FrantiÃ
¡ek Jan Ã
 kroup (; 3 June 1801 in Osice near Hradec Králové â 7 February 1862 in Rotterdam) was a Czech composer and conductor. His brother Jan Nepomuk Ã
 kroup was also a successful composer and his father, Dominik Ã
 kroup, and other brother Ignác Ã
 kroup were lesser known composers.
Biography
At the age of eleven he moved to Prague where he supported himself as a choir boy and flautist. He continued his schooling at one of the most important Czech national revival movement centres, Hradec Králové, where he was a choirboy at the cathedral. While there he studied with the local choirmaster and composer Franz Volkert. He later moved back to Prague to study at the university. He became a fairly successful opera and singspiel composer producing more than a dozen stage works. Among Ã
 kroup's part-time jobs was organist at the "Temple of the Israelite Society for Regulated Worship," known since the late nineteen-forties as the "Spanish synagogue." His last position was as the musical director of the German opera in Dutch Rotterdam. He died there and, as a person without means, was buried in a mass grave. He also produced an oratorio, a mass, and a few other sacred works. He is best remembered today as the author of the melody for the Czech national anthem "Kde domov mÃ
¯j?".
Works
From 1827 Ã
 kroup was a conductor at the Estates Theatre in Prague. There he led the Czech premières of many famous works by composers such as Richard Wagner. Ã
 kroup's oeuvre consists mainly of Czech and German opera which gained significant local popularity.
Opera, Singspiel and Incidental Music
- DrátenÃÂk, Singspiel in 2 Acts (1825); libretto by ; Ã
 kroup sang the title role. DrátenÃÂk is considered the first Czech opera.
- Der Nachtschatten, Singspiel (1827); libretto C.J. Schikaneder
- OldÃ
Âich a BoÃ
¾ena (OldÃ
Âich and BoÃ
¾ena), Opera (1828); German title: Uldarich und BoÃ
¾ena (1833); libretto by Josef Krasoslav Chmelenský
- Der Prinz und die Schlange (The Prince and the Snake, or Amor in the Amazon) (1829); Czech title: Princ a had neb Amor mezi Amazonkami (1835)
- Bratrovrah, Biblical Melodrama (1831); libretto by Jan Nepomuk Ã
 tÃÂpánek
- Die Drachenhöhle (1832)
- FidlovaÃÂka aneb Ã
½Ã¡dný hnÃÂv a Ã
¾Ã¡dná rvaÃÂka (FidlovaÃÂka, or No Anger and No Brawl), Folk Scenes of Prague Life with Song and Dance (1834); play by Josef Kajetán Tyl; includes "Kde domov mÃ
¯j?"
- LibuÃ
¡in sÃ
Âatek (LibuÃ
¡e's Marriage) (libretto by Josef Krasoslav Chmelenský, 1835, rewritten 1850)
- ÃÂestmÃÂr (1835); incidental music to the historical drama
- PouÃ
Â¥ k chrámu umÃÂnà(Pilgrimage to the Temple of Art) (1846)
- The Spectre's Bride
- DrahomÃÂra, Opera (première 20 November 1848); German libretto by V.A. Svoboda-Návarovský
- Ã
½iÃ
¾kova smrt (Ã
½iÃ
¾ka's Death) (1850); incidental music to the historical drama by Josef JiÃ
ÂàKolár
- Der Meergeuse (The Sea Geus), Romantic Opera in 3 Acts (1851); libretto by Johann Carl Hickel; premièred in 2003 at the Estates Theatre in Prague; Czech title: MoÃ
Âský geus
- Don César a spanilá Magelona (Don Cesar and the Comely Magolena), Incidental Music (1852)
- Columbus, Opera in 3 Acts (1855); original German libretto by Josef Krasoslav Chmelenský; Czech version premièred on 3 February 1942 with libretto translated by FrantiÃ
¡ek Pujman
Orchestral
- Chrudimská ouvertura (Chrudim Overture) (1854); overture for the opening of the municipal theatre in Chrudim, Czech Republic
Chamber music
- String Quartet No. 1 in F major, Op. 24
- String Quartet No. 2 in C minor, Op. 25
- String Quartet No. 3 in G major, Op. 29
- Trio for Clarinet (or Violin), Cello and Piano, Op.27
- Trio facile in F Major for Violin (or Flute), Cello and Piano, Op.28
- Trio facile for Violin (or Flute), Cello and Piano, Op.30
Piano
- Polonaise
- Deutsche Tänze (1824)
Vocal
- VÃÂnec ze zpÃÂvÃ
¯ vlasteneckých uvitý a obÃÂtovaný dÃÂvkám vlastenským (Wreath of Patriotic Songs Collected for and Dedicated to Patriotic Girls) (1835âÂÂ1839); 5 volumes edited by Ã
 kroup and Chmelenský
- Dobrou noc (Good Night) for Horn, Voice and Harp (or Piano); words by Josef Krasoslav Chmelenský
- PÃÂseÃ
 spoleÃÂnÃÂ; words by FrantiÃ
¡ek ÃÂelakovský; Both songs are included in VÃÂnec ze zpÃÂvÃ
¯ vlasteneckých uvitý a obÃÂtovaný dÃÂvkám vlastenským.
- VÃÂnec (1843-1844), second part
References
External links