Smetana Quartet


The Smetana Quartet was a Czech string quartet that was in existence from 1945 to 1989.

Personnel

1st violin
2nd violin
Viola
Cello
The Smetana Quartet arose from the Quartet of the Czech Conservatory, which was founded in 1943 in Prague by Antonín Kohout, the cellist. With Jaroslav Rybenský and Lubomír Kostecký as first and second violins, and Václav Neumann as violist, the group gave its first performance as the Smetana Quartet on 6 November 1945, at the Municipal Library in Prague. Neumann left to pursue conducting in 1947, at which point Rybenský went to the viola desk and Jiří Novák came in as first violin.
By 1949 the group had official connections with the Czech Philharmonic. The first foreign tour was in 1949, to Poland, and the first recording was of a quartet by Bedřich Smetana in 1950. Rybenský was obliged to retire after ill health in 1952, and was replaced by Milan Škampa. The performers were appointed professors at the Academy of Musical Arts in 1967. Of their many recordings, those made at that time for German Electrola are considered particularly fine.
For many years this group, which has been called the finest Czech quartet of its time, played the Czech repertoire from memory, giving these works a special intensity and intimacy.
The Smetana Quartet made the third commercial digital recording ever made, Mozart's K.421 and K.458, in Tokyo April 24–26, 1972. They rerecorded the same repertoire ten years later in Prague.
Antonín Kohout trained the Kocian Quartet and the Martinů Quartet, though the latter's members had been pupils of Professor Viktor Moučka, cellist of the Vlach Quartet.