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Jarmil Michael Burghauser (born Jarmil Michael Mokrý, October 21, 1921, Písek – February 19, 1997, Prague) was a Czech composer, conductor, and musicologist. After the short-lived Prague Spring, he incurred the disfavor of his country's Communist regime and had to adopt the pseudonym Michal Hájků in order to write a series of compositions in a style which evoked earlier periods of music, called Storie apocrifa della musica Boema. The works of Antonín Dvořák are commonly referred to today by their Burghauser numbers (as an alternative to the often confusing or absent opus numbers), which come from an authoritative chronological catalog Burghauser prepared of Dvořák's œuvre. Dvořák's pieces were not published in the order he wrote them, and his publisher gave his works opus numbers corresponding to publishing date. Burghauser has helped greatly to clear up this confusion. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Sonata in E Minor: III. Furiant
62Sonata in E Minor: II. Andante cantabile
63Sonata in E Minor: I. Allegro risoluto non troppo presto
54Three Czech Dances: No. 3, Směska
55Sonata in E Minor: IV. Rondo. Allegro assai
56Three Czech Dances: No. 1, Klatovák
57Three Czech Dances: No. 2, Minet
58Seven reliefs for large Orchestra: III. Moderato mosso
39Dalibor: Act 1 - "Oh, didst thou hear it, friend, in heaven's regions?"
310Seven reliefs for large Orchestra: I. Allegro impetuoso
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Burghauser: The Ways
Contemporary Czech Music - Compositions For Wind Instuments
Best Of Smetana

The Ways

Karel Ančerl Gold Edition 40
On the Track: Guitar Master Works

New Czech Compositions
Karel Ancerl Gold Edition 40
Burghauser: Seven Reliefs / Dobiáš: Symphony No. 2

Seven Reliefs / The Ways / Possibilities / The Pensive Country
Contemporary Czech Works for Guitar
Janáček, Bartók: Piano Works