2026
Jak hebrejskou duchovní hudbu proměnil skladatel Max Bruch v romantické hudební dílo (rozhovor)
SPURNÝ, LubomírZákladní údaje
Originální název
Jak hebrejskou duchovní hudbu proměnil skladatel Max Bruch v romantické hudební dílo (rozhovor)
Název česky
Jak hebrejskou duchovní hudbu proměnil skladatel Max Bruch v romantické hudební dílo (rozhovor)
Název anglicky
How Composer Max Bruch Transformed Hebrew Sacred Music into a Romantic Musical Work (Interview)
Autoři
Vydání
online. Praha, Epoch Times, od s. n/a, 2026
Další údaje
Typ výsledku
Popularizační texty a aktivity
Obor
60500 6.5 Other Humanities and the Arts
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Odkazy
Označené pro přenos do RIV
Ne
Organizační jednotka
Filozofická fakulta
Klíčová slova česky
Max Bruch; Kol Nidrei; hebrejská hudba; synagogální hudba; romantická hudba; violoncello a orchestr; židovská liturgie; Robert Hausmann
Klíčová slova anglicky
Max Bruch; Kol Nidrei; Hebrew music; synagogue music; Romantic music; cello and orchestra; Jewish liturgy; Robert Hausmann
Změněno: 13. 3. 2026 22:38, prof. PhDr. Lubomír Spurný, Ph.D.
V originále
The text discusses the origins and musical character of Kol Nidrei, Op. 47 by the German composer Max Bruch. This composition for cello and orchestra was written in 1880 during Bruch’s tenure as music director of the Liverpool Philharmonic Society and is based on the melody of the Jewish synagogue prayer Kol Nidrei sung on the eve of Yom Kippur. In the interview, Professor Lubomír Spurný explains the historical context of the work, Bruch’s interest in Hebrew musical traditions, and the influence of his teacher Ferdinand Hiller and the Berlin cantor Abraham Jacob Lichtenstein, who introduced him to synagogue melodies. The text also discusses the role of the cellist Robert Hausmann, for whom the composition was written. Bruch transformed Jewish liturgical material through the harmonic and orchestral language of late Romantic music, creating a work that combines synagogue tradition with the aesthetic principles of nineteenth-century European music. Kol Nidrei has since become one of the most expressive and enduring works in the cello repertoire.
Anglicky
The text discusses the origins and musical character of Kol Nidrei, Op. 47 by the German composer Max Bruch. This composition for cello and orchestra was written in 1880 during Bruch’s tenure as music director of the Liverpool Philharmonic Society and is based on the melody of the Jewish synagogue prayer Kol Nidrei sung on the eve of Yom Kippur. In the interview, Professor Lubomír Spurný explains the historical context of the work, Bruch’s interest in Hebrew musical traditions, and the influence of his teacher Ferdinand Hiller and the Berlin cantor Abraham Jacob Lichtenstein, who introduced him to synagogue melodies. The text also discusses the role of the cellist Robert Hausmann, for whom the composition was written. Bruch transformed Jewish liturgical material through the harmonic and orchestral language of late Romantic music, creating a work that combines synagogue tradition with the aesthetic principles of nineteenth-century European music. Kol Nidrei has since become one of the most expressive and enduring works in the cello repertoire.