Ľubica Čekovská

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Ľubica Čekovská

Ľubica Čekovská (Ľubica Salamon-Čekovská, Ľubica Malachovská-Čekovská; born March 16, 1975, Humenné)[1] is a Slovak composer and pianist.

Biography[edit]

Čekovská studied at the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava and the Royal Academy of Music in London.[2] Her works have been featured at ISCM World Music Days festivals (2009, Sweden; 2013, Slovakia) and Prague Spring festivals (2006, 2013, 2015).[3] She was awarded the Ján Levoslav Bella Prize for her piano concerto Two Portraits (2003), and the 2012 SOZA Award for international performances of Slovak music.

Čekovská works in a variety of genres, including composing for film, television, and theatre. She is represented by the German music publisher Bärenreiter.

Her latest opera, Impresario Dotcom, was commissioned for the Bregenzer Festspiele in 2020, but postponed due to the coronavirus outbreak. Čekovská then created a special abridged version for the restructured Festtage im Festspielhaus event in August 2020.[4]

Works[edit]

Čekovská assigned opus numbers to early works, but stopped using them after Op. 12 in 2000.

Operas[edit]

Orchestral[edit]

  • Turbulence (Op. 11; 2000, rev. 2007)
  • Shadow Scale (2006)
  • Adorations (2006)
  • Dorian Gray Suite (2011)
  • Palingenia (2015)
  • Etuda (2016)
  • Cantus Simplicissimus (2018)

Large ensemble[edit]

  • Fragment and Elegies (1997, rev. 2004) – String orchestra
  • Piece for String Orchestra (Op. 7; 1999)
  • Arctic Descent (Op. 8; 1999) – Woodwind ensemble
  • Fractal (Op. 12; 2000) – Chamber orchestra
  • Postludium (2005) – Chamber orchestra
  • Interrupted Line (2006, rev. 2008) – chamber orchestra
  • Theatre Music (2011) – String orchestra

Concertos[edit]

  • Concerto Two Portraits (2003) – piano, orchestra
  • Violin Concerto (2010)

Chamber music and solo instrumental[edit]

  • Composition for Trumpet and Piano (Op. 2; 1997)
  • Brown’s Motion (Op. 3; 1997) – flute, bassoon, piano
  • Fragment and Elegies (Op. 4; 1997) – solo accordion
  • Dark (Op. 5; 1997) – oboe, piano
  • One Minute (1997) – solo trombone
  • The Song (2002) – cello, piano
  • Kuckucks Winterlied (2005) – 4 cellos
  • In Conversation (2006) – cello, bayan
  • Musica homonensis (2007) – solo organ
  • Lux in tenebris (2007) – trumpet, organ
  • Duo Concertante (2010) – violin, piano
  • Evenodd (2013) – wind quintet
  • Nachtigalls Frühlingslied (2014) – 4 cellos
  • A Midsummer Quartet (2016) – string quartet
  • Fathers Downbeat (2018) – 4 basses, percussion
  • Esaje [Essays] (2019) – viola, piano

Choral[edit]

  • Close Harmony (1997) – SATB
  • On First Looking into Chapman's Homer (Op. 6; 1998) – SATB
  • Three Fragments from Stabat Mater (2018) – SSAATTBB
  • Liberte (2019) – Mezzo-soprano solo, SATB, orchestra

Voice and piano[edit]

  • At Day-Close in November (Op. 9; 1997) – Mezzo-soprano – Text by Thomas Hardy
  • Der Tod und das Mädchen (Op. 10; 1997) – Baritone – Text by Matthias Claudius
  • Dialogues (2001) – Tenor
  • Six Songs (2002) – Soprano

Solo piano[edit]

  • Five Miniatures (Op. 1; 1996)
  • LaSiFaDo (2007)
  • famisi (2007)
  • Sonata Tensiona (2009)
  • Four Movements (2012)

Film and television[edit]

  • Slečna Dušehojivá (2000) – TV movie
  • Kruté radosti (2002)
  • Kriminálka Staré Město (2010-13) – TV series
  • Exponáty alebo príbehy z kaštieľa (2013) – Documentary
  • Kolonáda (2013) – TV series
  • 38 (2014) – Documentary
  • Jak jsme hráli čáru (2014)
  • Čakáreň (2014) – Documentary
  • Dvojčata (2015) – TV series
  • Pirko (2016)
  • Dubček (2018)
  • Niečo naviac (2018) – Documentary
  • Vlci (2018) – TV series
  • Nero a Seneca (2019) – TV movie

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Music Centre Slovakia".
  2. ^ "Ľubica Čekovská: Biography".
  3. ^ "Ľubica Čekovská: Contemporary Music".
  4. ^ "Bregenzer Festtage 2020". Bregenz Festival. Archived from the original on 25 September 2020. Retrieved 7 August 2020.

External links[edit]