Alexander Moyzes - Symphony No. 1 in D major, op. 4/op. 31 (1928-29/1936)
Alexander Moyzes (1906 - 1984) Symphony No. 1 in D major, op. 4 revised as op. 31 (1928 - 29, revision 1936) for orchestra Allegro moderato 0:00 Adagio 11:46 Scherzo 20:44 Finale. Adagio. Allegro con brio 25:26 With the personality of A. Moyzes is associated with two firsts in the aspect of the development of Slovak music in the 20th Century. He became the first teacher of composition in Slovakia (at the then Academy of Music and Drama) and the creator of the first Slovak symphony. Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 4 was written during Moyzes' studies in Prague (1925-30) at the conservatory with Otakar Šín in 1928, but revised eight years later, when he was already working in Bratislava and had already completed a Master Composition Course with Vítězslav Novák. The First Symphony, which Moyzes wrote at the age of twenty-two, surprisingly reflects a maturity in tectonic-form sensibility, a brilliance in the treatment of themes that express a combination of post-Romantic symphonism and the dance-like quality embodied in the tradition of Slavic folklore (at that time closer to the Dvořák-Smetana circle). It contains the germs of what he and his first pupils (mostly his generational comrades) later brought to the creation of a stylistic phenomenon - interwar Slovak musical modernism. (Zuzana Martináková, in: bulletin New Slovak Music 1996) ==== S osobnosťou A. Moyzesa sa spájajú dve prvenstvá z aspektu vývoja slovenskej hudby v 20. Storočí. Stal sa prvým učiteľom kompozície na Slovensku (na vtedajšej Hudobnej a dramatickej akadémii) a tiež tvorcom prvej slovenskej symfónie. Symfónia č. 1 D dur, op. 4 vznikla ešte počas Moyzesových štúdií v Prahe (1925-30) na konzervatóriu u Otakara Šína v roku 1928, ktorú však revidoval o osem rokov neskôr, kedy už pôsobil v Bratislave a mal za sebou aj Majstrovský kompozičný kurz u Vítězslava Nováka. Prvá symfónia, ktorú Moyzes napísal ako dvadsaťdvaročný, prekvapivo odráža zrelosť v oblasti tektonicko-formového cítenia, brilantnosť v spracovaní tém, ktoré sú výrazom prepojenia postromantického symfonizmu a tanečnosti, obsiahnutej v tradícii slovanského folklóru (vtedy bližšie k dvořákovsko-smetanovskému okruhu). Sú v nej zárodky toho, čo neskôr on a jeho prví žiaci (väčšinou generační druhovia) vo svojej tvorbe doviedli k vytvoreniu štýlového fenoménu – medzivojnovej slovenskej hudobnej moderny. (Zuzana Martináková, in: bulletin Nová slovenská hudba 1996) Source: https://hc.sk/o-slovenskej-hudbe/osob... Performers: Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra Ladislav Slovák, conductor Photo: Hudobné centrum / Music Centre Slovakia For promotion only. The purpose of this channel is purely informational and its goal is to promote Slovak composer to a broader audience. We do not receive any rewards and other financial assets by promoting this artwork.

PIZZETTI Symphony in A Francesco Mander

Alexander Moyzes: Symfonie č. 12, op. 83 (1983)

How Newton Calculated Pi in Just One Afternoon

1970s French Chanson Music 🇫🇷 Classic Love Songs in a Rainy Paris Café 🌧️

65 Year Old Carpenter's Genius Pallet Idea: Smart And Practical Interior Design

Alexander Moyzes - Juraj Kubánka

Jeno Hubay - Petőfi Symphony (1922)

Trávnice - Alexander Moyzes 1/2

Erkki Melartin - Symphony No.1 in C-minor, Op.30 (1902)

Alexander Moyzes: Symfonie č. 4 Es dur, op. 38 (1947)

Eino Tamberg - Symphony No 1

Brahms Symphonies 3 and 4 with Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic

We Test 7 Tour De France Bikes From 7 Decades

Jean Sibelius - Symphony No. 2 D major op. 43 | WDR Sinfonieorchester | Jukka-Pekka Saraste

Baroque Music & Elegant Royal Court Ambience | Relaxing Classical Music for Studious Minds

Ján Cikker: Symfonie č. 2 Jarní / Symphony No. 2 Spring, op. 15 (1937)

Shostakovich - Violin Concerto No 1 Hilary Hahn/Mariss Jansons BPO

