Background
Bakala was born at Fryšták, Moravia.
Bakala was born at Fryšták, Moravia.
He studied conducting at the Brno Conservatory with František Neumann, and composition with Leoš Janáček at the organ school.
His career was centred on Brno and he was particularly associated with the music of Leoš Janáček. In 1922 he continued his studies at the Master school at the Conservatory with Vilém Kurz. From 1920 to 1925 and from 1929 to 1931 he worked as a conductor of the National Theatre in Brno, making his conducting debut in Orfeo ed Euridice.
Bakala discovered Janáček The Diary of One Who Disappeared in the composer"s trunk in 1921 and first performed it (taking the piano part) in April that year.
On 31 January 1925 he conducted the premiere of Bohuslav Martinů"s ballet Kdo je na světě nejmocnější? (Who is the Most Powerful in the World?) in Brno. From 1925 to 1926 he worked for a short time as an organist in Philadelphia in the United States, acting also as accompanist to Hans Kindler, with whom he had already successfully toured in Europe.
From 1926 he became a pianist and conductor of the Czechoslovakian Radio Orchestra in Brno, and on the death of Neumann in 1929 became principal conductor of the Brno Opera. He took the Brno Radio Symphony Orchestra on tour to Russia and Latvia in 1937.
In 1951 he began teaching at the newly founded Janáček Academy of Music and Performing Arts in Brno.
He was appointed as director and chief conductor of the Brno Philharmonic Orchestra in 1956. Bakala"s main interest was concentrated on the works of Janáček. In 1921 he staged the premiere of The Diary of One Who Disappeared, in 1930 he conducted the premiere of the opera Z mrtvého domu in Brno.
He revised this opera in co-operation with Osvald Chlubna.
He also studied Janáček"s seldom performed operas The Beginning of a Romance (1931) and Osud (1934). He edited the arrangements of Moravian folk songs.
Charles Mackerras described Bakala"s conducting of Janáček"s music as "a great milestone" in the history of interpretation of the composer, citing in particular an unissued Brno Radio broadcast of The Makropoulos Case.