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Steps to the New World • Janáček’s Lachian Dances and Taras Bulba


Music has tremendous power to create new landscapes before our eyes, to paint lovely pictures, and to tell stories. Simply put, thanks to music we can transport ourselves to a different time and space. One of the musical genres invented especially for this purpose in the middle of the nineteenth century is called the symphonic poem.

Subscription series K | Education programs | Duration of the programme 2 hours | For children and parents | For teens and adults

Programme

Leoč Janáček
Lachian Dances and Taras Bulba

Performers

Czech Student Philharmonic

Petr Kadlec guide

Marko Ivanović conductor

Photo illustrating the event Steps to the New World • Janáček’s Lachian Dances and Taras Bulba

Rudolfinum — Dvořák Hall

Cancelled
Cancelled
Price from 230 to 550 Kč Tickets and contact information

Customer Service of Czech Philharmonic

Tel.: +420 227 059 227
E-mail: info@czechphilharmonic.cz

Customer service is available on weekdays from 9.00 am to 6.00 pm.

 

The program is based on a musical part but also on a spoken word that will be given in Czech language only. The program will not be supplied with English subtitles.

Reviews by music critics after the Prague premiere of Taras Bulba on 9 November 1924 performed by the Czech Philharmonic and conductor Václav Talich:

The work was composed in 1915/1916 during the Great War, when Janáček was undergoing an especially heated internal struggle between the Czech patriot and the passionately committed Russophile within him. For Janáček, the fates of both Slavic tribes were closely bound, and if he decided at the time to celebrate in music the indestructible power of the Russian people as expressed in Gogol’s treatment of the legend of the courageous rebel leader of the Zaporozhian Cossacks, Taras Bulba, he certainly also identified therewith his unbroken faith in the victory of his own nation.

It seems to me that here, the improvisational method has given way to sturdy structure that has taken an organic form. Janáček’s colours burned fiercely. This time, they bore witness to the inner necessity of the work’s creation, with its power of expression and formal clarity.

The audience listened to the work breathlessly with absolute absorption, and at the end they erupted into cheering of a kind seldom witnessed at classical music concerts.

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