Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 1982
In a monograph entitled Zdenko Fibich published within a year of the composer's death, the musicologist Zdeněk Nejedlý asked the following question: ‘And who was more versatile than Fibich?’ The answer as far as Nejedlý was concerned was: ‘No one in the whole of the nineteenth century.’ Many of Fibich's contemporaries were quite certain that he occupied a position equal to his more internationally successful colleague Antonín Dvořák. Evidence of his contemporary standing is abundant, and his position in the firmament of Czech composers was characteristically summed up by William Ritter in 1896 when he described Fibich as the ‘Son’ in the ‘Holy Trinity’ of Czech music, in which Smetana was, naturally enough, the ‘Father’ and Dvořák the ‘Holy Spirit’. In an obituary article the critic Emanuel Chvála had no hesitation in putting Fibich next to Dvořák as ‘… the most eminent of our contemporary composers’. Nejedlý's assertion concerning Fibich's versatility is not entirely unworthy of examination. He contributed to many genres and expanded the scope of his theatrical activities with his cultivation of scenic melodrama. As a composer of opera Fibich stood aside from his Czech contemporaries in his deliberate avoidance of folk-orientated material and his compulsive interest in theatrical experiment. His intellectual demeanour led to collaborations with the finest Czech librettists of the time, and a close identification with the views of the aesthetician Otakar Hostinský (1847–1910). Believing strongly in the role of experiment in art, 4 and with a firm commitment to the principles of Wagnerian music drama, Hostinský was an ideal partner for the composer in the opera The Bride of Messina, the work which set the seal upon Fibich's position as an innovative force in Czech musical theatre.
1 Zdeněk Nejedlý, Zdenko Fibich, zakladatel scénického melodrama [Zdenko Fibich, the Founder of Scenic Melodrama] (Prague, 1901), 21.Google Scholar
2 William Ritter, Národní listy (Prague, 8 April 18%); repr. A. Rektorys, Zdeněk Fibich: sborník dokumentß a studií [Zdeněk Fibich: Collection of Documents and Studies] (henceforth AR) (Prague, 1951–2) i, 189–90.Google Scholar
3 Emanuel Chvála, ‘Za Zdeňkem Fibich’ [‘To Zdeněk Fibich’], Národní politika (Prague, 21 October 1900); AR, i, 256–61.Google Scholar
4 Otakar Hostinský, ‘O estetice experimentální [‘Concerning Aesthetic Experiment’], Česká mysl (1900).Google Scholar
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6 Compiled from: V. A. J. Hornové, Čaká zpěvohra [Czech Opera] (Prague, 1903); Jan Němeček, Národní Divadlo v období Karla Kovařovice [The National Theatre in the Time of Karel Kovařovic] (Prague, 1968); The author's own list of repertoire in the Provisional and National Theatres.Google Scholar
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8 Jaroslav Jiránek, Zdeněk Fibich (Prague, 1963), 21.Google Scholar
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12 O. Hostinský, Vzpomínky na Fibicha (Prague, 1909), 8.Google Scholar
13 From MS particelle in the possession of the Museum of Czech Music, formerly in the possession of the National Theatre Archive (N. D. A 54).Google Scholar
14 O. Hostinský, Vzpomínky na Fibicha (Prague, 1909), 9–10.Google Scholar
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24 Zdcněk Fibich, Nevěsta Messinská [The Bride of Messina] (7 May 1882), MS vocal score, sketch, in the possession of the Museum of Czech Music, Tr. B 335.Google Scholar
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39 376 pieces published in four volumes as Nálady, dojmy a upomínky [Moods, Impressions and Reminiscences], op. 41 (1894), op. 44 (1895), op. 47 (1896), op. 57 (1902).Google Scholar
40 John Tyrrell, ‘Fibich, Zdeněk’, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (London, 1980), vi, 520–6.Google Scholar
41 A. Schulzová, op. cit.; repr. AR, ii, 186.Google Scholar
42 Ibid, AR, ii, 188.Google Scholar
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45 Knittl, K., Dalibor, xx, nos. 10–11 (8 January 1898) 71–2; repr. AR, i, 215.Google Scholar