
Biography
Ľubica Čekovská was born in 1975 in Humenne. In 1993-1998 she studied music theory at the Academy of Performing Arts and composition with professor Dušan Martinček. During her postgraduate studies at the Royal Academy of Music in London, she continued her studies in composition with Prof. Paul Patterson and took part in courses with Robert Saxton, Thomas Adès, Arvo Pärt and Harrison Birtwistle. She has been awarded the Cuthbert Nunn Composition Prize of the Royal Academy of Music (1998), the Lewerhulme Award (1999), the Elsie Owen Prize (1999) of the Royal Academy of Music, an ISH Foundation Scholarship from H.R.H. Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mother (1998-2000) and the Jan Levoslav Bella Prize for her composition Piano Concerto (2004, Slovak Music Fund). She received the Tatra banka Foundation Prize for 2013 or on 6 July 2021 she received another award, the Slovak Minister of Culture Prize for 2020. In deciding on this prize, two of her operas, “Dorian Gray” and “Impresario Dotcom”, were particularly singled out. In 2023, she won the DOSKY Award in the category of Extraordinary Achievement of the Year for her authorship of the opera Impresario Dotcom. For the year 2023 she was awarded the Prize of the Prešov Self-Governing Region (PSK) for her unique contribution in the field of culture and musical art in Slovakia and for exceptional results with international overlap.
Her works have been performed at major contemporary music festivals. In 2009, her composition “Turbulence” was selected for performance at the ISCM World New Music Days festival in Sweden. In the same year she composed her first full-length opera “Dorian Gray” commissioned by the Slovak National Theatre to a libretto by Kate Pullinger, staged by Nicola Raab, conducted by Christopher Ward, which had a successful premiere in Bratislava in 2013, the world premiere was part of the ISCM World Music Days in Slovakia. In the 2010/2011 season she was composer-in-residence at the Altenburg-Gera Philharmonic.
In 2018 she was commissioned by the choir of the Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR Chor) to write for them “Three Fragments from Stabat Mater ” which was performed together with Dvořák’s Stabat Mater, at the Prinzregententheater in Munich under the direction of conductor Howard Arman.
In 2019 she became assistant professor and later associate professor at the Jan Albrecht Academy of Music and Arts in Banská Štiavnica (HUAJA).
In 2020, her second full-length opera, the buffa “Impresario Dotcom” – Fassung für Bregenz, with libretto by Laura Olivi, staged by Elisabeth Stöppler, conducted by Christopher Ward, had a successful premiere at the Bregenz Festival and was shortened due to Covid’s restrictions from the original 120min to 90min.
Impresario Dotcom was given it‘s Slovak premiere in 2023 on the boards of the Slovak National Theatre in Bratislava.
In 2021 she was commissioned by the Janáček Opera in Brno to write a full-length opera based on Virginia Woolf’s cult novel “Orlando”. The opera “Here I am, Orlando” was based on the English libretto by Viktoria Knotkova, staged by Jiří Heřman, conducted by Róbert Kružík. The premiere took place on 14 June 2024 at the Janáček Opera, Brno.
She is currently working on several commissions, a newly prepared opera “Judina” for the National Theatre in Košice and a commission for a large symphony orchestra for the 75th anniversary of the Slovak Philharmonic in Bratislava, “Maison de la Musique en sept périodes” planned world premiere on 24 October 2024.
The opera Dorian Gray will be given its German premiere in 2025-26 at the Eduard von Winterstein Theater in Annaberg Buchholz.
The author is represented by the German Baerenreiter Publishing Group.
Recently her opera “Here I am Orlando” has been nominated for this year’s World Premiere Award – International OPERA AWARDS.
Performances
composer_first_name | composer_last_name | title | date | orchestra | conductor | location | special |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Charlotte | Seither | Neues Werk für Stimme und Klavier | 05.07.2025 | Dietrich Henschel (Bariton), Anne Le Bozec (Klavier) | Bad Kissingen (Kissinger Sommer, Liederwerkstatt) | Uraufführung | |
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel XIX (wie schön leucht uns der morgenstern) für orgel solo | 18.07.2025 | Georg Gottschlich (Orgel) | Berlin (St. Marien Friedenau) | ||
Andrea Lorenzo | Scartazzini | Enigma für Orchester | 18.07.2025 | Jenaer Philharmonie | Simon Gaudenz | Toblach (Mahler Festwochen) | |
Beat | Furrer | Prophezeiungen – für Alt, Kontrabassklarinette und Akkordeon | 19.07.2025 | Helena Sorokina (Alt), Marco Sala (Kontrabassklarinette), Krassimir Sterev (Akkordeon), Cantando Admont | Cordula Bürgi | Salzburg (Salzburger Festspiele, Kollegienkirche) | |
Manfred | Trojahn | Streichquartett Nr. 3 | 26.07.2025 | Kuss Quartett | Hitzacker (Sommerliche Musiktage) | ||
Beat | Furrer | Prophezeiungen – für Alt, Kontrabassklarinette und Akkordeon | 27.07.2025 | Helena Sorokina (Alt), Marco Sala (Kontrab.klarinette), Krassimir Sterev (Akk.), Cantando Admont | Cordula Bürgi | Ossiach (Carinthischer Sommer, Stiftskirche) | |
Charlotte | Seither | „ahnst du“ für Orchester, Chor und Vokalensemble | 02.08.2025 | Orchester, Chor und Vokalensemble der Musikakademie der Studienstiftung | Martin Wettges | Bruneck (Intercable Arena) | |
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel XXXVII (so nimm denn meine hände) choralvorspiel XXXVII (so nimm denn meine hände) | 07.08.2025 | Leo van Doeselaar (Orgel) | Kampen (Bovenkerk) | Niederländische Erstauff. | |
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel XXXVIII (schmücke dich, o liebe seele) | 13.08.2025 | Anna-Victoria Baltrusch | Trier (Konstantinbasilika) | ||
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel XXXVIII (schmücke dich, o liebe seele) | 17.08.2025 | Anna-Victoria Baltrusch | Fulda (Dom St. Salvator) | ||
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel III (die nacht ist vorgedrungen) für orgel solo | 22.08.2025 | Angela Metzger (Orgel) | Berlin (Internationaler Orgelsommer, Dom) | ||
Dieter | Ammann | Viola Concerto „No templates“ | 30.08.2025 | Tabea Zimmermann (Viola) Lucerne Festival Contemporary Orchestra | David Robertson | Luzern (Lucerne Festival) | |
Bernd Alois | Zimmermann | Musique pour les soupers du Roi Ubu | 31.08.2025 | Deutsches Symphonieorchester Berlin | Anja Bihlmaier | Bonn | |
Beat | Furrer | Klavierkonzert Nr. 2 | 03.09.2025 | Francesco Piemontesi (Klavier), Orchestre de la Suisse Romande | Jonathan Nott | Genf (Victoria Hall) | Urauff., auch 4.9. Genf |
Dieter | Ammann | Violation für Violoncello und Orchester | 14.09.2025 | Sol Gabetta (Violoncello), Lucerne Festival Contemporary Orchestra | Riccardo Chailly | Luzern (Lucerne Festival) | |
Matthias | Pintscher | NUR für Klavier und Ensemble | 26.09.2025 | Conrad Tao (Klavier), Konzerthausorchester Berlin | Matthias Pintscher | Berlin (Konzerthaus) | auch 27.9. |
Beat | Furrer | PHAOS für Orchester | 28.09.2025 | Basel Sinfonietta | Titus Engel | Basel (Stadtcasino) | Schweizer Erstauff. |
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel IX (erbarm dich mein, o herre gott) für orgel solo | 06.10.2025 | Henry Fairs (Orgel) | Berlin (Maria unter dem Kreuz, Vierter Orgelzyklus) | ||
Philipp | Maintz | englouti, haché | 11.10.2025 | Angela Metzger (Orgel) | Madrid (Auditorio nacional de Música) | Span. Erstauff. | |
Dieter | Ammann | Viola Concerto „No templates“ | 16.10.2025 | Nils Mönkemeyer (Viola), Münchener Kammerorchester | Bas Wiegers | München (Prinzregententheater) | |
Manfred | Trojahn | Herbstmusik - Sinfonischer Satz | 23.10.2025 | Tiroler Symphonieorchester | Gerrit Prießnitz | Innsbruck (Congress) | auch 24.10. |
Beat | Furrer | Studie III für Klavier solo | 02.11.2025 | Filippo Gorini (Klavier) | Hong Kong (City Hall) | Uraufführung | |
Beat | Furrer | PHAOS für Orchester | 02.11.2025 | Basel Sinfonietta | Titus Engel | Essen (Philharmonie) | |
Andrea Lorenzo | Scartazzini | Earth für Orchester (Neues Werk zum 200. Jubiläum der Bremer Philharmoniker) | 02.11.2025 | Bremer Philharmoniker | Marko Letonja | Bremen (Die Glocke) | Urauff., auch 3.11. |
Giselher | Klebe | Das Mädchen aus Domrémy | 23.11.2025 | Alexander Hannemann, Regie: Michael Dissmeier | Detmold (Hochschule für Musik) | ||
Lubica | Cekovská | Toy Procession or orchestra | 28.11.2025 | Houston Symphony Orchestra | Juraj Valcuha | Houston (Jones Hall) | Uraufführung |
Philipp | Maintz | jag die hunde zurück! für sechs soprane und sechs schlagzeuger | 29.11.2025 | N. Senatskaya/S. Bódi/I. Balzer-Wolf/C. Vélez Murcia/H. Kim/M. Viera (Soprane), Christoph Sietzen | Wien (Festival Wien Modern, Konzerthaus) | Österr. Erstaufführung | |
Philipp | Maintz | haché für orgel solo, englouti für orgel solo | 09.12.2025 | Angela Metzger (Orgel) | München (musica viva, Herkulessaal der Residenz) | ||
Philipp | Maintz | choralvorspiel II (rorate cæli desuper) für orgel solo | 14.12.2025 | Andreas Sieling (Orgel) | Berlin (Dom) | Uraufführung | |
Beat | Furrer | „Ira-Arca“ für Bassflöte und Kontrabass | 20.01.2026 | Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin | Berlin (Konzerthaus) |
Works
Interview
To the inside of the musical event
[t]akte: You work with colour, density and harmony at a particular point in time. What approach do you adopt to shaping the drama of a composition? How do you assimilate the individual parameters? Are there some which interest you more than others?
Čekovská: As far as possible, I always start to compose on the basis of a musical impulse, an idea, sometimes even an extra-musical inspiration. I work for a long time with this idea, on all its possibilities for variation; I see it as a cell with its complete DNA information, and hence I seldom separate the harmony from the rhythm and from the form. I always try to work “with all parameters at the same time as with an individual parameter”. As regards time and form, I prefer shorter compositions making full use of the period of time, in which I stop being physically aware of actual minutes and my whole attention is devoted to the musical action. If I suddenly come “off the tracks”, either because of an unsuccessful form or because of musical “events” which are unclear for me, I again immerse myself in the difficulties. But of course it can be forgiven if the music reveals to me at the end of the composition why it arrived there…
Therefore, my task in composing is to concentrate continuously on what is going on, both without and within. For me, musical form is a composite of all the parameters which concern time. My creed is: it isn’t the form which makes the music, rather the music which makes the form.
Your compositions conceal quite private messages behind an abstract title. What are these messages? Are performers and listeners intended to recognise them?
I don’t see any need to reveal what takes place in the composition in its name. I don’t want to reveal too much of myself, perhaps because I don’t want to force upon the listener where the ‘key’ to the solution of the musical problems lies. S/he should make the effort him/herself. They are my personal messages. When I began working on the composition “Adorations”, the title only came to me at the end. I knew that the piece would somehow reflect the situation in which I received the invitation to write an orchestral work, that it would express something about my new motherhood or about people close to me who had died recently, about the celebration of life and death, about mourning and joy. Yet, in spite of everything, for me the title is almost just a metaphor, almost an “inspiration from outside”, transferred into the “inside” of the musical event, where I allow myself to be led exclusively by the musical attributes of the composition itself.
Your music generally leads to a moment of reconciliation, of comfort. Is it the same as what Martinu called a “little window to heaven”?
I’ve never regarded a composition of mine in that way. When I prepare the building blocks at the beginning, I start from the old principle of the arch – “exposition – development – conclusion”. In the exposition I challenge the music, in the development I struggle with it and in the conclusion I leave it. And that’s perhaps also a self-reflection, as I dislike going away without reconciliation when I begin a struggle with someone. “Let not the sun go down upon your wrath.” But for me, that is of course only a metaphorical parallel to my own “musical consensus”.
You’re a jazz musician. What do jazz and contemporary music have in common – also at the deepest level of thinking, feeling and creating? And another question: what do all types of music have in common?
No, I’m not a jazz musician. I think that engagement with jazz demands a different way of musical thinking. I play in the Bratislava Hot Serenaders orchestra, which is devoted to the authentic interpretation of New Orleans jazz. For me, this represents a “departure in genre”, just like writing for film and theatre, but in no way do I combine this with my composition of serious music. These are two opposing musical principles for me. Jazz is a “closed circle” for me, a “carousel with one theme”, and in comparison, a piece of serious music represents an “intentional line” which leads somewhere, into a new and unknown world. It is a fundamentally different way on an adventurous musical creative path. The difference between jazz and modern classical music lies clearly in their different functions. In his essay “Die Musik und das Schöne”, Eggebrecht distinguishes between art and popular music. The first kind is exists for itself, its inner being not influenced by functionalism or purpose, it is autonomous, free. The other has its clearly evident configurations. Although I dislike reducing these two worlds to a common denominator, they are linked by the magical ability to lead people into their “captivating period of time”. That’s the fascinating thing about music, despite its different messages.
How was it, returning to Slovakia from your course in England and building up a career as a composer there?
I feel the return as a leap into a more comfortable and slower tempo and into a somewhat different musical atmosphere, for after a period in London I realized that it is not at all easy to compose in a relaxed way and at the same time to be constantly looking for a job. I think that these two years, with full-time study at the Royal Academy of Music and frequent concert-going, made a subsequent “tacet” necessary, at least to have some peace for a while and to assimilate the whole range of information, study material, experiences and impressions which I brought home with me from England. And there were many more reasons to return home. But a composer absolutely needs contact with the big wide world in order to establish where s/he actually is.
Interview by Miroslav Srnka and Jana Urbanová