding position." It offers insight into human character, its weaknesses and motivations. It was light and frivolous, aimed to entertain, yet it was a penetrating study of human psychology and emotion, w hich Smetana was not able to achieve in his serious operas. (ref Ewen 777)

The story is set in a small Bohemian village a century earlier, where a festival is taking place. All villagers are in a joyful, celebratory mood except John and Mary, whose love met with opposition from Mary's parents. THey want her to marry Vasek, a stuttering idiiot, who is a son of a welathy landowner. This match was arranged by the broker, Kecal (Chatterbox in English).

My Fatherland

Bohemian folk music was dominant also in his concert works, particularly the six-part My Fatherland, whose Vltava (The Moldau) is universally admited, and in his two autobiagraphical quartets From My Life.

THe first 4 poems, said Jan Lowenbach, are of "fiercely musical reflections, impressions of Bohemian nature and reminiscences of Bohemian history filtered through a sensitive musical imagination." (Ewen 779) Vy7sehrad is is a tonal picture of old Bohemia. The MOldau is the portrait of hte river Vltava which rises in the forests of south Bohemian and flows past PRague into the Elbe. Smetana's program: two springs pour forth their streams in the shade of the Bohemian forest, the one warm and gushing, the other cold and tranquil. THeir wave,s gayly flowing over their stony beds, join and glitter in the sun. The woodland brook, chattering along, becomes the river MOldau which, as its waters hurry through the valleys of Bohemia, becomes a mighty stream. ... the wide river bed in which it rolls on, in majestic calm, toward PRague, where, welcomed by time-honored Vysehrad, it disapears from the poet's gaze far on the horizon." (ewen 77y9)

Sarka - Ctirad murdered by his weetheart, an Amazon. SMetana also provided a detailed description of his music. Tabor - Hussites. Blanik - extension of Tabor (Hussite wars). From the Fields and Groves of Bohemia - on a fine summer day we stand in Bohemia's blessed fields, whose lovely scent of flowers and cool breezes fill us with inspiration. (steen 780).

From My LIfe - program for all 4 movmeents supplied by hte composer: 1. love of art in his youth, romantic supremacy, yearning for something which he could not define, and warning of future misfortune. 2. joyful days of his youth when he composed dance music enough to bury the world and was known as a passionaty lover of dancing. 3. the bliss of his first love to the girl who became his faithful wife. 4. discovered that he coud treat the national elements in music and the joy in following this path until deafness set in. a high E in the first violin, over tremolos in the other three strings, tells of his deafness.

Bohemia had for centuries been an Austrian crown land, and unlike RUssia, had always bene in contact with the mainstream of European music; her folksongs do nto differ from thoese of Western nations as much as do the Russian. nationalism of smetana and dovrak is apparent int he choice of national subjects for program music and operas, and int eh infusion of their basic musical language (smetana;s from liszt), with a melodic freshness and spontaneity, harmonic and formal nonchalance. Pitts Sanborn said of The Bartered Bride that it is not folk music "in a crapming sense. While distinctively of its native soil... [this music] possesses the universal qualities necessary to give it a world-wide currency. We of other countries delight in Czech rhythms, its national dances, the characteristic contour of its melodies, but we also find in this music more than local color and exotci charm; the flowing humanity is there that transcends limits and boundaries." (ref Ewen 775)

Jan Lowenbach added that "Smetana was privileged not only to hear ad imitate the spirit of the rich melodies and varied rhythms of his nation, but also to invent, to feel,a nd to express it in a new way and to adapt it to the spirit of modern times." (Ewen 775)

The peak of his production from this period is his Klavirni trio g moll (1855) (Piano trio in g minor), which reflected his grief over the loss of Bedriska.

Smetana was a great admirer of Franz Liszt, and they were in frequent contact through correspondence and personal meetings. He was gripped by Liszt's idea of the symphonic poem. This gave rise to such works as his Richard III., Valdstynuv tabor (Waldstein's Camp) and Hakon Jarl. although things did not immediately go well for him.

Smetana's Tomb

His string quartet in E minor, Z mého života (From My Life, composed in 1876), the first of only two quartets, is an autobiographical work. The final movement is punctuated by a piercing high E in the first violin which, Smetana explained, represents the devastating effects of his tinnitus. He may also be hinting at this personal misfortune with the piccolo scoring in Má vlast. In 1883 Smetana, suffering further progressive neurological effects of his illness, finally became insane, and was taken to a mental hospital in Prague, where he died the following year. He is interred in the Vyšehrad cemetery in Prague. in general his works were well received during his lifetime, with a few exceptions, such as his tragic opera Dalibor, written in 1867, which was heavily criticised.

Works

Operas

  • Braniboři v Čechách (Brandenburgers in Bohemia) – 1863
  • Prodaná nevěsta (The Bartered Bride) – 1866
  • Dalibor – 1867
  • Libuše – 1872
  • Dvě vdovy (The Two Widows) – 1873
  • Hubička (The Kiss) – 1876
  • Tajemství (The Secret)
  • Čertova stěna (The Devil's Wall)
  • Viola (not completed) – 1884

Other

Cycle of symphonic poems Ma vlast (My Fatherland) 1874&ndash1879:

Vysehrad
Vltava:
Sarka
Z ceskych luhu a haju (From Czech Fields and Groves)
Tabor
Blanik
  • String quartet From my Life – 1876
  • Quartet Bohemian Dances
  • Tone poem Wallensteins Lager – 1859

Notes

[1]

External Links

http://archiv.radio.cz/hrbitov/smetaneng.html

References & Further Reading

gammond

  • Ewen, David (Edited by). The Complete Book of Classical Music. London: Hale, 1966. ISBN 0-709-03865-8.
  • Ramba, Jiří. Slavné české lebky, antropologicko-lékařské nálezy jako pomocníci historie (Famous Czech Skulls, anthropological-medical findings as helpers of history), Prague: Galén, 2005. ISBN 80-7262-325-7.
  • Steen, Michael. The Lives and Times of the Great Composers. Cambridge: Icon Books, 2003. ISBN 1-840-46485-2.
  • Nationalism and its Effect on Music in the Romantic Era (1985)

by John Mileshttp://hunsmire.tripod.com/music/nationalism.html

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  1. April 1980, "Josef Sudek" Creative Camera, Josef Sudek