Joško Ćaleta Explained

Joško Ćaleta
Birth Date:2 October 1964
Birth Place:Trogir
Fields:ethnomusicology
Workplaces:Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Research
Education:University of British Columbia
Academy of Music in Zagreb
Alma Mater:Academy of Music in Split
Thesis Title:Music of the Dalmatian hinterland: Interdisciplinary anthropological – ethnomusicological approach to musical practice in a cultural context
Thesis Url:https://repozitorij.dief.eu/a/?pr=i&id=87950
Thesis Year:2012
Doctoral Advisor:Grozdana Marošević
Awards:Josip Andreis prize (2000)
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Joško Ćaleta (2 October 1964) is a Croatian ethnomusicologist, music pedagogue, conductor, composer, record producer and klapa singer.[1] [2]

He is a member of the Croatian Composers' Society and the Croatian Ethnological Society.

Early life and education

Born in Trogir in 1964, Ćaleta graduated music education at the Academy of Music in Split in 1988, with thesis Problems in interpreting contemporary music when working with amateur ensembles.[3] He received Master of Arts title in 1994 with thesis Social and musical structure of the klapa singing style, Dalmatia and Vancouver at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver,[4] under the mentorship of prof. Alan Thrasher.[3] Since 1997, he works at the Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Research in Zagreb.[1] [2] Ćaleta received his doctorate degree in 2012 at the Academy of Music, University of Zagreb with thesis Music of the Dalmatian hinterland: Interdisciplinary anthropological – ethnomusicological approach to musical practice in a cultural context.[5]

Career

He started singing in 1979 in Klapa Trogir. Ćaleta described his beginnings with klapa in article from 1997: After he received further music education at the Music academy in Split, he became conductor of the klapa (1985–1989).[6] Ćaleta also directed klapas "Radovan" and "Kairos", as well as "Zvonimir" (1989–1997),[3] composed of Croatian Canadians in Vancouver. Under his guidance, "Zvonimir" was winner of the best ethnic choir award in Canada in 1994 and 1996.[1] [2] [6]

Following his return to Croatia, he conducted klapas "Omiš", "Nostalgija", "Jelsa", "Sagena" and "Dišpet".[6] He is record producer of around twenty music albums dedicated to klapa and other types of traditional singing in Croatia, six of which earned Croatian discographic award Porin (recorded by klapas "Nostalgija" and "Dišpet").[3] He is a member of professional, advisory and evaluation commissions, fairs and festivals throughout Croatia (International Folklore Fair, Pasionska baština), among others, klapa events: Dalmatian klapa Festival in Omiš, Večeri dalmatinske pisme in Kaštel Kambelovac, KiKfest in Buzet, Školjka in Pakoštane and higher lecturer in studies of ethnology and cultural anthropology at the University of Zadar.[3]

Since 2001, Ćaleta is collaborating with National Folk Dance Ensemble of Croatia LADO as composer, vocal pedagogue and conductor. In 2008, he founded the Kantaduri ensemble, specialized in performing traditional vocal music of southern Croatia, the Adriatic and Dinaric cultural areas. Of particular note is the collaboration with Katarina Livljanić and the Dialogos ensemble from Paris, which resulted in the musical works Dalmatica (a work inspired by medieval church music in southern Croatia) and Okamejeni glasi (Heretical angels — a musical work inspired by the stećci and the religious heritage of medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina).[3]

Awards and honours

Selected works

Books

Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www2.umbc.edu/MA/index/number9/caleta/cal_bio.htm Joško Caleta
  2. https://www.ief.hr/en/researchers/josko-caleta/ Joško Ćaleta, PhD
  3. http://www.hds.hr/clan/caleta-josko/ Ćaleta, Joško
  4. Joško. Ćaleta. Social and musical structure of the klapa singing style, Dalmatia and Vancouver. 1994. 10.14288/1.0099089.
  5. https://repozitorij.dief.eu/a/?pr=i&id=87950 Glazbovanje dalmatinskog zaleđa: Interdisciplinarni antropološko – etnomuzikološki pristup glazbenoj praksi u kulturnom kontekstu
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20080421152741/http://www.fdk.hr/skladatelji/caleta.html Joško Ćaleta