Update: Brno is now part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network

Update: Brno is now part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network

The city of Brno has just joined the UNESCO Creative Cities Network - UCCN in the field of music.

Brno is on the UNESCO list as a creative city for music. Creative cities involve seven areas - music, literature, film, folk art and crafts, design, media art and gastronomy. Brno is now part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network in the field of music. This group also includes for example Glasgow, Ghent, Seville, Mannheim, Hanover, Hamamatsu in Asia, Brazzaville in Africa and Bogota in South America. The main mission of the UCCN is the recognition of creativity as a strategic factor in the development of a city, strengthening creativity in the given cultural field, improving access for the population and their connection to cultural life. To become a member of the UCCN in its application the city must demonstrate its ability to contribute to the aims of the Network. Membership is for an unlimited period.

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Connection, unity, contemplation - these words can be used to describe the musical evening of Schola Gregoriana Pragensis under the direction of David Eben and organist Tomáš Thon, which took place yesterday as part of the Easter Festival of Sacred Music at the church of St. Thomas. Not only the singing of a Gregorian chant, but also the works of composer Petr Eben (1929-2007) enlivened the church space with sound and colour for an hour.  more

With a concert called Ensemble Inégal: Yesterday at the church of St. John, Zelenka opened the 31st edition of the Easter Festival of Sacred Music, this time with the suffix Terroir. This slightly mysterious word, which is popularly used in connection with wine, comes from the Latin word for land or soil, and carries the sum of all the influences, especially the natural conditions of a particular location and on the plants grown there. This term is thus metonymically transferred to the programme of this year's VFDH, as it consists exclusively of works by Czech authors, thus complementing the ongoing Year of Czech Musicmore

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