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Brno Conservatory

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The Brno Conservatory , also Brno Conservatoire ( Czech : Konzervatoř Brno ), was established in Brno on 25 September 1919 by Moravian composer Leoš Janáček .

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7-630: Leoš Janáček attempted to establish and improve high musical education in Brno from his early age. In 1881, he founded the Organ School , however, it was just the beginning of his efforts in this field. The conservatory was established by joining the Organ School, music school of Beseda brněnská , and music school of Vesna (women's educational association based in Brno). Initially, it was situated in

14-407: A "greek villa", on the corner of the streets of Smetanova and Kounicova. It was the former seat of the Organ School (from 1907). Janáček was the first director of the conservatory, but the school gained its current seat only during the directorship of his successor, Jan Kunc . The building of the conservatory was designed in 1899 in the style of Neo-Renaissance by German Wanderley. It was the seat of

21-604: The Brno Philharmonic Orchestra . Jan Kunc Jan Kunc (27 March 1883, Doubravice nad Svitavou – 11 September 1976, Brno ) was a Czech composer, teacher, and writer. From 1898 to 1902 Kunc attended the teachers' college in Brno, as well as the Organ School (1901–3) where his teacher was the composer Leoš Janáček . He studied composition with Vítězslav Novák at the Prague Conservatory from 1905 to 1906. From 1919 until 1945, he

28-613: The German Teachers Institute, founded by the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria . The commemorate plaque at the building reads: „Kaiser Franz Josef I. widmete dieses Haus der Bildung von Volksschullehrern 1872." ("The Emperor Franz Josef I dedicated this house to build the public teaching 1872"). During the period of German occupation of Czechoslovakia , the school became an important centre of Czech and Moravian cultural tradition. Jan Kunc remained

35-422: The conservatory from 1946. The department was separated and became independent in 1986. As of 2011, Brno Conservatory has classes for all instruments of the standard symphony orchestra . Additionally, the school provides teaching of guitar , accordion , cimbalom , recorder , composition , conducting and singing . Brno Conservatory regularly organizes concerts and theatre performances and collaborates with

42-408: The director until 1945. Other important directors include pianist and musicologist Ludvík Kundera and music theorist and composer Zdeněk Blažek . From 1919 to 1928, Brno Conservatory had two masterclasses intended for composers and pianists. The official status of the school was lower than university level, however, the quality of the courses was reasonably good. The dance department was a part of

49-481: Was a professor at the Brno Conservatory , becoming director of that institution in 1923. Kunc composed music for piano, chamber music, mixed choir, and solo vocal, as well as symphonic poems. In 1933 he composed a new setting of the traditional chant Christus vincit, Christus regnat, Christus imperat which became the interval signal for Vatican Radio , and in 1935 he created the official arrangement of

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