Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory

Coordinates: 50°2′26.84″N 14°25′41.039″E / 50.0407889°N 14.42806639°E / 50.0407889; 14.42806639

Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory (Czech: Konzervatoř Jaroslava Ježka), located in Prague, Czech Republic, is a conservatory specializing in contemporary music. Known primarily as a school for jazz and commercial music, it also offers a six-year undergraduate diploma in Classical music, composition, conducting, scriptwriting and musical theatre. The Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory offers instruction in piano, guitar, violin, viola, cello, bass, upright bass, flute, clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, trombone, percussion instruments, accordion and voice.

History

In 1958, pianist-composer-educator Vadim Petrov founded the People's Art School which offered courses for working people and was the precursor to the Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory. At the time of its founding, all music schools of the former Czechoslovakia focused primarily on Classical music, but the People's Art School offered training in jazz and commercial music for radio, theater and television. Unfortunately, the school wasn't able to attain the status of conservatory for ideological reasons until 1990, the year after the Velvet Revolution.

From the very beginning the personality of Jaroslav Ježek stood as an artistic and human inspiration. When the school finally managed to become a conservatory at the end of the 1980s, the name of this impresario was accepted in the title of the school.[1] In 1998, all the facilities of the Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory moved into one building in Roškotova 1692/4, Prague 4.

Selected faculty

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.