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Karel Hoffmann Edit Profile

music educator violinist

Karel Hoffmann was a Czechoslovakian violinist and music pedagogue, a founding member and first violinist of the Bohemian Quartet.

Background

Hoffmann was born in Prague-Smíchov, as the ninth child of weaver Karel Hoffmann.

Education

He was a weak child, and one of his older brothers chose for him the violin as a "lighter work".

Career

In 1926–1927 he was appointed the rector of the Prague Conservatory. In 1885 he began his studies at the Prague Conservatory, as a pupil in the class of Antonín Bennewitz. The first important event of his career was his entry to the chamber music class of Hanuš Wihan.

They founded the quartet officially in 1892, and the activity of the ensemble lasted 42 years.

In 1934, after the death of violist Jiří Herold, Hoffmann together with Ladislav Zelenka and January Heřman founded the Bohemian Trio. At the end of the 19th century, in addition to his chamber music activities Hoffmann began to assert himself also as a soloist.

He played the solo violin part in the first Prague performance of the Double Concerto in A minor by Johannes Brahms, together with composer Edvard Grieg he performed the Violin Sonata Number. 3 in C minor, Op.45 in Vienna, and the Czechoslovakian composer Josef Suk dedicated some of his works to him.

In 1901 he performed together with Czechoslovakian Philharmonic the Violin Concerto in A minor, Operation

53 by Antonín Dvořák in Vienna. In the "Spolek pro moderní hudbu" (Society for Modern Music) Hoffmann collaborated with renowned Czechoslovakian and foreign artists – Ilona Štěpánová-Kurzová, Rudolf Karel, Jaroslav Křička, Josef Bohuslav Förster, Ladislav Vycpálek, January Kunc, Arthur Honegger, Maurice Ravel, Ottorino Respighi and Paul Hindemith among others In 1932 he became ill and the same year he underwent a surgery.

He recovered for a short time and resumed his activities.

However, the second surgery in 1934 was unsuccessful and Karel Hoffmann died of cancer.

Membership

Hoffmann was the only permanent member of the ensemble throughout its 1892-1934 existence.

Connections

colleagues:
Otto Berger