Lubos Fiser studied composition with Emil Hlobil both at the Conservatory (1952-56) and at the Academy of Performing Arts (graduated 1960). His graduation work, the one-act opera Lancelot, already featured the substance of his musical expression - it is based on a melody supporting themes, formulated often in a very lapidary way which is then developed with complex and non-traditional forms of compositional thinking. The effect of his music is both simple and complex at the same time, as though it has been chiseled from stone. He began within the late romantic music tradition (two symphonies, Suite for orchestra, Sonnets to texts by Michelangelo, and other works composed at the end of the fifties), but his own opinion and clearly cut compositional style prevailed in the early sixties. Key works of that period are Fifteen Prints after Dürer's Apocalypse and the choral Caprichos, inspired by Goya's cycle of paintings. These compositions gained considerable international recognition. The Fifteen Prints won the first prize in a UNESCO international composer's tribune held in Paris in 1967. Both these works have a tendency towards new expressional and compositional means, in particular the use of the relaxed structure of aleatoric technique. Although that method accentuates the sonic component of musical structure, Fiser maintains his own approach. The key melodic theme, its repetition and transformation, continues to be the backbone of his works. Since the early seventies the author has returned to the exact musical notation of his ideas which provides his music with a seal of definitiveness. His style has developed to a brilliant perfection. Fiser has achieved maximum concentration within his musical forms which remains very compact and condensed. The effect of his music is not only in distinctly shaped thematic material, but also in contrast. The author likes to concentrate a number of clean-cut contrasts in a small space. This principle is most apparent in Fiser's one-movement sonatas.
The horizon of Fiser's intellectual world, as reflected in his compositions, is extensive. It is delineated by the broad borders of his cultural knowledge and interests. The composer preferred to reach back to old monuments of culture such as Summerian texts (Lament Over the Destruction of the Town of Ur, Istanu), and found inspiration in the Middle Ages (Songs for the Blind King John of Luxemburg), the Renaissance (The Rose), great works of old art (Dürer, Goya), and great thinkers (Galileo,Einstein). Naturally he understood the excursions into the past only in relation with the present. To look back was not an escape for him, but a confrontation with the eternal principles of life. His compositions have often exhibited both the mood of celebration, and warning as well. This makes his music very attractive and impressive. It is no coincidence that many works by Fiser were premiered at important concert halls abroad (Salzburg: Serenades for Salzburg, Songs for the Blind King John of Luxemburg; Munich: some chamber works, e.g. Istanu; New York: Report, etc.). Fiser's contribution to contemporary musical culture is considerable; his compositions often grasp the dynamic lifestyle of our modern era which he managed to express in a lapidary form of almost atomic energy.