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Otomar Kvěch
Otomar Kvěch
Czech music educator, composer and university educator
1
Paul Creston
Paul Creston
American composer
2
Jiří Gemrot
Jiří Gemrot
Czech composer, radio executive, and record producer
3
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
German composer
4
Marcel Mihalovici
Marcel Mihalovici
French composer
5
Jaroslav Křička
Jaroslav Křička
Czech conductor, music educator and composer
6
Karel Ančerl
Karel Ančerl
Czech conductor, composer and director conductor of Czech Philharmonic
7
Ragnar Søderlind
Ragnar Søderlind
Norwegian composer
8
Lodewijk Mortelmans
Lodewijk Mortelmans
Belgian composer
9
John Harbison
John Harbison
American composer
10
Roger Nixon
Roger Nixon
American composer
11
Ernst Toch
Ernst Toch
Austrian composer
12
Robert Ward
Robert Ward
American composer
Ladislav Vycpálek
Czech composer

Ladislav Vycpálek

Intro
Czech composer
Awards Received
Národní umělec
Meritorious Artist
Music
Ladislav Vycpalek, before 1931

Ladislav Vycpálek (Vršovice, Prague, 23 February 1882 – Prague, 9 January 1969) was a Czech composer and violist.

Vycpálek studied composition under Vítězslav Novák. However, he very soon found his own expressive style. He mainly composed vocal and choral works. Prior to World War I, he occupied himself with setting Czech and German symbolist poetry to music, then he drew inspiration from folk poetry. After the war, he turned towards a more humanistic philosophical reflection, creating three well-known cantatas: Cantata of the Last Things of Man (Kantáta o posledních věcech člověka, 1920–22), Blessed Be Man (Blahoslavený člověk ten, 1933), and the Czech Requiem (České requiem, 1940).