Slavko Osterc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Slavko Osterc in the 1930s

Slavko Osterc (17 June 1895 – 23 May 1941), was a Slovenian composer.

Osterc was born in Veržej. He studied under Emerik Beran, who was a pupil of Leoš Janáček, in his youth before attending the Prague Conservatory from 1925 to 1927. While there he studied under Karel Boleslav Jirák, Vítězslav Novák, and Alois Hába. Osterc was a professor at the Ljubljana Conservatory for much of his career, remaining there until his death. He was much the leading composer of Slovenia in the 1930s, as Marij Kogoj had been in the 1920s.[1] One of his pupils was Pavel Šivic.

Works[]

Note: This list is incomplete.

Operas
Ballets
  • Iz Satanovega Dnevnika (From Satan's Diary, 1924)
  • Maska rdeče smrti (The Masque of the Red Death, 1930)
  • Illusions (1938–40)
Orchestral
  • The Baptism on the Savica (symphonic picture, 1921)
  • Bagatelles (1922)
  • Symphony (1922)
  • Suite (1929)
  • Concerto for Orchestra (1932)
  • Ouverture classique (1932)
  • Concerto (1933)
  • Passacaglia and Chorale (1934)
  • Danses (1935)
  • Mouvements symphoniques (1936)
  • 4 pieces symphoniques (1938–39)
  • Mati (Mother; symphonic poem, 1940)
Other

References[]

  1. ^ Vlado Kotnik - Opera, power and ideology: anthropological study of a national art 2010 -p97 "The interwar generation of Slovenian opera composers was characterized by an eclectic range of styles, from Romanticism to modernism. The 1920s were dominated by the Expressionist composer Marij Kogoj,60 a pupil of Schoenberg and the 1930s.. Slavko Osterc"

Further reading[]

  • Don Randel, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard, 1996, p. 656.

External links[]


Retrieved from ""