Difference between revisions of "Battle of Prague"

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(a start - much more to come)
 
(Koczwara piece from which dance tunes derive)
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'''Battle of Prague'''
 
'''Battle of Prague'''
  
March which appears in the manuscripts of both [[John Clare]] ([[Northamptonshire]]) and [[John Moore (Shropshire|John Moore]] ([[Shropshire]]).
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Instrumental suite composed by František Kocžwara (Franz Kotzwara), a Bohemian instrumentalist and composer c1750 - 1791, who spent much of his musical career in England.
  
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:"Though it commemorated a much earlier event (1757), Kocžwara’s ''The Battle of Prague'' was first published while he was in Dublin about 1788. It had phenomenal success and was widely reprinted in London, the USA and on the Continent (nearly 40 issues have survived). First published with accompaniments, it also became a standard parlour piece for solo piano and in Boston it was ‘indespensable to climax every concert’. Appearing shortly before widespread political upheaval in Europe, it served as the model for a host of imitations describing Napoleonic engagements." <br /><br />Ronald R. Kidd, "Kocžwara, František" [[Grove Music Online]], http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/15244
  
[[Image:BoPrague JClare.jpg|Battle of Prague March - John Clare MSS]]
 
  
[[Category: Tune]]
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The suite contains a fast section which appears as [[Quickstep in the Battle of Prague]] in the manuscript of [[John Clare]] ([[Northamptonshire]]); and a [[Battle of Prague (March)|March]] which appears in the manuscripts of both John Clare and [[John Moore (Shropshire|John Moore]] ([[Shropshire]]).

Revision as of 17:16, 10 April 2009

Battle of Prague

Instrumental suite composed by František Kocžwara (Franz Kotzwara), a Bohemian instrumentalist and composer c1750 - 1791, who spent much of his musical career in England.

"Though it commemorated a much earlier event (1757), Kocžwara’s The Battle of Prague was first published while he was in Dublin about 1788. It had phenomenal success and was widely reprinted in London, the USA and on the Continent (nearly 40 issues have survived). First published with accompaniments, it also became a standard parlour piece for solo piano and in Boston it was ‘indespensable to climax every concert’. Appearing shortly before widespread political upheaval in Europe, it served as the model for a host of imitations describing Napoleonic engagements."

Ronald R. Kidd, "Kocžwara, František" Grove Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/15244




The suite contains a fast section which appears as Quickstep in the Battle of Prague in the manuscript of John Clare (Northamptonshire); and a March which appears in the manuscripts of both John Clare and John Moore (Shropshire).