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Roman Berger

From Unearthing The Music

Revision as of 12:35, 9 January 2020 by Diogooutra (talk | contribs)

Roman Berger (born August 9, 1930 in Cieszyn, on the Czech-Polish border) is a [[[Category: Slovakia]]|Slovak]] composer, music educator and scientist.

Berger, who came from a Lutheran pastor family, studied piano and music theory at the Katowice Music Academy. Following the 1948 communist coup in Czechoslovakia, Berger’s father was put under pressure to move his family to the Slovak capital Bratislava, where he continued his education at the University of Music Arts (VŠMU), and attended the piano classes of Frico Kafenda and Štefan Németh-Šamorínsky, and then began to teach. After he was denied a degree with Bolesław Woytowicz in Katowice, he became a composition student of Dezider Kardoš.

He completed his studies with distinction in 1965 with the cycle "Transformations, 4 Pieces for Large Orchestra". After a successful performance at the ISCM Festival in Prague in 1967, Transformations was to be included in the programme for the Warsaw Autumn Festival. However, on hearing of the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the so-called Warsaw Pact armies (Bulgaria, Hungary, East Germany and Poland), Berger refused to send the score of his work to Warsaw, in protest.

From the late 1970s onward, Berger's works were also performed internationally. He also wrote numerous articles on music theory and philosophy, music analysis and interpretation. Among other things, he was awarded the Herder Prize by the University of Vienna (1988), the Gloria Artis Medal for Cultural Merit (2006), the Order Polonia Restituta , Officer (2011), the Prize of the Polish Composers' Association (2012) and the diploma of the Pontifical Council for Culture (2013).

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References