In the Mists

In the Mists (Czech: V mlhách) is a piano cycle by Czech composer Leoš Janáček, the last of his more substantial solo works for the instrument. It was composed in 1912, some years after Janáček had suffered the death of his daughter Olga and while his operas were still being rejected by the Prague opera houses. All four parts of the cycle are largely written in "misty" keys with five or six flats; characteristic of the cycle are the frequent changes of meter. Czech musicologist Jiří Zahrádka compared the atmosphere of the cycle to impressionist works, in particular those of Claude Debussy.[1] The première took place on 7 December 1913, when Marie Dvořáková played it at a concert organized by the choral society Moravan in Kroměříž.[2]

In the Mists
Piano cycle by Leoš Janáček
The composer in 1914
Native nameCzech: V mlhách
Composed1912 (1912)
Performed7 December 1913 (1913-12-07)
Duration15 minutes
Movements4

On January 24, 1914, the cycle had its first public performance at the third concert of the Organ School in Brno by pianist Marie Dvořáková, teacher of the school.[3]

Structure

The cycle consists of four parts:

  1. Andante
  2. Molto adagio
  3. Andantino
  4. Presto

A typical performance of the complete work runs 14 to 15 minutes in length.

Manuscript version

After intensive studies of various sources, the German pianist Lars David Kellner published the first version of In the Mists on his 2013 Janacek album (The complete original works for piano), using Janacek's original manuscript.

Notes

  1. Zahrádka (2005), p. VII
  2. Kundera (1993), p. VII
  3. Kundera (1993), p. VII

References

  • Zahrádka, Jiří (preface): Janáček, Leoš: V mlhách. Urtext. Praha: Editio Bärenreiter Praha, 2005. BA 9500
  • Kundera, Ludvík (Introduction): Janáček, Leoš: V mlhách. Urtext. Praha: Editio Bärenreiter Supraphon Praha, 1993. H 6070/5

Arrangements

  1. Arrangement suitable for: piano
    • arrangement for: cello and harp
    • arrangement by: Dan Reiter
    • performed by: vlc Dan Reiter, har Natalie Cox
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.