Supraphon
381 products
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Beethoven & Reicha: Piano Concertos
$26.99CDSupraphon
Feb 13, 2026SU4359-2 -
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Bohuslav Martinu: Violin Concertos; Stravinsky: Divertimento
Haas, Shostakovich, Vasks, & Novak: Inscape – Alinde Quinte
Karel Husa: Music for Wind Quintet - Belfiato Quintet
Shostakovich & Prokofiev: Violin Concertos
Vitezslav Novak: Complete String Quartets
Bohuslav Martinu: String Quartets 2, 3, 5 & 7
Bohuslav Martinu: The Complete Works for Cello and Piano
Mussorgsky, Scriabin & Rachmaninoff: Piano Works
Suk, Martinu & Fiser: Works for Violin & Piano
J.S. Bach, Berio & Boulez: Music for Solo Clarinet
Konrad Ragossnig - Spanish Guitar Recital
Beethoven & Reicha: Piano Concertos
Corelli & Handel: Sonatas - Michaela Koudelkova
Alois Haba: The Complete Piano Works - Miroslav Beinhauer
Lovro von Matacic & Czech Philharmonic Orchestra - Beethoven
Jan Dismas Zelenka: Lacrimae
Pilgrimage - Musical Journey of Krystof Harant to Jerusalem
Tuma: Vesperae
Strauss: Tag und Nacht - Vier Letzte Lieder & Songs with Pia
Smetana: Symphonic Works
Smetana & Schubert: Piano Trios
Haydn, Mozart, Dittersdorf & Vanhal: An Evening in Vienna 17
Losy & Weiss: Lute Music in Prague & Vienna Circa 1700
Dvorak, Smetana, Suk & Ostrcil: Music for Prague
The story of the Prague Symphony Orchestra is closely related to the history of the Czech capital, which leaves an impression on their repertoire. After their successful recording of Karel Husa’s Music for Prague 1968 (Supraphon, 2021), the orchestra and its chief conductor are coming up with another album dedicated to Prague. This time, the program is focused on the late 19th century, i.e. the period when the Czech nation fought for its language, culture, and identity within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The backbone of the record is Suk’s monumental symphonic poem Praga, based on the Hussite chorale, “Ktož jsú Boží bojovníci” (Ye Who Are Warriors of God); Vyšehrad from Smetana’s famous cycle Má vlast (My Country); and a rarity: Pohádka o Šemíku (A Tale of Šemík), which is a largely unknown symphonic poem based on an ancient Czech legend connected with Vyšehrad, by Otakar Ostrcil, composed when he was nineteen. And of course, there is Antonín Dvorák. In hardly any work of his is Dvorák as explicitly patriotic as in his overture My Home (which is not very well known either). It is based on the theme of the popular song “Kde domov muj,” which later became the Czech national anthem. Another rarity of this album is Dvorák’s fanfare for the opening of the National Jubilee Exhibition in Prague. After their acclaimed recording of the composer’s Slavonic Dances, the Prague Symphony Orchestra confirm that the Czech repertoire of late Romanticism is their native and most natural language. The romantic and legendary city of Prague on a record of the Prague Symphony Orchestra.
