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Iva Bittová
Iva Bittová
Czech musician, and actor
1
Evan Ziporyn
Evan Ziporyn
American composer
2
Marek Štryncl
Marek Štryncl
Czech conductor and violoncellist
3
Håvard Gimse
Håvard Gimse
Norwegian pianist
4
Franco Alfano
Franco Alfano
Italian composer and pianist
5
Andrej Šeban
Andrej Šeban
Slovak jazz fusion guitarist
6
Camargo Guarnieri
Camargo Guarnieri
Brazilian composer
7
Alan Rawsthorne
Alan Rawsthorne
British composer
8
Wilhelm Backhaus
Wilhelm Backhaus
pianist
9
Alexander Moyzes
Alexander Moyzes
Slovak composer (1906–1984)
10
Edvard Grieg
Edvard Grieg
Norwegian composer and pianist
11
Alun Hoddinott
Alun Hoddinott
Welsh composer
12
Ernst Toch
Ernst Toch
Austrian composer
13
Grażyna Bacewicz
Grażyna Bacewicz
Polish composer, violinist
14
Tolib Shakhidi
Tolib Shakhidi
Soviet composer
15
Peter Maxwell Davies
Peter Maxwell Davies
English composer and conductor
16
Nikolai Myaskovsky
Nikolai Myaskovsky
Russian composer
Vladimír Godár
Slovak composer

Vladimír Godár

Intro
Slovak composer
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Vladimír Godár (born 16 March 1956, Bratislava) is a Slovak composer who is active in the fields of contemporary classical music and film music. He is also known for his collaboration with the Czech violinist, singer and composer Iva Bittová. As an academic, he is a writer, editor and translator of books on historical music research. He has been active in reviving the music and reputation of 19th Century Slovak composer Ján Levoslav Bella.

He studied composition under Juraj Pospíšil and piano under Mária Masariková at the Bratislava Conservatory. In 1979 he began work as editor of the music books department of OPUS, and he taught at the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava from 1985.

His work is little known outside Slovakia, but much of his music has been released by Slovart Records. Amongst his compositions is a large scale sonata for cello dedicated to the memory of Victor Shklovsky.

He won the 2001 Georges Delerue Award for the score of the film Landscape.

His collection of essays "Heretical Quodlibets" is scheduled to be published in English by Dalkey Archive Press in December 2020 in its "Eastern European Literature" series.