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Vlach Quartet

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TheVlach Quartet (Czech:Vlachovo kvarteto) is the name of two consecutive classicalstring quartetmusical ensembles, based inPrague, both of which were founded by members of the Vlach family. The original Vlach Quartet was founded byJosef Vlach [cs] in 1950 and wound up in 1975.[1][2] In 1982 theNew Vlach Quartet (Czech:Nové Vlachovo kvarteto) was founded by his daughter Jana Vlachova, with guidance her father, and came to be known as theVlach Quartet of Prague (Czech:Vlachovo kvarteto Praha), and is still active as a musical ensemble.[3]

Vlach Quartet

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Josef Vlach (Ratměřice, 8 June 1923 - Linköping, 17 October 1988) was a violinist, conductor and teacher in Prague. He shared the principal violin desk of the Czech Chamber Orchestra (as it existed underVáclav Talich[4]), with Jiri Novak, leader of theSmetana Quartet.[5][6] In 1950 he founded the Vlach Quartet with members of the Orchestra.[5] Over the next 25 years they produced interpretations of classical and Czech literature for string quartet, both in concerts and in recording, for which they had a contract withSupraphon Records. The original Vlach Quartet recordings include Beethoven op. 131, op. 18 nos. 1 & 6, op. 59 no. 1. In 1957 Josef Vlach also re-formed the Czech Chamber Orchestra.[7]

Personnel

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The personnel of the originalVlach Quartet in the period 1950-1975 were:[8]

  • 1st violin -Josef Vlach [cs]
  • 2nd violin -Václav Snítil
  • Viola[9]
    • Soběslav Soukup (1948–1952)
    • Jaroslav Motlík (1952–1954)
    • Josef Koďousek (1954–1975)
    • Jiří Hanzl (from 1970)
  • Cello - Viktor Moučka

The New Vlach Quartet/Vlach Quartet Prague

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The New Vlach Quartet was founded in 1982 by Jana Vlachová, Josef's daughter, who had played in a string quartet from childhood under her father's guidance and won first prize in the Concertino Praga international competition aged 14. She graduated from studies with Marie Hlounová at theAcademy of Performing Arts in Prague (AMU), chose to concentrate on chamber music, and formed a duo with the Swedish cellist Mikael Ericsson in 1977.[10] Ericsson had studied at theRoyal Danish Academy of Music inCopenhagen, attended master-classes byGuy Fallot andGregor Piatigorsky, and studied at the AMU in Prague withJosef Chuchro and Josef Vlach. He also has a recording career as a soloist.[11] Karel Stadtherr, violinist, had performed with theSuk Chamber Orchestra (in contact with Josef Vlach) and wasConcertmaster of the Prague Chamber Orchestra[12] without Conductor. Petr Verner studied solo viola at thePrague Conservatory and at the AMU in Prague with Jiří Zika, Lubomír Malý, Milan Škampa and Jan Pěruška.[13]

They received guidance and mentoring from Josef Vlach, imparting an interpretative tradition from the school ofVáclav Talich, and underwent a course of training by theMelos Quartet of Stuttgart. They expanded the range of the repertoire of the earlier Quartet, both in international scope and in the time-frame represented. They won the prize for best interpretation of a contemporary Czech work at the Czech String Quartet Competition inKroměříž in 1983.[7] Their performance and broadcasts focused both on the classics and on the Czech repertoire, including the works ofAntonín Dvořák,Bedřich Smetana,Leoš Janáček, andBohuslav Martinů. Beginning in 1995, they recorded all ofDvořák's string quartets for theNaxos label. Other recordings include works bySchubert,Haydn,John Fernström, and others, on theNaxos,Marco Polo,Bohemia Music andPanton labels.[14]

The Quartet has performed throughout Europe, including Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Greece, and Luxembourg, and many of their concerts have been broadcast, for instance by theBayerischer Rundfunk, the Südwestrundfunk, Danmarks Radio and Radio France. Czech Television has broadcast documentaries on both the old and the new Vlach Quartets. They have also toured the United States, with an opening concert inNew York City in July 2004. They had a Residency in 1997 inGifu,Japan, and were broadcast byNHK, Japan's principal station. In 2000 they led courses in interpretation at the conservatory inIngesund, Sweden. In 2004 the Vlach Quartet Prague was Quartet-in-Residence in Schengen, Luxembourg.

The Quartet's main collaborations are withMaria Kliegel (cello),Jenö Jandó andIvan Klánský (pianists),Eduard Brunner andDieter Klöcker (clarinet) andMaximilian Mangold (guitar).

The quartet has received a number of prizes, including: an award for the best string quartet among the European competition at the International String Quartet Competition in Portsmouth, England, in 1985; the prize of the Czech Chamber Music Association in 1991; and the prize of the Czech Music Fund for a CD containing string quartets byBedřich Smetana ("From My Life") andLeoš Janáček ("Intimate Letters") in 1992. In October 2000, they also won a Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik for a cpo recording ofEsquisses Hébraïques: Clarinet Quintets on Jewish Themes, withDieter Klöcker.

Personnel

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  • 1st violin - Jana Vlachová
  • 2nd violin
    • Ondřej Kukal (with New Vlach Quartet in recordings ofArriaga quartets 1–3)
    • Karel Stadtherr
  • Viola
    • Peter Verner (1985–2005)[15]
    • Georg Haag (2006–2009 or 2010)
    • Jiří Kabát (since 2010)[7]
  • Cello - Mikael Ericsson

References

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  1. ^Český hudební slovník."Vlachovo kvarteto".www.ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz (in Czech). Retrieved17 November 2021.
  2. ^a.s, SUPRAPHON."Josef Vlach / violin, conductor".supraphon.com. Retrieved17 November 2021.
  3. ^Naxos."Vlach Quartet Prague".www.naxos.com. Retrieved17 November 2021.
  4. ^"Prague Heart of Europe website". Archived fromthe original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved11 November 2008.
  5. ^abČeský hudební slovník."Josef Vlach".www.ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz (in Czech). Retrieved17 November 2021.
  6. ^Zdenek Bruderhans, Article onJiří Tancibudek 1921-2004,Reeding Matter, June 2004, Vol 7 part 2,[1]Archived 19 February 2011 at theWayback Machine
  7. ^abc"Biography".Vlach Quartet Prague. Retrieved5 April 2018.
  8. ^Source:His Master's Voice recording ofDvořák Quartet no. 6 andJanáček no. 2 (ALP 1622), 1958: Supraphon recordings of Dvořák op. 106 (SUA 10172),Josef Suk quartet no. 2 op. 31 (SUA 10818), 1967, and Beethoven op. 18 nos. 1 & 6 (1 11 1106), 1972.
  9. ^Riley, Maurice W. (1991), "The Czechoslovakia Viola School",The History of the Viola, Volume II, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Braun-Brumfield, p. 240
  10. ^Český hudební slovník."Jana Vlachová".www.ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz (in Czech). Retrieved17 November 2021.
  11. ^Český hudební slovník."Mikael Ericsson".www.ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz (in Czech). Retrieved17 November 2021.
  12. ^Český hudební slovník."Karel Stadtherr".www.ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz (in Czech). Retrieved17 November 2021.
  13. ^Dvořák Piano Quartet."Petr Verner".www.dvorakpianoquartet.cz. Retrieved17 November 2021.
  14. ^"Vlach Quartet Prague - Discography [En]". Archived fromthe original on 30 March 2017. Retrieved29 March 2017.
  15. ^"Profile of Petr Verner". Archived fromthe original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved12 November 2008.

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