1854–1872: Early life and family Leoš Janáček, son of schoolmaster Jiří Janacek and
Amalie (née Grulichová) Janáčková, was born in
Hukvaldy, Moravia (then part of the
Austrian Empire) on 3 July 1854. He was born with six surviving siblings, and baptised as Leo Eugen. He was a gifted child in a family of limited means, and showed an early musical talent in choral singing. His father wanted him to follow the family tradition and become a teacher, but he deferred to Janáček's obvious musical abilities. In 1865, young Janáček enrolled as a ward of the foundation of the
St Thomas's Abbey, Brno, where he took part in choral singing under
Pavel Křížkovský and occasionally played the organ. One of his classmates,
František Neumann, later described Janáček as an "excellent pianist, who played
Beethoven symphonies perfectly in a piano duet with a classmate, under Křížkovský's supervision". Křížkovský found him a problematic and wayward student but recommended his entry to the
Prague Organ School. Janáček later remembered Křížkovský as a great conductor and teacher.
1873–1880: Education and early career Janáček originally intended to study piano and organ but eventually devoted himself to composition. He wrote his first vocal compositions while choirmaster of the ''Svatopluk Artisan's Association'' (1873–1876). In 1874, he enrolled at the Prague organ school, under
František Skuherský and František Blažek. His student days in Prague were impoverished; with no piano in his room, he had to make do with a keyboard drawn on his tabletop. His criticism of Skuherský's performance of the Gregorian mass was published in the March 1875 edition of the journal
Cecilie and led to his expulsion from the school, but Skuherský relented, and on 24 July 1875 Janáček graduated with the best results in his class. On his return to Brno he earned a living as a music teacher, and conducted various amateur
choirs. From 1876 he taught music at Brno's Teachers' Institute. Among his pupils there was Zdenka Schulzová, daughter of Emilian Schulz, the Institute director. She was later to be Janáček's wife. In 1876, he also became a piano student of Amálie Wickenhauserová-Nerudová, with whom he co-organized chamber concertos and performed in concerts over the following two years. In February 1876, he was voted Choirmaster of the
Beseda brněnská Philharmonic Society. Apart from an interruption from 1879 to 1881, he remained its choirmaster and conductor until 1888. From October 1879 to February 1880, he studied piano, organ, and composition at the
Leipzig Conservatory. While there, he composed
Thema con variazioni for piano in B-flat, subtitled ''Zdenka's Variations''. Dissatisfied with his teachers (among them
Oscar Paul and Leo Grill), and denied a studentship with
Camille Saint-Saëns in Paris, Janáček moved on to the
Vienna Conservatory, where from April to June 1880, he studied composition with
Franz Krenn. He concealed his opposition to Krenn's neo-romanticism, but he quit
Josef Dachs's classes and further piano study after he was criticised for his piano style and technique. He submitted a violin sonata (now lost) to a Vienna Conservatory competition, but the judges rejected it as being "too academic". Janáček left the conservatory in June 1880, disappointed despite Franz Krenn's very complimentary personal report. One of his classmates and friends in Vienna was composer and pianist
Josef Weiss.
1881–1899: Folkloristic work and early compositions Janáček returned to
Brno where, on 13 July 1881, he married his young pupil, Zdenka Schulzová. In 1881, Janáček founded and was appointed director of the organ school, and held this post until 1919, when the school became the
Brno Conservatory. In the mid-1880s, Janáček began composing more systematically. Among other works, he created the
Four male-voice choruses (1886), dedicated to Antonín Dvořák, and his first opera,
Šárka (1887–1888). During this period he began to collect and study folk music, songs and dances. In the early months of 1887, he sharply criticized the comic opera
The Bridegrooms, by Czech composer
Karel Kovařovic, in a
Hudební listy journal review: "Which melody stuck in your mind? Which motif? Is this dramatic opera? No, I would write on the poster: 'Comedy performed together with music', since the music and the libretto aren't connected to each other". Janáček's review apparently led to mutual dislike and later professional difficulties when Kovařovic, as director of the
National Theatre in Prague, refused to stage Janáček's opera
Jenůfa. From the early 1890s, Janáček led the mainstream of folklorist activity in
Moravia and
Silesia, using a repertoire of folk songs and dances in orchestral and piano arrangements. Many of the tunes he used had been recorded by him but a second source was
Xavera Běhálková who sent him 70 to 100 tunes that she had gathered from around the
Haná region of
central Moravia. Most of his achievements in this field were published in 1899–1901 though his interest in folklore would be lifelong. His compositional work was still influenced by the declamatory, dramatic style of
Smetana and
Dvořák. He expressed very negative opinions on German neo-classicism and especially on
Wagner in the
Hudební listy journal, which he founded in 1884. The death of his second child, Vladimír, in 1890 was followed by an attempted opera,
Beginning of the Romance (1891) and the
cantata Amarus (1897).
1900–1915: Difficult years '' In the first decade of the 20th century, Janáček composed choral church music including
Otčenáš (Our Father, 1901),
Constitues (1903) and
Ave Maria (1904). In 1901, the first part of his piano cycle
On an Overgrown Path was published and gradually became one of his most frequently-performed works. In 1902, Janáček visited Russia twice. On the first occasion he took his daughter Olga to
Saint Petersburg, where she stayed to study Russian. Only three months later, he returned to Saint Petersburg with his wife because Olga had become very ill. They took her back to
Brno, but her health worsened. Janáček expressed his painful feelings for his daughter in a new work, his opera
Jenůfa, in which the suffering of his daughter had transfigured into Jenůfa's. When Olga died in February 1903, Janáček dedicated
Jenůfa to her memory. The opera was performed in Brno in 1904, with reasonable success, but Janáček felt this was no more than a provincial achievement. He aspired to recognition by the more influential Prague opera, but
Jenůfa was refused there (twelve years passed before its first performance in Prague). Dejected and emotionally exhausted, Janáček went to
Luhačovice spa to recover. There he met Kamila Urválková, whose love story supplied the theme for his next opera,
Osud (
Destiny). In 1905, Janáček attended a demonstration in support of a Czech university in Brno, where the violent death of František Pavlík, a young joiner, at the hands of the police inspired his piano sonata,
1. X. 1905 (
From The Street). The incident led him to further promote the anti-German and anti-Austrian ethos of the
Russian Circle, which he had co-founded in 1897 and which would be officially banned by the Austrian police in 1915. In 1906, he approached the Czech poet
Petr Bezruč, with whom he later collaborated, composing several choral works based on Bezruč's poetry. These included
Kantor Halfar (1906),
Maryčka Magdónova (1908), and
70.000 (1909). Janáček's life in the first decade of the 20th century was complicated by personal and professional difficulties. He still yearned for artistic recognition from Prague. He destroyed some of his works, others remained unfinished. Nevertheless, he continued composing, and would create several remarkable choral, chamber, orchestral and operatic works, the most notable being the 1914 cantata,
Věčné evangelium (
The Eternal Gospel),
Pohádka (
Fairy tale) for 'cello and piano (1910), the 1912 piano cycle
V mlhách (
In the Mists), his
violin sonata, and his first symphonic poem
Šumařovo dítě (''A Fiddler's Child
). His fifth opera, Výlet pana Broučka do měsíce
(The Excursions of Mr. Brouček to the Moon and to the 15th Century''), composed from 1908 to 1917, has been characterized as the most "purely Czech in subject and treatment" of all of Janáček's operas.
1916–1928: Breakthrough and masterworks In 1916, he started a long professional and personal relationship with theatre critic, dramatist and translator
Max Brod. In the same year,
Jenůfa, revised by Kovařovic, was finally accepted by the National Theatre. Its performance in Prague in 1916 was a great success, and brought Janáček his first acclaim. Following the Prague première, he began a relationship with singer Gabriela Horváthová, which led to his wife Zdenka's attempted suicide and their "informal" divorce. In Janáček's 70th year (1924), his biography was published by Max Brod, and he was interviewed by
Olin Downes for
The New York Times. In 1925, he retired from teaching but continued composing and was awarded the first honorary doctorate to be given by
Masaryk University in Brno. In the spring of 1926, he created his
Sinfonietta, a monumental orchestral work, which rapidly gained wide critical acclaim. In the same year, he went to England at the invitation of
Rosa Newmarch. A number of his works were performed in London, including his first string quartet, the wind sextet
Youth, and his violin sonata. Shortly after, and still in 1926, he started to compose a setting to an
Old Church Slavonic text. The result was the large-scale orchestral
Glagolitic Mass. The world première of Janáček's lyrical
Concertino for piano, two violins, viola, clarinet, French horn and bassoon took place in
Brno in 1926. Around the same time, Janáček began work on a comparable chamber work for an even more unusual set of instruments, the
Capriccio for piano left hand, flute, two trumpets, three trombones and tenor tuba, was written for pianist
Otakar Hollmann, who lost the use of his right hand during World War I. It premièred in Prague on 2 March 1928. In 1927 – the year of the Sinfonietta's first performances in New York, Berlin and Brno – he began to compose his final operatic work,
From the House of the Dead, the third act of which would be found on his desk after his death. In January 1928, he began his second string quartet, the
Intimate Letters, his "manifesto on love". Meanwhile, the Sinfonietta was performed in London, Vienna and Dresden. In his later years, Janáček became an international celebrity. He became a member of the
Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin in 1927, along with
Arnold Schoenberg and
Paul Hindemith.
Death and funeral In August 1928, he took an excursion to
Štramberk with Kamila Stösslová and her son Otto, but caught a chill which developed into pneumonia. He died on 12 August 1928 in
Ostrava, at the sanatorium of Dr. L. Klein, at the age of 74. He was given a large public funeral that included music from the last scene of his
Cunning Little Vixen. He was buried in the Circle of Honour at the
Brno Central Cemetery. == Personality ==