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Collegium Musicum (band)
Slovak art rock band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Collegium Musicum was a Slovak progressive rock and symphonic rock band formed by keyboard virtuoso Marián Varga and bassist Fedor Frešo in Bratislava in late 1969. They are best known for their complex, predominantly instrumental compositions centered around Varga's Hammond organ, lengthy solos, and rock-tinged reinterpretations of classical works by Rimsky-Korsakov, Dvořák, Stravinsky, Bartók, and others in the Western classical canon.[1][2][3]
While never achieving mainstream popularity, Collegium Musicum was among the most foundational pillars of the Czechoslovak big-beat scene in the 1970s,[4] drawing frequent comparisons to English progressive rock counterparts Emerson, Lake & Palmer, with Varga himself being labelled the "Slovak Keith Emerson".[3][5] The group throughout its life featured some of the foremost Slovak rock instrumentalists, who apart from Varga and Frešo included František Griglák, Pavol Hammel, Martin Valihora, and others. They gained notoriety among the Slovak youth counterculture for their unique and improvisational live performances, and the band would spend significantly more time touring the country than in the recording studio. Nonetheless, eight LPs[a] were released over the span of ten years, and Varga disbanded the group soon after recording their final studio record, Divergencie (1981).[6]
Collegium Musicum enjoyed a revival through touring in the late 1990s and from 2009 onward, particularly among younger generations.[7] The latter featured the so-called "classic" lineup of Varga, Frešo and Griglák, but with newcomer Martin Valihora on drums.[8][9] The group disbanded after the death of leader Varga in August of 2017.[10]
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History
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From 1969 to 1974
The first lineup of Collegium Musicum consisted of three former members of the then-dismantled band Prúdy — Marián Varga (keyboards), Fedor Frešo (bass/vocals) and Dušan Hájek (drums) — alongside guitarist Fedor Letňan.[11] This lineup did not last long and no recordings of this era are known of. Letňan was replaced by Pavel Váně, and the 1970 EP Hommage à J.S. Bach features Váně and the band playing two Varga compositions, the namesake homage and "Ulica plná plášťov do dažďa" ("A Street Full of Raincoats"), the latter of which Frešo and Hájek would receive co-writing credits for. Váně was replaced by Rastislav "Rasťo" Vacho as the band prepared to record their self-titled debut album.[12] Collegium Musicum (1970) is divided into three compositions, with the final track "Concerto in D" being a reinterpretation of Haydn's "Rondo all'Ungarese" from his Keyboard Concerto No. 11, arranged by Varga. The musical style featured on the album would foreshadow the more progressive approach taken by the band on future records.[13]
The group toured small clubs in and around Bratislava for the next half a year with this lineup of Vacho on guitar, until he quit after wishing to continue his architectural studies at university.[12] He would return in 1972 for the album Zelená Pošta (1972), but in the meantime, Varga and the rest of Collegium Musicum sought out another guitarist to replace Vacho via mutual acquaintances in the Slovak music scene. Guitarist and songwriter also formerly of Prúdy Pavol Hammel was asked, but he declined, instead pointing in the direction of one of his protégés who appeared on a recent album of his, František "Fero" Griglák. Varga was skeptical, knowing Griglák was only seventeen years old at the time and had only the Hammel album to his name in terms of recorded material. Despite this, an audition to join the group was presented to Griglák, and he passed with flying colors, allowing Collegium Musicum the opportunity to tour once again with a new lineup and to begin ironing out the compositions that would appear on their subsequent studio album, Konvergencie (1971).
Konvergencie was an immense project for a rock group to undertake at the time. It is a double LP, the first in Slovak history, with each side containing a single song, nearly all over twenty minutes in length. The only time something of this magnitude had been done previously was with fellow English progressive rock group Soft Machine and their seminal album Third (1970), released only a year prior. The songs on Konvergencie range from a live recording of the epic multi-movement "Suita po tisíc a jednej noci" ("Suite After One Thousand and One Nights"), a reinterpretation of composer Rimsky-Korsakov's 1888 piece Scheherazade, to "Eufónia" ("Euphony"), a rock jam in D mixolydian that abruptly turns into an extended solo improvisation on Varga's Hammond organ, complete with high-pitched screeches, drones, and tone clusters. This album was Collegium Musicum's greatest musical achievement financially, selling over 140,000 copies in Czechoslovakia and earning Varga a large amount in royalties.[14] It would later be declared the second greatest Slovak album of all time by a jury of twenty-five members, including Varga, in 2007.[15][16]

Fero Griglák continued to tour with Collegium Musicum into the year 1972, but grew dissatisfied when he wished to have his own compositions performed, being sidelined by Varga. He left and formed the jazz-rock band Fermáta with keyboardist Tomáš Berko that same year.[17] Rasťo Vacho would return but leave again soon after, at which point Varga, Frešo and Hájek made the decision to stay together as a trio and perform live without a guitarist. This was unique for a rock group at the time, yet drew even more similarity to Keith Emerson and his bands The Nice and Emerson, Lake & Palmer. The only album corresponding with this lineup was 1973's Live, recorded during a July 21st performance in the Slovak Radio Building (then called the Czechoslovak Radio Concert Hall). It featured more emphasis on Frešo's virtuosic bass lines, Hájek's heavy rhythmic interplay on drums (including a drum/percussion solo over seven minutes long on the track "Monumento"), and a more loud, raucous and distorted organ tone from Varga. This was also the last record to feature Frešo until Continuo (1978), with him having left in 1974.
From 1975 to 1981
Frešo would be replaced by bassist Ivan Belák for the following studio record, Marián Varga & Collegium Musicum (1975).[6] This LP saw the return of a guitarist to the group, this time a session musician by the name of Jozef Farkaš. It also contained compositions that would become live favorites for the group, most notably a rendition of Béla Bartók's modernist piano cycle Mikrokosmos, featuring a main groove in 7/8. The group went on hiatus for a short period and reconvened in December of 1977 with Varga, Frešo, Hájek, and newly recruited singer Ľudovít Nosko and lead guitarist Karl Witz for the next album of recorded material, Continuo (1978). In 1979, a new, last line-up with drummer Pavel Cosma and guitarist Peter Peteraj was formed again. They released the album On a Ona (1979), this time with Varga as the only original member remaining in the group. Finally, after Divergencie (1981) was recorded, Varga split up the group to pursue a solo career in film scoring and other endeavors.
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Musical style
The precise genre(s) of Collegium Musicum have been described variously as progressive rock, symphonic prog,[11] art rock[18], and others.
Discography
Studio Albums
- 1970 - Collegium Musicum
- 1971 - Konvergencie
- 1972 - Zelená Pošta (uncredited; with Pavol Hammel)
- 1975 - Marián Varga & Collegium Musicum
- 1978 - Continuo
- 1979 - On a Ona
- 1981 - Divergencie
Live albums
- 1973 - Live
- 1997 - Collegium Musicum '97
- 2010 - Speak, Memory
EPs
- 1970 - Hommage à J.S. Bach / Ulica plná plášťov do dažďa[19]
Members
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Notes
- This number includes Zelená Pošta (1972), which was initially released as a Varga/Hammel collaboration but contemporaneously rebranded as a Collegium Musicum record.
References
External links
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