Proksch

Bedřich Smetana: Collection [8CDs] (2023)  Music

Posted by ArlegZ at April 11, 2024
Bedřich Smetana: Collection [8CDs] (2023)

Bedřich Smetana: Collection [8CDs] (2023)
XLD | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 2.4 Gb | Total time: 09:37:00 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Brilliant Classics | # 96909 | Recorded: 1962-2013

The most complete collection available of music by the father of Czech nationalism in music. Má Vlast, The Bartered Bride and the String Quartet ‘From My Life’: all written within a decade of each other, all so fundamental in their different genres in forming a Czech national identity in music that it can seem incredible they were the work of a single composer.

Reforming the European Union : realizing the impossible  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by insetes at April 14, 2024
Reforming the European Union : realizing the impossible

Reforming the European Union : realizing the impossible By Daniel Finke, Thomas König, Sven-Oliver Proksch, George Tsebelis
2012 | 227 Pages | ISBN: 0691153922 | PDF | 5 MB
Roberto Plano - Bedrich Smetana: Piano Music, Album Leaves and Sketches (2014)

Roberto Plano - Bedřich Smetana: Piano Music, Album Leaves and Sketches (2014)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 269 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 180 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Brilliant Classics | # 94788 | Time: 01:16:39

This will be quite a discovery for those who know the music of Bedrich Smetana only through his grand and nationalistic cycle of tone-poems, Ma Vlast, even if they are yet familiar with his more painfully intimate string quartets or his folkloristic operas. For Smetana, like most composers, needed to eat; and to do so he was happy to make his own contribution towards satisfying the seemingly insatiable appetite of the bourgeois 19th-century public for piano music that they could perform at home. Music of no great difficulty but boundless charm, these miniatures are now seldom heard and even less often recorded, and this is a shame, for works such as the Op.3 Characteristic Pieces show how the pianistic extroversion of Brahms and Liszt (who was a great admirer and supporter of the young Smetana, giving him valuable introductions to publishers) could be adapted to a domestic context, and with the particular inflection of Czech and Bohemian character, derived not only from simple and song-like melodies but also irregularly stressed dance-rhythms that the young Italian pianist Roberto Plano relishes to the full on this welcome new survey.