Josip Štolcer-Slavenski

Josip Štolcer-Slavenski

Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (May 11 1896 - November 30 1955) was a Croatian composer. He was born in Čakovec, Austria-Hungary (present day Croatia) into the Štolcer family. Here he attended elementary school but later studied music in the class of Zoltán Kodály in Budapest and Vítězslav Novák in Prague. He also studied in Paris, France.

Career

Štolcer started his career as a music teacher in Zagreb in 1923 but soon, in 1924, he moved to Belgrade where he had better conditions to work and live. Like another Croatian composer, Jakov Gotovac, he was a national romantic whose work was strongly influenced by regional and national heritage. The sounds of home, its own history and heritage were in his works masterfully expressed new sequence of universal time. He observed the sound heritage of the cultures of the east, hoping to find the environments unchanged by the influence of the modern world. Josip Štolcer's Memorial Collection, established in 1965, contains original manuscripts and scores, tapes and records, as well as numerous other objects and musical instruments from the composer's home.

Opus

His best works are incorporated in a symphony named "Simfonija Orienta (Symphony of the Orient)" for solists, choir and orchestra as well as in another symphony "Balkanofonija (Symphony of the Balkans)". Further he composed piano concertos, violin sonatas, string quartets, and solos; his best-known choir songs are "Voda zvira" and "Romarska".

Međimurje songs

* Međimorje kak si lepo zeleno (Međimurje, how beautifully green you are)
* Raca plava po Dravi (Swimming duck on the Drava river)
* Tu za repu tu za len (Catch for turnip and catch for flax)
* Imala majka tri jedine kceri (A mother had three daughters)

External links

*IMSLP|id=Slavenski, Josip|cname=Josip Slavenski
* [http://skole.hinet.hr/ss-cakovec-501/skola/pocetna.htm Gymnasium Josip Štolcer-Slavenski Čakovec]
* [http://www.slavenski-novisad.org.yu/ Music School "Josip Slavenski"]
* [http://www.scaruffi.com/music/thanh.html On the page is talking] composer Josip Štolcer-Slavenski has 'written [ [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
]
] for the Bosanquet Enharmonium with 53 tones in an octave'

References


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