Vladimír Soukup Explained

Vladimír Soukup (20 February 1930 – 3 March 2012) was a Czech post-romantic composer.

Biography

Vladimír Soukup was born in Prague,[1] capital of the Czech Republic. He first studied privately the composition with, then in 1955 he studied with composer Jaroslav Řídký at the Prague Academy of Performing Arts. His output can be divided in two main categories. Regarding "absolute" music, orchestral and chamber music has always been Soukup's main concern. In particular he wrote during his whole career a large number of sonatas and concertos for various instruments. Apart from the Concerto for Trombone, Strings and Timpani (1967), written for Miloslav Hejda, all his concertos and sonatas have not been composed for specific performers, but include specific features of the techniques of each instrument. So, although virtuosic, they are relatively easy to play. This part of Soukup's output also includes four symphonies and several shorter orchestral and chamber compositions.From the 1970s, a second trend began in Soukup's output with the composition of many stage works (operas, ballets) and choral/vocal works. Nearly all of them (cantatas, cycles of songs, works for choir) are based on Czech texts and poems.All of these compositions, ranging from the post-romantic style to a more modernist (but still tonal/melodic) one, are overall expressionistic, written in an always dramatic mood. His works have been compared to Prokofiev, Martinů, Honegger and Bartók. A published piano reduction score of his Piano Concerto is held in the Gorno Music Library at the college-Conservatory of Music, The University of Cincinnati (Ohio, USA). In the same library are typeset librettos and typeset piano scores of his opera Susy in Bath, plus a published score and parts for his Trio for Violin, Cello and Piano. Soukup told: "I want to attract contemporary listener not by sound effects or technical experiment, but by convincing emotional confession."[2] Vladimír Soukup died on 3 March 2012, aged 82.

Works

The following lists show all his compositions in the genre symphony, and selected works in the other genres.

Symphonies

Concertos

Chamber and Instrumental Works

Stage Works (Operas, Ballets and Musical Plays)

Vocal and Choral Works (Cantatas, Cycles of Songs and Choruses)

Sources

Notes and References

  1. http://composers-classical-music.com/s/SoukupVladimir.htm Vladimír Soukup on Composers-classical-music.com
  2. http://www.musica.cz/en/composers/show?itemId=148 Vladimír Soukup on the Czech Music Information Centre
  3. http://gulabin.com/composers/pdf/VLADIMIR%20SOUKUP.pdf Vladimír Soukup on Gulabin.com
  4. https://www.baerenreiter.com/fileadmin/Domain/User/Download_Allgemein/Werbemittel/deutsch/SPA098_KOK_web.pdf Kassel Orchestral Catalogue, 2005/06
  5. http://gulabin.com/composers/pdf/VLADIMIR%20SOUKUP.pdf Vladimír Soukup on Gulabin.com
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=qmHjixiWjhUC&dq=vladimir+soukup+1930&pg=PA666 Maurice Hinson & Wesley Roberts : "The Piano in Chamber Ensemble : An Annotated Guide", Second Edition, p. 149
  7. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/7253108 Score on Worldcat.org
  8. https://www.amazon.com/Miami-Wind-Quintet-Gustav-Mahler/dp/B001HDW9QM Edited on CD "Oxford", 1991, performed by the Miami Wind Quintet, ASIN : B001HDW9QM
  9. http://www.apimusic.org/city-lights-clone.html Score of the work
  10. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/62999673 Score on Worldcat.org
  11. http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/sonata-for-bb-clarinet-and-piano-sheet-music/19825311 Score of the work
  12. http://www.musica.cz/en/composers/show?itemId=148 Vladimír Soukup on the Czech Music Information Centre
  13. https://books.google.com/books?id=qM_eTHCjh2IC&dq=vladimir+soukup+sonata+clarinet&pg=PA1988-IA6 Phillip Rehfeldt : "New Directions for Clarinet", Revised Edition, 1994
  14. http://gulabin.com/composers/pdf/VLADIMIR%20SOUKUP.pdf Vladimír Soukup on Gulabin.com