Bedřich Smetana

Person1824-1884

Bedřich Smetana's albums, compilations, singles and EPs, live albums, and videos discography with cataloged releases, editions, and credits

Bedřich Smetana·CzechiaCzechia· Svitavy

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Bedřich Smetana (pronounced [ˈbɛdr̝ɪx ˈsmɛtana]; 2 March 1824 - 12 May 1884) was a Czech composer. He is best known for his symphonic poem Vltava (better known as The Moldau), the second in a cycle of six which he entitled Má vlast (My Country), and for his opera Prodaná nevěsta (The Bartered Bride). Smetana was the son of a brewer in Litomyšl in Bohemia, then part of the Austrian Empire. He studied piano and violin from an early age, and played in an amateur string quartet with other members of his family. Smetana attended a high school in Pilsen from 1840-1843. He studied music in Prague, despite initial resistance from his father. He secured a post as music master to a noble family, and in 1848 received funds from Franz Liszt to establish his own music school. September 1855 marked the death of his second child, his beloved four-year-old daughter Bedřiška. 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. In 1856, Smetana moved to Gothenburg, Sweden, where he taught, conducted and gave chamber music recitals. In 1863, back in Prague, he opened a new school of music dedicated to promoting specifically Czech music. By 1874 he had become deaf from syphilis, but he continued to compose; Má vlast was written after his deafness had developed. 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". From 1875 he lived in small village of Jabkenice. 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, due to further progressive neurological effects of his illness, 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. Smetana was the first composer to write music that was specifically Czech in character. Many of his operas are based on Czech themes and myths, the best known being the comedy The Bartered Bride (1866). He used many Czech dance rhythms and his melodies sometimes resemble folk songs. He was a great influence on Antonín Dvořák, who similarly used Czech themes in his works.

Discography

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Má Vlast

1929

Studio Album

Vltava ("The Moldau")

1940

Studio Album

Má Vlast

1941

Studio Album

The Moldau (No. 2 Of The Symphonic Cycle "My Country")

1945

Studio Album

My Fatherland (Symphonic Cycle)

1947

Studio Album

The Moldau, Husitská Overture

1950

Studio Album

Carmen Suite / Die Moldau

1950

Studio Album

From My Life

1950

Studio Album

"Egmont" Overture / The Moldau

1952

Studio Album

Roumanian Rhapsdy No. 1 (In A Major, Op.11) / The Moldau

1952

Studio Album

Tajemství

1952

Studio Album

Smetana: Die Moldau / Hindemith: Der Schwanendreher

1952

Studio Album

The Kiss

1953

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Quartet In E Minor ("From My Life") / Quartet No. 6 In F Major, Op. 96 ("American")

1953

Studio Album

Smyčcový Kvartet C. 1 E-moll ˶Z Mého Života"

1953

Studio Album

Ma Vlast - My Country (A Cycle Of Symphonic Poems)

1954

Studio Album

Die Verkaufte Braut (Opernquerschnitt)

1954

Studio Album

Pictures At An Exhibition / The Moldau / Rhapsody No. 3

1954

Studio Album

Taras Bulba / Suite Strings / Wallenstein's Camp, Op. 14

1955

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1812 Overture / Mephisto Waltz / Carnival Overture / Polka And Fugue From Schwanda / The Bartered Bride: Overture

1956

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Rapsodia Română Nr. 1 / Dansuri Din Galantha / Vltava / Scherzo Capriccioso

1956

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Manfred, Op. 115 / Moldava Da "Ma Vlast"

1956

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Dance Of The Comedians / Selections From The Peer Gynt Suite

1956

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The Bartered Bride

1956

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The Bartered Bride (Excerpts); Vltava / Polka And Fugue (Schwanda The Bagpiper) / Rumanian Rhapsody No. 1

1958

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Sinfonie Nr. 5 F-dur Op. 76 / Marsch Zur Shakespeare-Feier

1958

Studio Album

Incidental Music To "Rosamunde" - The Moldau - Overture To "The Bartered Bride"

1958

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Sinfonia Nuevo Mundo / El Moldava

1959

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Slavonic Dances / The Bartered Bride

1959

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Dvorak String Quartet No. 6 Smetana String Quartet No. 1

1960

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Prodaná Nevěsta

1960

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Fingal's Cave

1960

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Ouverture Solennelle "1812" / Die Moldau

1960

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Liszt: Les Préludes / Smetana: The Moldau / Moussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain / Sibelius: Valse triste

1961

Studio Album

Rhapsodies

1961

Studio Album

The Moldau / The Bartered Bride Overture / The Préludes

1961

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Les Préludes · The Moldau · Night On Bald Mountain · Valse Triste

1961

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Rhapsodies

1961

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Čertova Stěna

1961

Studio Album

Die Moldau / Aus Böhmens Hain und Flur

1961

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Symphony Nr. 5 From The New World / Die Moldau

1962

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Piano Trio In G Minor / Elegy

1962

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Music From Bohemia

1962

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Piano Concerto / Vltava (Ma Vlast)

1962

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Bohemian Rhapsody

1963

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Spiegel Klassik - Die Moldau

1963

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Die Verkaufte Braut

1963

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Highlights From The Bartered Bride

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