Der Rosenkavalier
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Richard Strauss's Ariadne Auf Naxos
Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos - A survey of the major recordings by Ralph Moore Ariadne auf Naxos is less frequently encountered on stage than Der Rosenkavalier or Salome, but it is something of favourite among those who fancy themselves connoisseurs, insofar as its plot revolves around a conceit typical of Hofmannsthal’s libretti, whereby two worlds clash: the merits of populist entertainment, personified by characters from the burlesque Commedia dell’arte tradition enacting Viennese operetta, are uneasily juxtaposed with the claims of high art to elevate and refine the observer as embodied in the opera seria to be performed by another company of singers, its plot derived from classical myth. The tale of Ariadne’s desertion by Theseus is performed in the second half of the evening and is in effect an opera within an opera. The fun starts when the major-domo conveys the instructions from “the richest man in Vienna” that in order to save time and avoid delaying the fireworks, both entertainments must be performed simultaneously. Both genres are parodied and a further contrast is made between Zerbinetta’s pragmatic attitude towards love and life and Ariadne’s morbid, death-oriented idealism – “Todgeweihtes Herz!”, Tristan und Isolde-style. Strauss’ scoring is interesting and innovative; the orchestra numbers only forty or so players: strings and brass are reduced to chamber-music scale and the orchestration heavily weighted towards woodwind and percussion, with the result that it is far less grand and Romantic in scale than is usual in Strauss and a peculiarly spare ad spiky mood frequently prevails. -
Famous Singers Fro M the Establish Ment of Italian Opera Down T O the Present
FAMOUS SING ERS OF TO-DAY AND YESTERDAY THE MU SIC LOVER S’ SER IES T o ll o i he f w n g, each, GREAT COMPOSERS A ND THEIR WORK By Loui s C . E lson FAMOUS PIANIS TS OF TO-DAY A ND YE S TER DAY B en r C Lahee y H y . The ll w ach fo o ing, e , A HI STORY OF OPER A New Revised E dition By Arthur E lson MODERN COMPOSERS OF EUROPE New Revised E dition By Arth ur E lson ORCHE S TR AL I N S TRUME NTS A ND THE IR U SE New Revised E di ti o n By Arthur E lson S HA KE S PEAR E IN MU S IC By Louis C . Elson FAMOUS VIOLINISTS OF T0 -DAY A ND YE S TERDAY New Revised E dition B en r C Lahee y H y . FAMOU S S INGE RS OF TO-DAY A ND YE S TERDAY New Revised E dition B n y He ry C . Lahee THE NATIONAL MU S IC OF AMERI CA A N D I TS S CE OUR S . New Revised E dition B Loui s C an d r hur E son y . A t l The ll w ach fo o ing, e , AMERICAN COMPOSERS By R up er t Hughes an d Arthur Elson THE GRAND OPER A S I NGER S OF TO-D A Y New Revised E dition B en r C Lahee y H y . THE ORGAN A ND I TS MAS TER S New Revised E dition B en r C Lahee y H y . -
1St Connection Between Baseball and Opera
Baseball & Opera (compiled by Mark Schubin, this version posted 2014 April 14) 1849 : 1 st connection between baseball and opera: Fans of American actor Edwin Forrest, who is playing Macbeth in New York, hire thugs from among ballplayers at Elysian Fields in Hoboken, New Jersey (1 st famous ball field) to disrupt performances of British actor William Macready, also playing Macbeth in New York at what had been Astor Opera House. Deadly riot ensues; Macready is rescued by ex-Astor Opera House impresario Edward Fry, who later (1880) invents electronic home entertainment (and probably headphones) by listening to live opera by phone. 1852: Opera-house exclusivity dispute with composer’s niece Johanna Wagner forms legal basis of baseball’s reserve clause. 1870 : Tony Pastor’s Opera House baseball team is covered by The New York Times (they won). 1875 : San Francisco Chronicle reports on that city’s opera-house baseball team. 1879 : Pirate King role created for Signor Brocolini, who, as John Clark, played first base for the Detroit Base Ball Club. 1881 : Dartmouth College opera group performs to raise money for college’s baseball team. 1884 : Three telegraph operators, James U. Rust, E. W. Morgan, and A. H. Stewart, present live games remotely. One sends plays from ballpark, second receives and announces, third moves cards with players’ names around backdrop. Starting in Nashville’s 900-seat Masonic Theater, they soon move to 2,500-seat Grand Opera House, beginning half-century of remote baseball game viewing at opera houses (also Augusta, GA Grand Opera House starting 1885). 1885 : The Black Hussar is probably 1 st opera with baseball mentioned in its libretto (in “Read the answer in the stars”). -
Chronology 1916-1937 (Vienna Years)
Chronology 1916-1937 (Vienna Years) 8 Aug 1916 Der Freischütz; LL, Agathe; first regular (not guest) performance with Vienna Opera Wiedemann, Ottokar; Stehmann, Kuno; Kiurina, Aennchen; Moest, Caspar; Miller, Max; Gallos, Kilian; Reichmann (or Hugo Reichenberger??), cond., Vienna Opera 18 Aug 1916 Der Freischütz; LL, Agathe Wiedemann, Ottokar; Stehmann, Kuno; Kiurina, Aennchen; Moest, Caspar; Gallos, Kilian; Betetto, Hermit; Marian, Samiel; Reichwein, cond., Vienna Opera 25 Aug 1916 Die Meistersinger; LL, Eva Weidemann, Sachs; Moest, Pogner; Handtner, Beckmesser; Duhan, Kothner; Miller, Walther; Maikl, David; Kittel, Magdalena; Schalk, cond., Vienna Opera 28 Aug 1916 Der Evangelimann; LL, Martha Stehmann, Friedrich; Paalen, Magdalena; Hofbauer, Johannes; Erik Schmedes, Mathias; Reichenberger, cond., Vienna Opera 30 Aug 1916?? Tannhäuser: LL Elisabeth Schmedes, Tannhäuser; Hans Duhan, Wolfram; ??? cond. Vienna Opera 11 Sep 1916 Tales of Hoffmann; LL, Antonia/Giulietta Hessl, Olympia; Kittel, Niklaus; Hochheim, Hoffmann; Breuer, Cochenille et al; Fischer, Coppelius et al; Reichenberger, cond., Vienna Opera 16 Sep 1916 Carmen; LL, Micaëla Gutheil-Schoder, Carmen; Miller, Don José; Duhan, Escamillo; Tittel, cond., Vienna Opera 23 Sep 1916 Die Jüdin; LL, Recha Lindner, Sigismund; Maikl, Leopold; Elizza, Eudora; Zec, Cardinal Brogni; Miller, Eleazar; Reichenberger, cond., Vienna Opera 26 Sep 1916 Carmen; LL, Micaëla ???, Carmen; Piccaver, Don José; Fischer, Escamillo; Tittel, cond., Vienna Opera 4 Oct 1916 Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos; Premiere -
Verdi's Rigoletto
Verdi’s Rigoletto - A discographical conspectus by Ralph Moore It is hard if not impossible, to make a representative survey of recordings of Rigoletto, given that there are 200 in the catalogue; I can only compromise by compiling a somewhat arbitrary list comprising of a selection of the best-known and those which appeal to me. For a start, there are thirty or so studio recordings in Italian; I begin with one made in 1927 and 1930, as those made earlier than that are really only for the specialist. I then consider eighteen of the studio versions made since that one. I have not reviewed minor recordings or those which in my estimation do not reach the requisite standard; I freely admit that I cannot countenance those by Sinopoli in 1984, Chailly in 1988, Rahbari in 1991 or Rizzi in 1993 for a combination of reasons, including an aversion to certain singers – for example Gruberova’s shrill squeak of a soprano and what I hear as the bleat in Bruson’s baritone and the forced wobble in Nucci’s – and the existence of a better, earlier version by the same artists (as with the Rudel recording with Milnes, Kraus and Sills caught too late) or lacklustre singing in general from artists of insufficient calibre (Rahbari and Rizzi). Nor can I endorse Dmitri Hvorostovsky’s final recording; whether it was as a result of his sad, terminal illness or the vocal decline which had already set in I cannot say, but it does the memory of him in his prime no favours and he is in any case indifferently partnered. -
Knoxville: Summer of 1915” Danielle E
Undergraduate Research Journal Volume 19 Article 12 2015 Musical and Cultural Significance in Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915” Danielle E. Kluver University of Nebraska at Kearney Follow this and additional works at: https://openspaces.unk.edu/undergraduate-research-journal Part of the Music Commons Recommended Citation Kluver, Danielle E. (2015) "Musical and Cultural Significance in Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915”," Undergraduate Research Journal: Vol. 19 , Article 12. Available at: https://openspaces.unk.edu/undergraduate-research-journal/vol19/iss1/12 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Office of Undergraduate Research & Creative Activity at OpenSPACES@UNK: Scholarship, Preservation, and Creative Endeavors. It has been accepted for inclusion in Undergraduate Research Journal by an authorized editor of OpenSPACES@UNK: Scholarship, Preservation, and Creative Endeavors. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Musical and Cultural Significance in Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915” Danielle E. Kluver INTRODUCTION “We are talking now of summer evenings in Knoxville, Tennessee in the time that I lived there so successfully disguised to myself as a child” (Agee 3). These first words of James Agee’s prose poem “Knoxville: Summer of 1915,” introduce the reader to a world of his youth – rural Tennessee in the early part of the century. Agee’s highly descriptive and lyrical language in phrases such as “these sweet pale streamings in the light out their pallors,” (Agee 5) invites the reader to use all his senses and become enveloped in the inherent music of the language. Is it any wonder that upon reading Agee’s words, composer Samuel Barber should be drawn into this narrative that enlivens the senses and touches the heart with its complexity of human emotions told through the recollections of childhood from a time of youth and innocence. -
110308-10 Bk Lohengrineu 13/01/2005 03:29Pm Page 12
110308-10 bk LohengrinEU 13/01/2005 03:29pm Page 12 her in his arms, reproaching her for bringing their @ Ortrud comes forward, declaring the swan to be happiness to an end. She begs him to stay, to witness her Elsa’s brother, the heir to Brabant, whom she had repentance, but he is adamant. The men urge him to bewitched with the help of her own pagan gods. WAGNER stay, to lead them into battle, but in vain. He promises, Lohengrin kneels in prayer, and when the white dove of however, that Germany will be victorious, never to be the Holy Grail appears, he unties the swan. As it sinks defeated by the hordes from the East. Shouts announce down, Gottfried emerges. Ortrud sinks down, with a the appearance of the swan. cry, while Gottfried bows to the king and greets Elsa. Lohengrin Lohengrin leaps quickly into the boat, which is drawn ! Lohengrin greets the swan. Sorrowfully he turns away by the white dove. Elsa sees him, as he makes his towards it, telling Elsa that her brother is still alive, and sad departure. She faints into her brother’s arms, as the G WIN would have returned to her a year later. He leaves his knight disappears, sailing away into the distance. AN DG horn, sword, and ring for Gottfried, kisses Elsa, and G A F SS moves towards the boat. L E Keith Anderson O N W Mark Obert-Thorn Mark Obert-Thorn is one of the world’s most respected transfer artist/engineers. He has worked for a number of specialist labels, including Pearl, Biddulph, Romophone and Music & Arts. -
Bruno Walter (Ca
[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.] Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky Yale University Press New Haven and London Frontispiece: Bruno Walter (ca. ). Courtesy of Österreichisches Theatermuseum. Copyright © by Yale University. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections and of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Designed by Sonia L. Shannon Set in Bulmer type by The Composing Room of Michigan, Grand Rapids, Mich. Printed in the United States of America by R. R. Donnelley,Harrisonburg, Va. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ryding, Erik S., – Bruno Walter : a world elsewhere / by Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references, filmography,and indexes. ISBN --- (cloth : alk. paper) . Walter, Bruno, ‒. Conductors (Music)— Biography. I. Pechefsky,Rebecca. II. Title. ML.W R .Ј—dc [B] - A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. For Emily, Mary, and William In memoriam Rachel Kemper and Howard Pechefsky Contents Illustrations follow pages and Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Bruno Schlesinger Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg,– Kapellmeister Walter Breslau, Pressburg, Riga, Berlin,‒ -
Staged Treasures
Italian opera. Staged treasures. Gaetano Donizetti, Giuseppe Verdi, Giacomo Puccini and Gioacchino Rossini © HNH International Ltd CATALOGUE # COMPOSER TITLE FEATURED ARTISTS FORMAT UPC Naxos Itxaro Mentxaka, Sondra Radvanovsky, Silvia Vázquez, Soprano / 2.110270 Arturo Chacon-Cruz, Plácido Domingo, Tenor / Roberto Accurso, DVD ALFANO, Franco Carmelo Corrado Caruso, Rodney Gilfry, Baritone / Juan Jose 7 47313 52705 2 Cyrano de Bergerac (1875–1954) Navarro Bass-baritone / Javier Franco, Nahuel di Pierro, Miguel Sola, Bass / Valencia Regional Government Choir / NBD0005 Valencian Community Orchestra / Patrick Fournillier Blu-ray 7 30099 00056 7 Silvia Dalla Benetta, Soprano / Maxim Mironov, Gheorghe Vlad, Tenor / Luca Dall’Amico, Zong Shi, Bass / Vittorio Prato, Baritone / 8.660417-18 Bianca e Gernando 2 Discs Marina Viotti, Mar Campo, Mezzo-soprano / Poznan Camerata Bach 7 30099 04177 5 Choir / Virtuosi Brunensis / Antonino Fogliani 8.550605 Favourite Soprano Arias Luba Orgonášová, Soprano / Slovak RSO / Will Humburg Disc 0 730099 560528 Maria Callas, Rina Cavallari, Gina Cigna, Rosa Ponselle, Soprano / Irene Minghini-Cattaneo, Ebe Stignani, Mezzo-soprano / Marion Telva, Contralto / Giovanni Breviario, Paolo Caroli, Mario Filippeschi, Francesco Merli, Tenor / Tancredi Pasero, 8.110325-27 Norma [3 Discs] 3 Discs Ezio Pinza, Nicola Rossi-Lemeni, Bass / Italian Broadcasting Authority Chorus and Orchestra, Turin / Milan La Scala Chorus and 0 636943 132524 Orchestra / New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Orchestra / BELLINI, Vincenzo Vittorio -
Fidelio Again, Or, a Tale of Two Cantatas
RECORDS by a No. 32 whose arietta is just that and fervent in phrase, Op. t to as Dame accepts a lackey's rôle and the recordists trifle too fast to hurt it beyond repair. Myra gives it and HMV -Victor has regis- have minimized his bass if any. The line The sonatas previously issued have all tered it melts this critic to a sentimental of beauty in the adagio is worth hearing. been noticed here. Like the components enthusiasm. Op. tog is played in the same The last two movements are awkward. of any complete edition, they vary in general manner - soft, intense but sym- C. G. B. value. They are in great part much better metrical - and may be as magisterial a in sound than the Kempff edition, but presentation; but the critic has always BEETHOVEN few will think that the Backhaus strength been puzzled by its simpler music, and Sonatas for Piano and Violin; No. 7, countervails the vivacious symmetry of cannot declare how he thinks it stands in C Minor, Op. 30, No. 3; No. to, Prof. Kempff. There are 190 recordings in relation to other interpretations. He in G, Op. 96 of Beethoven piano sonatas, and among prefers this Op. 110 to all, and the sound Friedrich Gulda, Ruggiero Ricci. them five or six of the Backhaus versions of both to all. The high octaves here are LONDON LL 1004. 12 -in. 26, 26 are outstanding, an impressive accomplish- real as real, and nowhere is reproduction min. $5.95 - ment. C. G. B. troublesome. C. -
Concert Program
“Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty—that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.” The English poet John Keats had written those lines in his “Ode To a Grecian Urn.” The invention of the Beautiful, whether in the visual arts of painting and sculpture, the spoken art of poetry and drama, or the field of music, is profoundly affected by the burning question: what is human freedom, and do all human beings not only have a right to it, but also a natural, “unalienable” pre- disposition to be free? If so, the capacity for human freedom were embedded in the fabric of the universe itself. Freedom would be not only a natural, but also necessary power for the evolution of the uni- verse itself. Poet Friedrich Schiller contended that “man is born for that which is better.” Schiller also warned that it is only “through Beauty, that one proceeds to Freedom.” If he is correct, would a corol- lary be properly inferred, that “it is through ugliness, that one descends into Slavery?” And is that to be the epitaph of our time? Violence is ugly. Violence solves nothing. Violence is the enemy of all mankind. “Precisely for this reason is nothing so unworthy of man as to suffer violence, for violence annuls him. Who does it to us, dis- putes nothing less than our humanity; who suffers it in a cowardly manner, throws away his humanity,” says the poet Friedrich Schiller in his essay “On the Sublime.” Can the response to violence, be the strength to love in the face of hate? Can music overcome the madness of violence? The struggle of the human being to become better, to discover his/her purpose in the uni- verse, the struggle to make life matter, does not require violence; it requires the abolition of violence. -
Guild Gmbh Guild -Historical Catalogue Bärenholzstrasse 8, 8537 Nussbaumen/TG, Switzerland Tel: +41 52 742 85 00 - E-Mail: [email protected] CD-No
Guild GmbH Guild -Historical Catalogue Bärenholzstrasse 8, 8537 Nussbaumen/TG, Switzerland Tel: +41 52 742 85 00 - e-mail: [email protected] CD-No. Title Composer/Track Artists GHCD 2201 Parsifal Act 2 Richard Wagner The Metropolitan Opera 1938 - Flagstad, Melchior, Gabor, Leinsdorf GHCD 2202 Toscanini - Concert 14.10.1939 FRANZ SCHUBERT (1797-1828) Symphony No.8 in B minor, "Unfinished", D.759 NBC Symphony, Arturo Toscanini RICHARD STRAUSS (1864-1949) Don Juan - Tone Poem after Lenau, op. 20 FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDN (1732-1809) Symphony Concertante in B flat Major, op. 84 JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH (1685-1750) Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor (Orchestrated by O. Respighi) GHCD Le Nozze di Figaro Mozart The Metropolitan Opera - Breisach with Pinza, Sayão, Baccaloni, Steber, Novotna 2203/4/5 GHCD 2206 Boris Godounov, Selections Moussorgsky Royal Opera, Covent Garden 1928 - Chaliapin, Bada, Borgioli GHCD Siegfried Richard Wagner The Metropolitan Opera 1937 - Melchior, Schorr, Thorborg, Flagstad, Habich, 2207/8/9 Laufkoetter, Bodanzky GHCD 2210 Mahler: Symphony No.2 Gustav Mahler - Symphony No.2 in C Minor „The Resurrection“ Concertgebouw Orchestra, Otto Klemperer - Conductor, Kathleen Ferrier, Jo Vincent, Amsterdam Toonkunstchoir - 1951 GHCD Toscanini - Concert 1938 & RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (1872-1958) Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis NBC Symphony, Arturo Toscanini 2211/12 1942 JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833-1897) Symphony No. 3 in F Major, op. 90 GUISEPPE MARTUCCI (1856-1909) Notturno, Novelletta; PETER IILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840- 1893) Romeo and Juliet