František Bartoš (other)
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František Bartoš (other)
František Bartoš may refer to: *František Bartoš (composer) (1905–1973), Czech composer, music critic, and musicologist *František Bartoš (folklorist) František Bartoš (16 March 1837 – 11 June 1906) was a Czechs, Czech ethnomusicologist, folklorist, folksong collector and dialectologist. He is viewed as the successor of František Sušil, the pioneer of Moravian ethnomusicology. He notably o ... (1837–1906), Moravian folksong collector and dialectologist * František Bartoš (motorcyclist) (1926–1987), Czech Grand Prix motorcycle road racer {{hndis, Bartos, Frantisek ...
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František Bartoš (composer)
František Bartoš (13 June 1905, Brněnec – 21 May 1973, Prague) was a Czech composer, music critic, musicologist and writer. He studied music composition with Karel Boleslav Jirák and Jaroslav Křička at the Prague Conservatory from 1921 through 1925. After this he participated in multiple masterclasses with the composer Josef Bohuslav Foerster. He wrote music criticism for ''Tempo'' magazine from 1935 to 1938 and again from 1946 to 1948. As a musicologist he published several scholarly works on Bedřich Smetana, and also wrote on other Czech composers and on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 1756 – 5 December 1791) was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. Despite his short life, his rapid pace of composition and proficiency from an early age .... As a composer his best known works are ''String Quartet no.2, op.10'' (1935), the orchestral suite ''Měšťák šlechticem'' (1937), and ''Rozhlas ...
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František Bartoš (folklorist)
František Bartoš (16 March 1837 – 11 June 1906) was a Czechs, Czech ethnomusicologist, folklorist, folksong collector and dialectologist. He is viewed as the successor of František Sušil, the pioneer of Moravian ethnomusicology. He notably organized the collecting, categorizing and editing of hundreds of Moravian folksongs which were published is a four volume collection along with about 4,000 folksongs from other ethnic traditions. The folksongs appear in ethnographic monographs and the work as a whole is viewed as one of the most important folk song collections ever published. However, Bartoš, like many other early European folk music scholars, sometimes changed the texts of the folk songs, thereby reducing the documentary value of the work. Born in Mladcová near Zlín, Bartoš was educated at the Gymnasium (school), Gymnasium in Olomouc and at the University of Vienna. In 1864 he became a schoolteacher in Strážnice, later taking teaching positions in Olomouc, Těšín, ...
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