Bibliography (1923/29) and Karel Navrátil: Difference between pages
Tchaikovsky Research
(Difference between pages)
m (Text replacement - "<br>" to "<br/>") |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Czech composer and music writer (b. 12/24 April 1867 in [[Prague]]; d. 23 December 1936 in [[Prague]]). | |||
Navrátil studied in [[Vienna]] with Guido Adler (music theory) and Karel Ondříček (violin), and went on to become a music critic in the Austrian capital. After 1915 he returned to [[Prague]], where he worked as a music teacher and a freelance composer. His compositions include two operas, a symphony and five symphonic poems, two piano concertos and a violin concerto, chamber music and piano pieces, choral works and songs, although very few of these have been published. | |||
==Correspondence with Tchaikovsky== | |||
1 letter from Tchaikovsky to Karel Navrátil has survived, dating from 1891, and has been translated into English on this website: | |||
* '''[[Letter 4572b]]''' – 13/25 December 1891, from [[Maydanovo]] | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
* {{bib|2016/6}} (2016) | |||
==External Links== | |||
* [[wikipedia:Karel_Navrátil|Wikipedia]] | |||
[[Category:People|Navrátil, Karel]] | |||
[[Category:Composers|Navrátil, Karel]] | |||
[[Category:Writers|Navrátil, Karel]] | |||
[[Category:Correspondents|Navrátil, Karel]] |
Revision as of 21:49, 18 November 2022
Czech composer and music writer (b. 12/24 April 1867 in Prague; d. 23 December 1936 in Prague).
Navrátil studied in Vienna with Guido Adler (music theory) and Karel Ondříček (violin), and went on to become a music critic in the Austrian capital. After 1915 he returned to Prague, where he worked as a music teacher and a freelance composer. His compositions include two operas, a symphony and five symphonic poems, two piano concertos and a violin concerto, chamber music and piano pieces, choral works and songs, although very few of these have been published.
Correspondence with Tchaikovsky
1 letter from Tchaikovsky to Karel Navrátil has survived, dating from 1891, and has been translated into English on this website:
- Letter 4572b – 13/25 December 1891, from Maydanovo