Tag: Lidice

  • journal 19. Hudba pro Lidice

    Prague, 2017 —

    With cutting-edge contemporary idioms, Czech-American composer Karel Husa’s music expresses superbly the drama and beauty of Czech culture and history. I first became aware of his music when I heard the University of Michigan Symphony Band premiere his powerful piece, Hudba pro Prahu 1968, commemorating the 1968 Soviet military occupation of Czechoslovakia.

    LISTEN ›

    Univ. of Texas Wind Ensemble

    Twenty-some years later, I met him in 1992 in Brno while performing again at the International Music Festival. He was the more celebrated guest, coming home for the first time since the Czech revolution opened the country after 40 years of Soviet oppression.

    A Peaceful Place

    Elizabeth and I first visited the Czech village of Lidice on our visit to Prague in the fall of 2017. The phrase, “a peaceful place,” is from the poem, “The Murder of Lidice” by Edna St. Vincent Millay.

    A charming Czech village, Lidice was brutally destroyed by the Gestapo in 1942. On June 10, all the village men were shot, the children taken away to orphanages or gas chambers, the women sent to concentration camps, and the entire village was razed.

    For history, photos, and insights into the Lidice atrocity, go to Elizabeth Cernota Clark’s blog, Lidice Lives.

    My music expresses the dark brutality of the atrocity.

    Lidice Remembered

    Clark 2017 (TC-86)

    Live performance February 6, 2018, at Texas State Univ. Performing Arts Center

    Texas State cello students Boris Chalakov, Joshua Adams, Terri Boutte, Simon Reid, Anna Trevino, Gabriel Vazquez

    Rainbow

    Though horrible tragedy struck this place, now the sloping lawn and babbling creek are a safe haven to peaceful spirits. Looking for the Rainbow, a sequel to Lidice Remembered, continues in complex rhythmic counterpoint of darker sonorities, evoking a restless spirit of searching, anticipating. Written during the COVID pandemic for Karla Hamelin and her Texas State cello students, Looking for the Rainbow expresses both the uncertainty and hopefulness in our collective struggle to survive the storms of disease and violence. A beautiful memorial rose garden in Lidice celebrates the transformative power of hope.

    Looking for the Rainbow

    Clark 20121 (TC-111)

    Where My Home Is

    Kde domov můj

    national anthem of the Czech Republic

    After the war, concerned British citizens led by Sir Barnett Stross convinced the world that the village should be rebuilt. The women of Lidice were able to return and were given beautiful new Czech-style homes in a planned village next to the Memorial Gardens.

    Another piece celebrates this hopeful outcome of the story. A New Lidice is scored for SSAA treble choir and string trio. Lyrics are taken in part from a stirring Stross speech, but the voices are those of the women who bravely rebuilt their community.

    A New Lidice

    Clark 2019 (TC-97)

    Texas State Aurora Voce, Lynn Brinckmeyer cond.
    with string students Kailey Johnson, Kelsey Sexton, Tina Moritz

    “We build a new village, while a just world watches.

    Stavíme novou vesnici. Spravedlivý svêt bude sledovat.

    “Lidice belongs to the world of all who suffered.

    “Mankind has one common enemy – War.

    “Only a realization of our common humanity can save mankind.

    “The just world will watch.”

    ___________

  • journal 11. Moravská Hudba

    Brno, 1991 —

    I first visited Czechoslovakia in 1991 to perform at the Brno International Music Festival. How this opportunity came about is a story in itself. My colleague Tom Sovik at the University of North Texas joined a group promoting the City of Dallas as a sister city with Brno, the second largest Czech city and capital of the Moravian province, where he had done his doctoral musicology research. At his suggestion, I wrote a short piece as a gift to Brno. Its mayor turned over the gift score to the secretariat of Brno’s International Music Festival, a distinguished Moravian composer Arnošt Parsch. He invited me to come to the festival and conduct my music. The result was an October 1991 performance in Brno’s New Town Hall of two of my works, ANTIPHONS (1989) and CANZONA, for combined woodwind and brass quintets, which I conducted.

    rehearsing with Czech ensemble

    Parsch invited me back in 1992 for the 27th Brno International Festival’s Experimental Music Exposition V. I presented my LIGHTFORMS 2: StarSpectra multimedia computer music and played trombone in an experimental multimedia piece by my friend, Rodney Waschka. I had performed the same program early that fall at the Festival Internacional Alfonso Reyes in Monterrey, Mexico.

    PTACí

    While in Brno for the 1991 festival, I met choreographer Hana Smičkova, who invited me to compose a work for her Mimi Fortunae Dance Theater, which rehearsed in the ancient Spilberk Castle. I began studying the great 20th-century Moravian composer Leoš Janáček’s music as background for the ballet’s composition.

    PTACí (“Birds”) was premiered in Brno in 1993 by the Moravian Chamber Orchestra, which I conducted. The ballet, choreographed by Smičkova, was performed by Mimi Fortunae in historic Mahunovo Divadlo, the first building in Europe to be equipped by Thomas Edison with electric lights.

    During these years, Parsch and I became composer friends. Our visits to each other always included long walks in nature and deep discussions of music, art, and culture. In 1991 I had visited the northern Moravian mountain village of Hukvaldy, the summer home of Janáček. He loved nature walks and studied bird songs.

    Hukvaldy Sketches was first a concert suite of PTACI, my set of modern musical impressions of old Moravia, in the ancient heart of Eastern Europe. Scored for a chamber quartet, it was premiered February 6, 2018, at Texas State University Performing Arts Center, by Ian Davidson (oboe), Vanguel Tangarov (clarinet), Ames Asbell (viola), and Kari Klier (marimba).

    The final transformation of this work was a re-scoring of Hukvaldy Sketches for the original PTACI orchestration. Its five scenes:

    Hrad – morning climb to the castle ruins

    Ptáci – watching Leoš’s birds

    Vody – forest streams and shadows

    Bystroušky – mouflons and other mountain wildlife

    Podzim – autumn sunset

    PTACí / Hukvaldy Sketches

    Clark 1993/2016 (TC-69/80)

    Morava

    In my intense study of Janácek, I reveled in the expressive depth of his uniquely modern Moravian music. His powerful String Quartet No. 2 and his collection of gentle piano music, Po zarostlém chodníčku, affected me deeply.

    In one of my Brno performances, Parsch’s Czech colleagues commented on my music’s affinity to modern Moravian musical style. I was informally dubbed an honorary Moravian Composer, a distinction I proudly took as a high honor of their acceptance. Since then, I have written many pieces with Czech imagery:

    Two of these are vocal music that include some Czech lyrics. The treble choir piece A NEW LIDICE begins with “We build a new village, while a just world watches. Stavíme novou vesnici. Spravedlivý svêt bude sledovat.” Children (including my daughter Alison) sang a short phrase in Czech in MORAVIAN MOUNTAIN SONGS, written for the Woodrow Wilson Elementary School Choir in Denton, Texas.

    Sinfonietta

    with Parsch at the spring outside Brno

    Leos Janácek composed his great concert work, Sinfonietta, in 1926 for the Sokol Gymnastic Festival in Prague. Janáček said it was intended to express “contemporary free man, his spiritual beauty and joy, his strength, courage and determination to fight for victory.” It is what I call musical sketches of his home city, Brno, the largest city in the Moravian east of what was then Czechoslovakia.

    I visited Brno several times starting in 1991 to perform my music at its International Music Festival.

    LISTEN ›

    Janácek Sinfonietta

    UNT Symphony Orch. on YouTube

    The festival traditionally ends with a performance of Sinfonietta by the Brno Philharmonic in Janácek Divadlo (theatre). In 1993 my ballet, PTACI, was premiered at historic Mahunovo Divadlo, across a plaza from Janácek Divadlo.

    Though I could have continued my “Sketches” series with a “Brno Sketches,” instead a 2024 work is a set of more abstract variations partly based on and quoting themes from Sinfonietta (in the tradition of Brahms’ Variations on a Theme of Haydn).

    • Variation 1 “Canon” engages that ancient musical technique, evoking Brno’s medieval history.
    • Variation 2 “Overtones” explores two harmonic series, C and Bb, painted over each other in layers of color, with hints of fanfare emerging through the clouds.
    • Variation 3 “Constellations” is a kaleidoscopic succession of large sonorities built on stone-sturdy Perfect Fifth intervals brightened by jazz-like added tones.
    • Variation 4 “Fanfare” is an ostinato pattern-music fantasia on Sinfonietta‘s grand fanfare themes.

    Brno Variations

    Clark 2024 (TC-138)

    ___________