Antonín Leopold Dvořák was a Czech composer. Dvořák frequently employed rhythms and other aspects of the folk music of Moravia and his native Bohemia, following the Romantic-era nationalist example of his predecessor Bedřich Smetana. Wikipedia
Born: September 8, 1841, birth house of Antonín Dvořák, Nelahozeves, Czechia
Died: May 1, 1904 (age 62 years), Prague, Czechia
Spouse: Anna Čermáková (m. 1873–1904)
Place of burial: Vyšehrad Cemetery, Prague, Czechia
Grandchildren: Josef Suk and Antonín Dvořák
Children: Otakar Dvořák, Magdalena Dvořáková, Josefa Dvořáková, and more
Compositions
Symphony No. 9
Cello Concerto
Humoresques
Symphony No. 8
String Quartet No. 12
Rusalka
Serenade for Strings
Stabat Mater
Symphony No. 7
Violin Concerto in A minor, Op. 53
Songs My Mother Taught Me
Goin' Home
Piano Quintet No. 2
'Largo' form the New World Symphony
Song to the Moon
Symphony No. 6
Piano Trio No. 4
Requiem
Symphony No. 5
Violin Sonatina
Carnival Overture
Serenade for Wind Instruments
Biblical Songs
Czech Suite
Piano Concerto
Romantic Pieces
Terzetto in C major
The Water Goblin
Silent Woods
String Quintet No. 2
Romance in F minor
American Suite
The Noon Witch
Armida
From the New World: IV. Allegro con fuoco
Legends
The Devil and Kate
The Jacobin
Othello
The Golden Spinning Wheel
In Nature's Realm
Symphony No. 1
Humoresque in G-flat major, op. 101 no. 7
A Hero's Song
Scherzo capriccioso
Symphony No. 4
Piano Quartet No. 1
The Wild Dove
String Sextet
Piano Quartet No. 2
Symphony No. 2