Antonín Dvořák lived in New York from September 1892 to April 1895; he was invited as director of the National Conservatory of Music, with the aim of promoting an American music that looked into its own roots instead of (or in addition to) the European tradition. During this stay he composed his most famous work, the Symphony from the New World, premiered on 16 December 1893. A few weeks after, in March 1894, Dvořák composed the Biblické Písně ( Biblical songs), a cycle of ten songs with texts from the Bible, from the Book of Psalms.