Two Choruses for Women's voices op.17 - Vítězslava Kaprálová / SSAA a cappella

Code: R416
back to previous selection
Publisher Český rozhlas
Genre: classical & sacret
Arrangement: choral score / a cappella
Cast: quartet
choir
Lyrics language: Czech
Format: book
Series: Czech composer
Vitezslava Kapralova (1915-1940) - czech music composer and conductor, daughter of composer Vaclav Kapral, student of many significant names. Eventhough she died very young of TBC, she had composed… show more
7,05 €
+ -

in stock, for shipment

Doprava zdarma CZ od 62,55 €

share with friends:

Parameters

Product code: R416
Composer: Kaprálová, Vítězslava
No. of songs: 2
Pages: 12
Language: English
Czech
Size: 21 x 30 cm
EAN: 9790660614495
Weight: 60 g

Songlist (2)

  1. Vězdička (Little star)
  2. Potpoliš (Quail)

Product description

Vitezslava Kapralova (1915-1940) - czech music composer and conductor, daughter of composer Vaclav Kapral, student of many significant names. Eventhough she died very young of TBC, she had composed more than 40 exceptional compositions that were and still are very appreciated. The book offers you Two Choruses for Women's Voices, op.17 (Potpoliš and Vězdička) from 1936-1938 which are the subject of our first ever complete edition. The two choruses, set to texts of Ondřej Přikryl, which Kaprálová adopted from the second edition of his Hanácky pesničke, were in part composed concurrently with the cantata Ilena. Both the cantata and the choruses are still rooted in the post-romantic style which Kaprálová was already abandoning at the time. Perhaps it was the difficulty of this transition, combined with the necessity of learning the advanced technique of choral composition in preparation for her cantata, which led the composer to modify these works repeatedly. At the beginning of 1938 she arrived at a final version ready to be entrusted to her father for performance and worthy of an opus number.

Vítězslava Kaprálová (1915 - 1940) was a Czech composer and conductor of the first half of the 20th century. She came from a musical family; her father, Václav Kaprál, was a composer and her mother, Vítězslava Kaprálová, née Uhlířová, was a singing teacher. From childhood she showed exceptional musical talent. She studied composition with Vilém Petrželka at the Brno Conservatory and conducting with Zdeněk Chalabala. After graduating, she continued her studies at the Prague Conservatoire's master school under Vítězslav Novák and Václav Talich. Thanks to a French state scholarship, she went to Paris in 1937, where she studied conducting with Charles Munch and composition privately with Bohuslav Martinů. Despite the short time allotted to Kaprálová (she died at the age of 25 of tuberculosis), she managed to compose some forty extremely valuable compositions (piano, chamber, orchestral, vocal) and her music was already highly appreciated during her lifetime. In 1946 the Czech Academy of Sciences awarded her membership in memoriam in recognition of her contribution to Czech music.