Otakar OstrÄil

Otakar OstrÄil (25 February 1879 in Prague – 20 August 1935 in Prague) was a Czech composer and conductor. He is noted for symphonic works Impromptu, Suite in C Minor, and Symfonietta, and in his opera compositions PoupÄ› and Honzovo královstvÃ.
Compositional career
OstrÄil was born in Prague, where he spent his entire life, as it was the center of the Czech musical community in his generation. He studied philosophy at Charles University, attending the classes of Otakar Hostinský, and simultaneously studied composition and music theory privately under ZdenÄ›k Fibich. From his early student days he was a close friend of ZdenÄ›k Nejedlý, whose outspoken voice in musicology would form OstrÄil's greatest critical support. He worked as a conductor at the Vinohrady Theater (1914-1919) and later at the National Theatre (Prague) (1920-1935), which was one of the most influential positions in Czech musical life. He also worked as a pedagogue at the Prague Conservatory, teaching conducting.
OstrÄil's main output consists of six operas: Jan ZhoÅ™elecký (written as a student under Fibich, 1898, unperformed), Vlasty skon (Vlasta's passing, premiered 1904, to a libretto previously considered by Smetana and Fibich), Kunálovy oÄi (Kunál's eyes, 1908), PoupÄ› (The Bud, 1912), Legenda z Erinu (A Legend of Erin, 1921), and Honzovo královstvà (Johnny's Kingdom, based on a short story by Leo Tolstoy, 1934). His most significant orchestral music includes Symphony in A (1906), Impromptu (1912), Suite in c minor (1914), Symfonietta (1922), Léto (Summer, tone poem, 1927), and KřÞova cesta (The Way of the Cross, orchestral variations, 1929). Beyond these, he also composed various works for chamber and choral ensembles; much like his main musical influence, Gustav Mahler, his rigorous conducting schedule rarely allowed free time for composition, with the exception of the summers when the theater was not in season.
Influences
Like his contemporaries, VÃtÄ›zslav Novák, Josef Suk, and Otakar Zich, OstrÄil composed in a densely orchestrated, thickly contrapuntal style that was heavily influenced by Mahler, Richard Strauss, and the early works of Arnold Schoenberg. At times, the extreme linearity of his work (as in the orchestral preludes to Legenda z Erinu and the climactic sections of KřÞova cesta) goes beyond functional harmony; in these moments he can easily be aligned with the Viennese expressionists, whom he much admired. At the very end of his career, with Honzovo královstvÃ, he turned to an ironic sort of neoclassicism reminiscent of Paul Hindemith or even Dmitri Shostakovich: the work is full of grotesque marches and folk dances that match the socialist politics of the libretto's mock folktale atmosphere.
As a conductor, OstrÄil had a significant influence on his younger contemporaries in the interwar period. From the beginning of his time at the National Theater he conceived new ideas of musical leadership and choice of repertoire, wherein representatives of the current generation of musical modernism, both at home and abroad, would be presented to Prague audiences as a matter of cultural responsibility. As a result, under OstrÄil, Prague saw the Czech premieres of works by Debussy, Strauss, Stravinsky, Darius Milhaud, Zich, and most importantly, the opera Wozzeck by Alban Berg in 1926.
These programming choices met with extreme controversy over his entire fifteen-year administration at the National Theater, especially from conservative critics such as AntonÃn Å ilhan, who branded the conductor as an anti-Czech pro-communist traitor, and whose articles prompted a riot at the third performance of Wozzeck. Many of these criticisms had to do with OstrÄil's close association with Nejedlý, who by this time was a strong proponent of the Czechoslovak Communist Party. It was OstrÄil's belief in the necessity of presenting modern art to the public that won him many supporters among the students of Prague, led by the young pedagogue and microtonal composer Alois Hába; in a climate increasingly unsympathetic to modernist exploration, the conductor was hailed as a hero.
His untimely death in 1935, at the height of his career, was a bitter blow to the community, and for the remainder of the democratic era (to 1938) his achievements were continually rhapsodized in print.
Works
- Operas
- Rybáři (fragment)
- Jan Zhořelecký (1898)
- CymbelÃn (1899 - unfinished)
- Vlasty skon, Op. 5 (1903)
- Kunálovy oÄi, Op. 11 (1908) on the theme from the short story of Julius Zeyer.
- PoupÄ›, Op.12 (1910)
- Legenda z Erinu, Op. 19 (1919)
- Honzovo královstvÃ, Op. 25 (Honza's Kingdom after Leo Tolstoy 1933)
- Melodramas
- Krásné dědictvà (Eliška Krásnohorská - destroyed)
- Kamenný mnich (1893)
- Lilie (Karel JaromÃr Erben)
- Balada o mrtvém Å¡evci a mladé taneÄnici, Op. 6 (K. Leger - 1904)
- Balada Äeská, Op. 8 (Jan Neruda - 1903)
- Skřivan (Mir. Valenta - 1934)
- Orchestral works
- Fairy Tale Suite in G Major, Op. 2 (1898)
- Pohádka o Å emÃku, Op. 3 (Tale of Å emÃk, tone poem, 1899)
- Symphony in A, Op. 7 (1906)
- OsiÅ™elo dÃtÄ›, Op. 9 (The Orphan's Tale 1907)
- Sirotek, Op. 10 (The Orphan, incidental music for play after Nemcova 1906)
- Impromptu, Op. 13 (1912)
- Suite in c minor, Op. 14 (1914)
- Legenda o sv. Zite Cantata, Op. 17 text by Jaroslava Vrchlického(1913)
- Symfonietta, Op. 20 (1922)
- Léto, Op.23 (Summer, tone poem, 1927)
- KřÞova cesta Op. 24 (The Way of the Cross, orchestral variations, 1929)
- Chamber music
- Sonatina for Viola, Violin and Piano, Op.22 (1925)
- String Quartet in B Major, Op.4 (1899)
External links
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