Psohlavci (opera)
Psohlavci is a Czech-language opera in 3 acts by Karel Kovařovic to a libretto by Karel Šípek after Psohlavci (The Dogheads) by Alois Jirásek. It premiered 24 April 1898, at the Prague National Theatre.[1][2]
Cast
- Hančí
- Jan Sladký-Kozina
- Kryštof Hrubý
- Matěj Přibek
- Stará Kozinová
Recordings
- Drahomíra Tikalová, Beno Blachut, Václav Bednář, Marie Veselá, Vladimír Jedenáctík, Oldřich Kovář, Zdeněk Otava, Miluše Dvořáková Prague National Theatre Orchestra, Prague National Theatre Chorus, František Dyk 1961
gollark: Congratulations!
gollark: Modern high-core-count Intel CPUs will *happily* use hundreds of watts if the configuration allows it.
gollark: Daylight saving time: because if someone is unhappy with how their work hours line up with sunlight or something, the obvious solution is to meddle with the fabric of time itself and cause untold hundreds of issues in computer programs everywhere.
gollark: That sounds about as sensible as daylight saving time.
gollark: There are quite a lot of laws *in general*, enough that you can't practically know what they all are.
References
- The Musical Times - Volume 60 - Page 595 1919 It immediately recognised 'Psohlavci ' as something large, forceful, and passionately human; something_ true and lasting of which it would not easily tire. Every time the opera is announced the Narodni Divadlo is packed from stalls to gallery.
- The New Penguin Opera Guide 2001- p467 The 'Dogheads' of the title are the Czechs of Chodsko, a border region whose emblem is a dog's head. The Habsburgs' attempt to deny their ancient privileges (received for defending the border) sparked off their rebellion in 1695.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.