Immagine dell'autore.

Leoš Janáček (1854–1928)

Autore di Jenůfa [sound recording]

280+ opere 820 membri 2 recensioni 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

Leos Janacek was born in Moravia, part of the Czech Republic. At the age of 10, he was placed at the Augustine monastery in Brno as a chorister. For two years (1872--74), he was a student at Brno Teachers Training College and at the Organ School in Prague, where he studied organ with Skuhersky. He mostra altro later took lessons in composition with L. Grill at the Leipzig Conservatory. From 1879 to 1880, Janacek studied with Franz Krenn at the Vienna Conservatory. A year later, he returned to Brno, where he conducted the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra. Between 1919 and 1925, Janacek taught at the Conservatory of Brno. Many Czech composers of younger generations were his students. Janacek began composing music early in his life in many genres, including choral works, orchestral music, chamber music, and piano music. However, it was not until the 1916 production of his opera Jeji Pastorkyna (Her Foster Daughter), known more widely as Jenufa, that his importance as a composer was realized in the music world. Many of Janacek's operas were based on important Russian literary works. Kat'a Kabanova (1921) and From the House of the Dead (1938) are two such operas. Janacek also believed in the artistic importance of folk songs. He collected a number of folk songs in his native Moravia. Janacek is considered the most important modern Czech composer. In addition to Jenufa, his works include the symphonic poem Taras Bulba (1918) and the Glagolitic Mass (1926), a Latin text translated into Czech. During the last two decades of his life, Janacek was highly influenced by French impressionistic music. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Public domain. (Wikipedia)

Opere di Leoš Janáček

Jenůfa [sound recording] (1890) — Composer, Librettist — 28 copie
Káťa Kabanová [libretto] (1988) — Compositore — 24 copie
Jenůfa [video recording] (1989) — Composer, Librettist — 12 copie
Glagolská mše (Glagolitic Mass) [sound recording] (1927) — Compositore — 11 copie
Jenůfa [vocal score] (2003) — Composer, Librettist — 11 copie
Jenůfa [libretto] (1908) — Librettist — 10 copie
Věc Makropulos (2011) 9 copie
Glagolská mše (Glagolitic Mass) [full score] (2010) — Compositore — 9 copie
From the House of the Dead [2007 film] (2008) — Compositore — 3 copie
The Makropulos case (2003) 3 copie
Jenůfa [full score] {version Brno, 1908} (1908) — Composer, Librettist — 2 copie
Choruses for Male Voices (2001) 2 copie
Ecrits (2009) 2 copie
Hukvaldské studánky (1954) 2 copie
For Accordion 1 copia
Sinfonietta / Glagolitic Mass [sound recording] (2008) — Compositore — 1 copia
The Eternal Gospel [sound recording] (2005) — Compositore — 1 copia
Pieces for Piano (2008) 1 copia
Janáček : Jenůfa : 2021/22 [programme] (2021) — Compositore — 1 copia
Piano Works (2005) 1 copia
Things Lived and Dreamt [sound recording] — Compositore — 1 copia
Taras Bulba [score] (2008) 1 copia
Violin Sonata 1 copia
Ballada 1 copia
Graduale 1 copia
Janacek - Katia Kabanova (2010) 1 copia
Amarus 1 copia

Opere correlate

Love Letters (1996) — Collaboratore — 182 copie
Historia de la música: 1900-1905. Los colores del piano (1998) — Collaboratore — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome canonico
Janáček, Leoš
Nome legale
Janacek, Leo Eugen
Data di nascita
1854-07-03
Data di morte
1928-08-12
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Czechoslovakia
Nazione (per mappa)
Czech Republic
Luogo di nascita
Hukvaldy, Moravia, Austro-Hungary
Luogo di morte
Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
Luogo di residenza
Brno, Czech Republic
Attività lavorative
composer
folklorist
Organizzazioni
Brno Conservatory

Utenti

Recensioni

CHECK SHELVES
 
Segnalato
VPALib | Mar 6, 2019 |
Jenůfa was the work that launched Janáček’s operatic career. Leos Janacek wrote his opera Jenufa between 1896 and 1903. It wasn't until the 1970s that it began to dawn on the British consciousness that the Czech composer - previously known for a handful of orchestral pieces like the Sinfonietta - was one of the 20th century's greatest operatic composers.

Jenufa can seem melodramatic. It's a classic love triangle, complicated by the interjection of a religious fanatic, the Kostelnicka. Jenufa marked the beginning of Janacek's quest for what he called "speech melody". Although he moved further way from the format of conventional opera, with arias and duets, he developed one of the most personal and subtle melodic signatures in all music. He studied the speech patterns of mental patients, the noises of animals and birds, and he listened as carefully to traditional folk music as he did to the emerging contemporary school from western Europe. He wrote: "The spirit that infuses all life can be found near at hand, in ourselves, among people perfectly familiar to us, enchanti ng and piquant, arresting melodies and amazing scenes." That's why his music speaks more directly to modern audiences than any composer of his time.

This is a story of wild passion and fatal pride, in which love and forgiveness triumph only after great suffering--Janácek deals with compassion and redemption, rather than directly with religion. However, in portraying the life of a small Moravian village in the second half of the 19th century, he does tell us something about the religion and the way in which it permeated everyday life.

Thus the Kostelnicka (or Sextoness) has earned her title on account of looking after the small local church. She is also a trusted adviser, and enjoys a high social status in the community. But her desperate wish to save her stepdaughter's honor and future prospects leads to terrible heresy: "I will deliver the boy to God," she tells herself at the end of Act II, before setting off to drown the illegitimate child. Her reasoning has been twisted by her fear of the inevitable humiliation of both Jenufa and herself, and her pride has proved stronger than her faith.

Yet the Kostelnicka's fear of disgrace was genuine: in the rural communities of 19th-century Moravia, "fallen" girls had to endure horrific public humiliation, and they frequently remained social and economic outcasts for the rest of their lives. The contemporary village mores are tellingly described by Janácek's onetime colleague and fellow folklorist Frantisek Bartos in the preface to their 1899 book, Moravian Folk-songs Newly Collected: "The sensual, sexual love, ennobled by Christianity, has acquired the character of a moral idea, and in this idealized form it is the origin of the most beautiful love songs." But, writes Bartos, the necessary condition of the longing for the beloved which inspired such folk songs was "morality, strict discipline, and chastity. And, among our people, one minded and observed these most strictly."

Thus all transgressors against the stern social order and local customs invited harsh judgment. In one region of Moravia, according to Bartos, a pregnant girl would have her long hair cut off in public by the married women of the village; around the capital of Brno, when a pregnant girl was getting married, the village youths would mockingly carry a cradle behind the wedding procession. Elsewhere in southern Moravia the local shepherd would run the "fallen" girl through the village and crack the whip above her as the local community was returning from Mass.

Life in rural Moravia was far from joyless at the time. Dances and festivals abounded and the young would make merry. Yet young men, too, would invite criticism if they played the field too often, and seducers would rarely escape punishment. In the finale of Jenufa it is the vox populi, in the person of the Shepherdess, which pronounces the judgment on the handsome, feckless Steva: "No girl would marry him now, not even an honest Gypsy."

Only Laca's love overcomes all obstacles. To him, Jenufa--her beauty spoiled and her reputation tarnished--is still the girl he has always loved, and he doesn't even care about her forthcoming trial and the inevitable public scorn. "What is the world to us," he tells her, "if we can comfort one another?" At long last he wins Jenufa's heart: "This is that greater love, the love that pleases God," she responds.

In Jenufa, Janácek draws our attention to some of humanity's highest moral ideals. Laca's love for Jenufa helps him overcome his destructive jealousy; Jenufa's compassion makes the Kostelnicka realise the extent of her pernicious pride, and her subsequent humility redeems her in Jenufa's eyes. At the time of writing his first operatic masterpiece, Janácek was no longer a believer. But compassion and redemption--essential parts of the Christian doctrine--are the cornerstones of Jenufa, and indeed of many of Janácek's subsequent stage works. It is also a story that emphasises the importance of the social background and group pressures and influences on family life and the development of intrapsychic and interpersonal conflict.
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
antimuzak | Feb 17, 2007 |

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Petr Dvorský Vocals [Steva]
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Jennifer Higgins Contralto vocals
Jeremy White Bass vocals
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Bohumil Gregor Conductor
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Marko Ivanovic Conductor
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Mark Baker Steva Burya
Hanna Schwarz Grandmother Buryjovka
Ingrid Tobiasson Grandmother Buryja
Philip Langridge Laca Klemen
Nina Stemme Jenůfa
Nikolaus Lehnhoff Stage Producer
Will Hartmann Laca Klemen
Deborah Polaski Kostelnicka Buryja
Jennifer Larmore Kostelnicka Buryjovka
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Stephanie Braunschweig Stage director
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Brian Large Director
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Statistiche

Opere
280
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
820
Popolarità
#31,114
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
2
ISBN
72
Lingue
8
Preferito da
1

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