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Náměšť nad Oslavou
25. 7. - 1. 8. 2026

NIGHT CONCERTS - FOLK HOLIDAYS 2026

Night concerts take place from Monday to Friday and start half an hour after the end of the main program (mostly after 11:00 p.m.) in the Old Weaving Hall on Náměště nad Oslavou.

MONDAY JULY 27, 2026 - NIGHT CONCERT

AFTER 11PM AT OLD VEAWING HALL

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THE WEAVING
THE WEAVING

THE WEAVING (IRELAND/ENGLAND)

ENGLISH AND IRISH TRADITIONAL MUSIC FROM A TRIO WITH GREAT FAME AWAITING.

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TUESDAY JULY 28, 2026 - NIGHT CONCERT

AFTER 11PM AT OLD VEAWING HALL

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DOROTA BAROVÁ - photo by Helena Kadlčíková
DOROTA BAROVÁ - photo by Helena Kadlčíková

WEDNESDAY JULY 29, 2026 - NIGHT CONCERT

AFTER 11PM AT OLD VEAWING HALL

THURSDAY JULY 30, 2026 - NIGHT CONCERT

AFTER 11PM AT OLD VEAWING HALL

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ANTONÍN FAJT
ANTONÍN FAJT

FRIDAY JULY 31, 2026 - NIGHT CONCERT

AFTER 11PM AT OLD VEAWING HALL

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MARIAN FRIEDL
MARIAN FRIEDL

40:40:40 x 4 (CZECH REPUBLIC / SLOVAKIA)

ETHNOSUITE CREATED SPECIALLY FOR THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE FOLK HOLIDAYS

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DOROTA BAROVÁ - photo by Helena Kadlčíková
DOROTA BAROVÁ - photo by Helena Kadlčíková

SONGS ABOUT A HEART FILLED WITH MEMORIES

WHAT DOROTA BAROVÁ FOUND BEHIND THE MIRROR?

For so long we have associated the singer, cellist and composer with the melodious Polish language, that we could not imagine that she would replace it with Czech in the songs growing out of intimate chamber music. And if that did happen, we were interested in how they would sound in the new one; after so many years, perhaps even with minor concerns. Unnecessary, and actually inappropriate, after all, we are talking about Dorota, who is concerned with musical beauty in any language. She was inspired to sing in Czech on the album Píseň pro Mi by the passing of her close friend, artist and poet Michaela Vejnarová (1979–2023), to whom she wanted to pay her respects and who she felt was appropriate for us to understand her grief and perhaps learn “what is seen in the mirror and what awaits behind it”.
For so long we have associated the singer, cellist and composer with the melodious Polish language, that we could not imagine that she would replace it with Czech in the songs growing out of intimate chamber music. And if that did happen, we were interested in how they would sound in the new one; after so many years, perhaps even with minor concerns. Unnecessary, and actually inappropriate, after all, we are talking about Dorota, who is concerned with musical beauty in any language. She was inspired to sing in Czech on the album Píseň pro Mi by the passing of her close friend, artist and poet Michaela Vejnarová (1979–2023), to whom she wanted to pay her respects and who she felt was appropriate for us to understand her grief and perhaps learn “what is seen in the mirror and what awaits behind it”.

Photos by Helena Kadlčíková