The Prague Carnival. Introduction and Polonaise


  • Recorded: 2022
  • Record Place: The Smetana Hall of Municipal House, Prague
  • First Release: 2024
  • (P) 2024 SUPRAPHON a.s.
  • Genre: Orchestral

Artists

  • music by: Bedřich Smetana
  • conductor: Tomáš Brauner
  • musical group: Prague Symphony Orchestra

Album

Prague Symphony Orchestra, Tomáš Brauner

Smetana, Dvořák, Suk, Ostrčil: Music for Prague

Digital services

Catalogue Number: SU 4342-2
Published: 12th April 2024
Genre: Orchestral
Format: 1 CD
Antonín Dvořák – My Home, Op. 62 (1882). Fanfare for the opening of the National Jubilee Exhibition in Prague 1891. Bedřich Smetana – Prague Carnival (1883), Vyšehrad (1874). Otakar Ostrčil – A Tale of Šemík, Op. 3 (1899). Josef Suk – Praga, Op. 26 (1904)

Prague Symphony Orchestra, conductor Tomáš Brauner

The story of the Prague Symphony Orchestra is closely related to the history of the Czech capital, which leaves an impression on their repertoire. After their successful recording of Karel Husa’s Music for Prague 1968 (Supraphon, 2021), the orchestra and its chief conductor are coming up with another album dedicated to Prague. This time, the programme is focused on the late 19th century, i.e. the period when the Czech nation fought for its language, culture and identity within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The backbone of the record is Suk’s monumental symphonic poem Praga, based on the Hussite chorale, “Ktož jsú Boží bojovníci” (Ye Who Are Warriors of God); Vyšehrad from Smetana’s famous cycle Má vlast (My Country); and a rarity: Pohádka o Šemíku (A Tale of Šemík), which is a largely unknown symphonic poem based on an ancient Czech legend connected with Vyšehrad, by Otakar Ostrčil, composed when he was nineteen. And of course, there is Antonín Dvořák. In hardly any work of his is Dvořák as explicitly patriotic as in his overture My Home (which is not very well known either). It is based on the theme of the popular song “Kde domov můj,” which later became the Czech national anthem. Another rarity of this album is Dvořák’s fanfare for the opening of the National Jubilee Exhibition in Prague. After their acclaimed recording of the composer’s Slavonic Dances, the Prague Symphony Orchestra confirm that the Czech repertoire of late Romanticism is their native and most natural language.

The romantic and legendary city of Prague on a record of the Prague Symphony Orchestra

Reviews

“Imprégnés de leur culture musicale nationale, Brauner et ses Pragois servent ces musiques avec une fraîcheur, une ferveur et un naturel qui désamorcent l'emphase que certaines peuvent suggérer, tout en soulignant leur générosité et leur sincérité.”
Classica, September 2024

“The main reason to get this disc is for Ostrčil’s A Tale of Šemik, for which this is for all practical purposes the only available recording, and Dvořák’s Fanfare, where this version is as good or better than its four recorded predecessors… the playing is spirited and committed, and the recorded sound is fine. It simply comes up short when compared to major alternatives.”
Fanfare, October 2024

Antonín Dvořák
1. Fanfare for the Opening of the National Jubilee Exhibition in Prague 1891 02:23
Antonín Dvořák
2. My Home. Ouverture, Op. 62 09:44
Otakar Ostrčil
3. A Tale of Šemík. Tone Poem, Op. 3 18:59
Bedřich Smetana
4. The Prague Carnival. Introduction and Polonaise 05:57
Bedřich Smetana
5. Vyšehrad. Tone Poem 14:44
Josef Suk
6. Praga. Tone Poem, Op. 26 23:28

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