Description
\u200BIs there such a thing as "female" and "male" music? The life of Croatian composer Dora Pejacevic clearly shows that - like many other women composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries - she had far fewer opportunities in the musical world than her male colleagues. Yet her aristocratic background and a mother who was herself a composer afforded her certain freedoms. Step by step, Pejacevic found her way into concert programmes throughout the Habsburg Monarchy, with works ranging from piano and vocal music to the symphony, a genre traditionally considered "male." The reception of her music illustrates how difficult it is to classify music according to gender: while some critics described her compositions as "feminine", others recognised in them a "masculine" expressive power. What remains beyond doubt, however, is Dora Pejacevic's artistic significance - as one of the most outstanding women composers of her era.