Hexagonal concertina with bellows, a characteristic nineteenth-century portable aerophone. The concertina is a portable free-reed instrument that emerged in the early nineteenth century. It was designed in 1829 by the British physicist and instrument maker Sir Charles Wheatstone, during a period of intense experimentation with new bellows-driven keyboard and button instruments. Although it is often confused with the accordion, it is a distinct instrument with its own structural design and playing technique. The concertina is a free-reed aerophone in which sound is produced by air flowing through metal reeds that vibrate freely. Its appearance is closely linked to the broader family of free-reed aerophones, instruments in which sound is produced by the vibration of metal reeds activated by a flow of air. Such instruments began to spread throughout Europe during the early nineteenth century. The accordion had already appeared in Germany, while other related instruments developed in diffe...
Dvořák’s study at his country residence in Vysoká, surrounded by portraits of composers who shaped his artistic world. Antonín Dvořák emerged as one of the leading voices of Czech national music, blending folk-inspired lyricism with the structural discipline of the Central European symphonic tradition. From his rural beginnings in Bohemia to his directorship of the National Conservatory in New York, his life reflects the ascent of a composer who achieved international recognition while remaining deeply connected to his homeland. 1841 Born on September 8 in Nelahozeves, near Prague, into the family of an innkeeper and butcher. 1853 Begins serious musical studies in Zlonice, showing particular aptitude for violin and composition. 1857 Admitted to the Prague Organ School, where he receives formal training in theory and church music. 1861 Composes his first known completed work, the String Quartet in A major , dated June 6. 1864 Meets and falls in love with Josefina Čermáková, b...