On today’s date in 1890, the Czech composer Antonin Dvorak conducted the first performance of his Symphony No. 8 in G Major in Prague, on the occasion of his election to the Bohemian Academy of Science, Literature and Arts.
By 1890, Dvorak was a world-famous composer, honored in his own country and abroad. Within a year of its premiere, Dvorak conduced his Symphony No. 8 again in London, Frankfurt, and at Cambridge University, when he received an honorary doctor of music degree in 1891. And it was this 8th Symphony that Dvořák conducted in America in August of 1893, at a special Bohemian Day concert during Columbian Exposition, also known as “The Chicago World's Fair.”
Despite some mysterious and melancholy passages, Dvorak’s Eighth Symphony is usually described as “sunny,” “idyllic,” and “pastoral.” Its final movement opens with a brass fanfare, perhaps a reference to a century-old tradition of signal trumpeters playing from the towers and parapets in Prague, a sight and sound that visitors to the famous Astronomical Clock tower in that city’s Old Town Square can still experience today.
It’s amusing—and perhaps revealing of something deep in the national spirit—that at a rehearsal of this finale, the legendary Czech conductor Rafael Kubelik quipped to his players, "Gentlemen, in Bohemia the trumpets never call to battle—they always call to the dance!"