Slavné Verdiho Requiem zakončí 18.ročník festivalu!

About the Festival

Olomoucis a city with a thousand year tradition of spiritual and musical life. The Czech prince Vratislav founded a bishopric in Olomouc as early as in 1063. The Olomouc diocese was elevated to archdiocese in 1777.
Highly developed and lively musical activity of the past concentrated around the metropolitan chapter and brought prominent musicians not only to Olomouc but to the whole region. Outstanding composers and instrumentalists dedicated their lives to development and enrichment of its culture.
The prominent renaissance polyphonist Jacobus Gallus was the choir master at St. Wenceslas cathedral, the Austrian composer and violinist Heinrich Ignaz Biber, and the Czech baroq composer Pavel Josef Vejvanovský lived and worked at the nearby Archbishop’s castle in Kroměříž. In 1767, W. A. Mozart, aged 11, visited Olomouc and allegedly composed his so called Olomouc symphony there. Other eminent composers left their imprint: Antonín Dvořák worked with the Žerotín choir and dedicated his largest oratorio St. Ludmila to them and Gustav Mahler conducted the orchestra of the German theatre in Olomouc.
Ludwig van Beethoven dedicated his glorious Missa solemnis to the Archduke Rudolph of Hapsburg on the occasion of his inauguration as the archbishop of Olomouc and Leoš Janáček dedicated his Glagol Mass to the archbishop Prečan.
Olomouc, the city in the heart of Moravia, with its rich spiritual and musical tradition, a myriad of marvels of both sacral and secular architecture, is predestined to host a sacred music festival.

The Autumn Festival of Sacred Music was founded in 1994 and over the eleven years of its existence has become a major cultural event in Olomouc. Under the auspices of the archbishop of Olomouc and Moravian metropolitan Msgre Jan Graubner the Festival is organised by the artistic agency ARS VIVA in co-operation with the City of Olomouc and the Regional Authority of the Olomouc Region.
The prominent Czech conductor Stanislav Macura is the Festival’s artistic director and conductor. The dramaturgy draws upon the immensely rich heritage of brilliant composers of all nations without ignoring contemporary modern sacred music and observes ecumenical principles. The Festival has been recognised for the outstanding artistic quality of guest soloists and internationally renowned quality of vocal and instrumental ensembles.
Radio recordings were made from the Festival concerts by Czech Radio, Radio Niederoesterreich (ORF), Slovak Radio and Polish Radio; concerts were broadcasted across Europe via international radio network of EBU. It has become a rule that the final concert is broadcasted live by Czech Television.

The founder and organiser of the Festival is the artistic agency ARS VIVA in co-operation with the civic society MUSICA VIVA.