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Czech Chamber Music Society • Eva Krestová


Eva Krestová, leader of the viola section of the Czech Philharmonic, presents her instrument in two different settings. While the usual combination of viola and piano is found in sonatas by Shostakovich and the British composer Rebecca Clarke, in Bohuslav Martinů’s Three Madrigals, a viola and violin duo will be heard.

Subscription series DK | Czech Chamber Music Society

Programme

Rebecca Clarke
Viola Sonata

Bohuslav Martinů
Three Madrigals (Duo No. 1) for violin and viola, H 313

Dmitri Shostakovich
Viola Sonata, Op. 147

Performers

Radim Kresta violin 
Eva Krestová viola

Tomáš Vrána piano

Photo illustrating the event Czech Chamber Music Society • Eva Krestová

Rudolfinum — Martinů Hall — Academy of Performing Arts

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Performers

Radim Kresta  violin

Eva Krestová  viola

Eva Krestová began her musical career as a violinist, studying first at the conservatoires in Brno and Prague, then graduating from the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague under the guidance of Jindřich Pazdera. Already as a student, she had a passion for playing chamber music, and she perfected her skills in that discipline under such members of renowned ensembles as Niklas Schmidt (Trio Fontenay), Jerry Horner (Fine Arts Quartet), and Ivan Klánský (Guarneri Trio Prague). She was known to us as a violinist first with the Puella Trio, which she later left to begin her career in the world-famous Pavel Haas Quartet. During four years of playing second violin in that quartet, she appeared in the world’s most famous concert halls (Carnegie Hall, Wigmore Hall, Herkulessaal), and she won a Gramophone Award.

However, it was necessary to move on, and another path appeared very quickly on the viola. “Back then, my husband [violinist Radim Kresta] was playing in a piano trio, and he came up with something of an idea. Once he brought a violin home from a luthier, and he said: ‘Come play in a piano quartet with us!’ … I tried playing the viola, first for a few minutes, then for an hour, and suddenly I found that I couldn’t stop”, says Eva Krestová. She was entirely intoxicated by the instrument that she says has “more breadth of soul” than the violin. At first she was making appearances at the same time as both a violinist and a violist, but now she seldom plays the violin. This was also aided by her professional engagements, first for two seasons with the Prague Philharmonia, then for a year at Prague’s National Theatre. From there, her path took her to the position of principal violist of the Czech Philharmonic, where she has been working since 2021.

The story of her discovery of the viola has also played an important part in the world of chamber music. The Josef Suk Piano Quartet was formed under the leadership of Radim Kresta, and the group has enjoyed many successes at international competitions, the most important being their victory at the ACM Premio Trio di Trieste in Italy. They have been performing with success for more than a decade at domestic and foreign festivals, and they were honoured with the 2013 Czech Chamber Music Society Award. 

Besides playing in orchestras and chamber music and raising a family (two children), Eva Krestová also makes occasional solo appearances. Her partners have been, for example, Virtuosi Italiani, the Prague Philharmonia, the Pilsen Philharmonic, and the Moravian Chamber Orchestra, of which she was the concertmaster for several years while studying at the conservatoire. Her playing in chamber ensembles has been captured on a number of recordings (Supraphon, Arco diva); she has also recorded for the BBC, the Japanese television network NHK, and Czech Television.

Tomáš Vrána  piano

He was born in 1994. He has played piano since three years of age. At the age of five he began to attend the Elementary Art School in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm, where his teacher was Libuše Pavelčáková. After elementary school he enrolled at the Academic Secondary School and the Janáček Conservatory in Ostrava, where he now studies piano under Monika Tugendliebová. His greatest piano achievements include his fivefold victory in the Prague Junior Note competition, where he was the absolute winner. He was also a double winner of the Virtuosi per Musica di Pianoforte competition in Ústí nad Labem, the absolute winner of the Pro Bohemia competition in Ostrava and a laureate of the Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Competition in Brno, where he was also awarded a special prize for Mozart’s composition. Further, for example, he repeatedly won the competition of elementary art schools, won first prize in the competition of Brno conservatories and won the competition of conservatoires in Pardubice organized by the Ministry of Education and Sports. Several times he has performed in Slovakia and Austria; he became the winner of Vítězslav Novák Competition and played in concert at the Czech Radio Ostrava (broadcast live by the Vltava radio station). In 2008 he received a Czech TV Award – Zlatý Oříšek (Golden Nut). In his spare time, he enjoys literature, fine art or making his own films.

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