Bambini di Praga

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Bambini di Praga
Choir
Bambini di Praga Trutnov.JPG
Bambini di Praga at Trutnov Open Air Music Festival in 2007
Also known asKulínčata
Bambini
Former nameHrabůvští singers
Dětský pěvecký sbor Československého rozhlasu
Origin Czechoslovakia
Founded1973
Founder Bohumil Kulínský Sr.  [ cs ]
Disbanded2011
Genre Vocal music
Choirmaster Blanka Kulínská  [ cs ]
Bohumil Kulínský Jr.  [ cs ]

Bambini di Praga ("Children of Prague" in Italian) was a Czech children's choir based in Prague and active from 1973 to 2011. The collective was composed mainly of girls.

Contents

History

Early days and predecessors

In 1939, Bohumil Kulínský Sr. (born 1910) established a children's choir in Hrabůvka, a district of Ostrava, at the time a part of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. The choir was called Hrabůvští singers and they won their first singing competition in 1940. Thanks to this success, Kulínský was invited to Prague where in 1945, he founded Dětský pěvecký sbor Československého rozhlasu (Children's Choir of Czechoslovak Radio), also known as Kulínčata. During this period, the choir's popularity grew. [1]

Bambini and Bimbi

Bambini di Praga at the Municipal House concert hall in Prague, 2006 Bambini.jpg
Bambini di Praga at the Municipal House concert hall in Prague, 2006

In 1973, cooperation with Czechoslovak Radio was interrupted. Kulínský, together with his wife Blanka, continued at the helm of the choir, however, and they rehearsed in a primary school instead, where they remained until the 2002 Prague floods. On 1 May 1973, the choir was renamed Bambini di Praga.

Around 1975, at the age of 16 or 17, Bohumil Kulínský Jr. created a second choir, Bimbi di Praga, composed of the smallest and most talented singers. [2] Several well-known musicians have passed through the ranks of the younger choir, including Lenka Dusilová, Martina Čechová, and Jana Boušková. In 1977, Kulínský Jr. became the choirmaster of Bambini di Praga. His father died in 1988.

During this time, Blanka Kulínská led Chlapecký sbor Pražského mužského sboru FOK (Boys' Choir of the Prague Men's Choir FOK). Some famous names who have performed in the choir include David Koller, Petr Malásek, Jan Čenský, Tomáš Trapl, Martin Kumžák, and Radek Krejčí.

In 1990, six months after the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, Blanka Kulínská and Bohumil Kulínský Jr. established a private music school in Prague, Škola sborového zpěvu při Bambini di Praga (Bambini di Praga School of Choral Singing).

Bohumil Kulínský's conviction and last days of Bambini

In 2004, Bohumil Kulínský was arrested and charged with numerous acts of sexual abuse of minors, with a final tally of 49 victims between 1984 and 2004. On 23 April 2008, he was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment with parole for the sexual abuse of 23 girls, some of whom were as young 15 when the acts took place. [3] Kulínský began his sentence, by that point extended to 5.5 years, in January 2009. [4]

On 28 June 2011, shortly after Bohumil Kulínský's conditional release from prison, Bambini di Praga announced that they would end their activities. [5]

In September 2018, Kulínský died of kidney failure at the age of 59.[ citation needed ] His mother, Blanka, died in 2022.[ citation needed ]

Partial discography

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References

  1. "Bambini di Praga". bach-cantatas.com. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. "Blanka Kulínská: Nevadí mi být druhá" [Blanka Kulínská: I Don't Mind Being Second]. radioservis-as.cz (in Czech). 28 April 2003. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  3. "Kulínský dostal za zneužívání sboristek podmínku" [Kulínský Was Given a Condition for Abusing Choir Members]. idnes.cz (in Czech). 23 April 2008. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  4. "Soud zpřísnil trest pro Kulínského, místo podmínky 5,5 roku vězení" [Court Tightens Sentence for Kulínský to 5.5 Years in Prison]. idnes.cz (in Czech). 15 January 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  5. "Dětský sbor Bambini di Praga po 38 letech definitivně končí" [Bambini di Praga Children's Choir Is Definitely Coming to an End After 38 Years]. idnes.cz (in Czech). 28 June 2011. Retrieved 21 March 2021.

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