![]() His lectures were attended by some of the most important Croatian composers and musicians of the future period – Ivo Brkanović, Bruno Bjelinski, Krešimir Kovačević, Stjepan Šulek and Slavko Zlatić. Showing himself an all-round, talented and competent musician, along with the harmony that he taught the longest – forty years – in different periods he also taught horn, conducting, music theory, instrumentation, composition, orchestral score analysis and history of music. He worked as a teacher until the end of his life (he died on Januin Zagreb), with a break for World War II, when he went into retirement. In 1912 he left the Opera, and devoted himself full time to teaching and to composition. They arrived (mostly returning) from their training in Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Berlin and Paris, and in 1910 Lhotka was a teacher in the Music School of the Croatian Land Music Institute, later to be the Music Academy. The increasingly better organisation of the concert scene and the reform of musical education made Zagreb an apt place for young composers to make a name for themselves. After he had done his military service, and worked for a short time as a teacher in a branch of the Moscow conservatory in Yekaterinoslav (today Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, once part of the Russian Empire), he arrived in Zagreb, in 1909, and accepted the job of first hornist and rehearsal pianist in the Opera. Six years later he graduated in both courses the graduation piece in composition was the “Rej” Scherzo in F Major, performed for the first time in the Musikverein Hall in Vienna. In 1899 he became a student of the Prague Conservatory, studying horn and composition he was taught composition by Karel Stecker, Josef Klička and Antonín Dvořák. ![]() ![]() ![]() Fran Lhotka was born on December 25, 1883, in the town of Mladá Vožice in Bohemia. ![]()
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