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Handel Airs D'operas Mp3, Flac, Wma
Handel Airs D'Operas mp3, flac, wma DOWNLOAD LINKS (Clickable) Genre: Classical Album: Airs D'Operas Country: Europe Released: 1983 Style: Baroque, Opera MP3 version RAR size: 1724 mb FLAC version RAR size: 1279 mb WMA version RAR size: 1926 mb Rating: 4.9 Votes: 315 Other Formats: VQF DMF WMA MIDI AAC MOD MP1 Tracklist Arie Di Rinaldo 1 "Or La Tromba" (Rinaldo, III, 9) 3:44 2 "Cara Sposa" (Rinaldo, I, 7) 9:44 3 "Venti, Turbini" (Rinaldo, I, 9) 4:52 4 "Cor Ingrato" (Rinaldo, I, 3) 4:39 Aria Di Serse 5 "Frondi Tenere"-"Ombra Mai Fu" (Serse, I, 1) 4:12 Aria Di Arsace 6 "Furibondo Spira Il Vento " (Partenope, II, 9) 4:48 Aria Di Poppea 7 "Bel Piacere" (Agrippina, III, 10) 2:19 Aria Di Almirena 8 "Lascia Ch'Io Pinaga Mia Cruda Sorte" (Rinaldo, II, 4) 5:59 Aria Di Orlando 9 "Fammi Combattere" (Orlando, I, 10) 3:49 Credits Composed By – Georg Friedrich Haendel* Conductor – Claudio Scimone Mezzo-soprano Vocals – Marilyn Horne Orchestra – I Solisti Veneti Notes 16 page liner front insert is in English, French and German. Printed and Made in West Germany. Barcode and Other Identifiers Label Code: RC650 Other versions Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year G.F. Haendel* - G.F. Haendel* - Marilyn Marilyn Horne, I Horne, I Solisti Veneti, NUM 75047 Erato NUM 75047 France 1983 Solisti Veneti, Claudio Scimone - Airs Claudio Scimone D'Operas (LP) Handel* - Marilyn Handel* - Marilyn Horne, I Horne, I Solisti Solisti Veneti, Claudio 2292-45186-2 Erato 2292-45186-2 France 1991 Veneti, Claudio Scimone - Airs D'Operas Scimone (CD, Album, -
Cds by Composer/Performer
CPCC MUSIC LIBRARY COMPACT DISCS Updated May 2007 Abercrombie, John (Furs on Ice and 9 other selections) guitar, bass, & synthesizer 1033 Academy for Ancient Music Berlin Works of Telemann, Blavet Geminiani 1226 Adams, John Short Ride, Chairman Dances, Harmonium (Andriessen) 876, 876A Adventures of Baron Munchausen (music composed and conducted by Michael Kamen) 1244 Adderley, Cannonball Somethin’ Else (Autumn Leaves; Love For Sale; Somethin’ Else; One for Daddy-O; Dancing in the Dark; Alison’s Uncle 1538 Aebersold, Jamey: Favorite Standards (vol 22) 1279 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Favorite Standards (vol 22) 1279 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: Gettin’ It Together (vol 21) 1272 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Gettin’ It Together (vol 21) 1272 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: Jazz Improvisation (vol 1) 1270 Aebersold, Jamey: Major and Minor (vol 24) 1281 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: Major and Minor (vol 24) 1281 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: One Dozen Standards (vol 23) 1280 pt. 1 Aebersold, Jamey: One Dozen Standards (vol 23) 1280 pt. 2 Aebersold, Jamey: The II-V7-1 Progression (vol 3) 1271 Aerosmith Get a Grip 1402 Airs d’Operettes Misc. arias (Barbara Hendricks; Philharmonia Orch./Foster) 928 Airwaves: Heritage of America Band, U.S. Air Force/Captain Larry H. Lang, cond. 1698 Albeniz, Echoes of Spain: Suite Espanola, Op.47 and misc. pieces (John Williams, guitar) 962 Albinoni, Tomaso (also Pachelbel, Vivaldi, Bach, Purcell) 1212 Albinoni, Tomaso Adagio in G Minor (also Pachelbel: Canon; Zipoli: Elevazione for Cello, Oboe; Gluck: Dance of the Furies, Dance of the Blessed Spirits, Interlude; Boyce: Symphony No. 4 in F Major; Purcell: The Indian Queen- Trumpet Overture)(Consort of London; R,Clark) 1569 Albinoni, Tomaso Concerto Pour 2 Trompettes in C; Concerto in C (Lionel Andre, trumpet) (also works by Tartini; Vivaldi; Maurice André, trumpet) 1520 Alderete, Ignacio: Harpe indienne et orgue 1019 Aloft: Heritage of America Band (United States Air Force/Captain Larry H. -
TFO Tour 2017
Tongyeong Festival Orchestra European Tour 2017 Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of Isang Yun (1917-1995) 23 September to 2 October 2017 Program Maurice Ravel: Le Tombeau du Couperin Isang Yun: Violin Concerto No. 3 (1992) Isang Yun: Harmonia (1974) Maurice Ravel: Ma Mère l´oye (Ballett) Clara Jumi Kang Violin Tongyeong Festival Orchestra Heinz Holliger Conductor Inquiries: Tongyeong International Music Foundation www.timf.org [email protected] Tongyeong Festival Orchestra Following the example of Lucerne, Switzerland, Tongyeong Festival Orchestra (TFO) was created to enhance the musical spectrum of the Tongyeong International Music Festival, and to serve as an artistic ambassador for Tongyeong City, a UNESCO Creative City of Music. Since the festival’s first edition in 2002, TIMF has been striving to assemble highly qualified musicians in order to build its own ensemble. In 2011, then Alexander Liebreich initiated a collaboration of musicians from Ensemble TIMF with the Munich Chamber Orchestra, thus for the first time building a truly international Festival Orchestra. From then on, the group was assembled annually, performing at home and abroad. At the opening of the new Tongyeong Concert Hall in 2014, TFO was again led by Alexander Liebreich and included musicians from Ensemble TIMF, Polish National Radio Orchestra of Katowice, and from major international symphony orchestras, such as NDR Hamburg, Munich Philharmonic, Kremerata Baltica, Osaka Philharmonic, Melbourne Symphony and Sydney Symphony Orchestra. In 2015, TFO truly became a musical centerpiece of the Tongyeong International Music Festival. Following the festival theme „Voyages“, the orchestra went abroad to play in Japan and China. Performing together with violinist Gidon Kremer and German conductor Christoph Poppen, the orchestra consisted of musicians mainly from Korea, Japan and China to create a musical bridge between the three countries. -
Everything Essential
Everythi ng Essen tial HOW A SMALL CONSERVATORY BECAME AN INCUBATOR FOR GREAT AMERICAN QUARTET PLAYERS BY MATTHEW BARKER 10 OVer tONeS Fall 2014 “There’s something about the quartet form. albert einstein once Felix Galimir “had the best said, ‘everything should be as simple as possible, but not simpler.’ that’s the essence of the string quartet,” says arnold Steinhardt, longtime first violinist of the Guarneri Quartet. ears I’ve been around and “It has everything that is essential for great music.” the best way to get students From Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert through the romantics, the Second Viennese School, Debussy, ravel, Bartók, the avant-garde, and up to the present, the leading so immersed in the act of composers of each generation reserved their most intimate expression and genius for that basic ensemble of two violins, a viola, and a cello. music making,” says Steven Over the past century america’s great music schools have placed an increasing emphasis tenenbom. “He was old on the highly specialized and rigorous discipline of quartet playing. among them, Curtis holds a special place despite its small size. In the last several decades alone, among the world and new world.” majority of important touring quartets in america at least one chair—and in some cases four—has been filled by a Curtis-trained musician. (Mr. Steinhardt, also a longtime member of the Curtis faculty, is one.) looking back, the current golden age of string quartets can be traced to a mission statement issued almost 90 years ago by early Curtis director Josef Hofmann: “to hand down through contemporary masters the great traditions of the past; to teach students to build on this heritage for the future.” Mary louise Curtis Bok created a haven for both teachers and students to immerse themselves in music at the highest levels without financial burden. -
Artist Series – Gilbert Kalish Program Notes
ARTIST SERIES – GILBERT KALISH PROGRAM GEORGE CRUMB (b. 1929) Three Early Songs for Voice and Piano (1947) Night Let It Be Forgotten Wind Elegy Tony Arnold, soprano • Gilbert Kalish, piano FRANZ SCHUBERT (1797-1828) “Der Hirt auf dem Felsen” for Soprano, Clarinet, and Piano, D. 965, Op. 129 (1828) Lisette Oropesa, soprano • David Shifrin, clarinet • Gilbert Kalish, piano JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833-1897) Quartet No. 3 in C minor for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello, Op. 60 (1855-56, 1874) Allegro non troppo Scherzo: Allegro Andante Finale: Allegro comodo Gilbert Kalish, piano • Nicolas Dautricourt, violin • Paul Neubauer, viola • Torleif Thedéen, cello NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Three Early Songs for Voice and Piano (1947) George Crumb (b. CHarleston, WV, 1929) Crumb wrote these songs in 1947, the year he graduated high school and entered Mason College in his native Charleston, West Virginia. His now-wife of 70 years, Elizabeth May Brown, was the first to sing them and they are dedicated to her. They are wholly unlike the works that Crumb eventually became famous for—their sound is more early 20th century art song than the unique and otherworldly sound palette he would later develop. Crumb explained that in West Virginia at that time, Debussy was “almost an ultra-modern.” These songs, with delightful melodies and floating harmonies, show that young Crumb, even before finding his mature style, still had a gift for music that is understated yet emotionally powerful. Crumb suppressed the vast majority of his student compositions but he’s allowed performance of these songs. “Most of the music I wrote before the early sixties (when I finally found my own voice) now Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center causes me intense discomfort,” he writes, “although I make an exception for a few songs which I composed when I was 17 or 18.… these little pieces stayed in my memory and when, some years ago, Jan DeGaetani expressed an interest in seeing them (with a view to possible performance if she liked them), I made a few slight revisions and even decided to have them published. -
2Majors and Minors.Qxd.KA
As printed January 2005 MUSIC Music (MUS, JAZ) Major and Minors in Music Department of Music, College of Arts and Sciences CHAIRPERSON: Judith Lochhead DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES: Perry Goldstein UNDERGRADUATE SECRETARY: Germaine Berry OFFICE: 3304 Staller Center for the Arts PHONE: (631) 632-7330 E-MAIL: [email protected] WEB ADDRESS: www.sunysb.edu/music Minors of particular interest to students majoring in Music: Anthropology (ANT), Art History (ARH), Cinema and Cultural Studies (CCS), Dance (DAN), English (EGL), History (HIS), Philosophy (PHI), Theatre Arts (THR) Faculty Joyce Robbins, Professor Emerita, B.S., Michael Powell, Artist in Residence, B. Mus., Ray Anderson, Visiting Professor, Director of Juilliard School of Music: Violin; viola; peda- Wichita State: Trombone. Jazz Program and Stony Brook Jazz Band, gogy; chamber music. William Purvis, Artist in Residence, B.A., Empire State College: Jazz studies; jazz impro- Daria Semegen, Associate Professor and Haverford College: Horn; chamber music. visation. Director of Electronic Music Studio, M.Mus., Philip Setzer, Artist in Residence, M.M., Joseph Auner, Professor, Ph.D., University of Yale University: Composition; theory; electronic Juilliard School of Music: Violin; chamber Chicago: 19th- and 20th-century history and music. music. theory. Sheila Silver, Professor, Ph.D., Brandeis Stephen Taylor, Artist in Residence, Diploma, Colin Carr, Professor, Certificate of University: Composition; theory. Juilliard School of Music: Oboe; chamber Performance, 1974, Yehudi Menuhin School: Jane Sugarman, Associate Professor, Ph.D., music. Cello; chamber music. University of California, Los Angeles: Chris Pedro Trakas, Artist in Residence, Joseph Carver, Assistant Professor, D.M.A., Ethnomusicology; world music cultures, south- M.Mus., University of Houston: Voice. -
Daniel Lanois
ESPERANZA SPALDING If “esperanza” is the Spanish word for hope, then bassist, vocalist and composer Esperanza Spalding could not have been given a more fitting name at birth. Blessed with uncanny instrumental chops, a multi-lingual voice that is part angel and part siren, and a natural beauty that borders on the hypnotic, the 25-year-old prodigy-turned-pro might well be the hope for the future of jazz and instrumental music. Spalding was born in 1984 and raised on what she calls “the other side of the tracks” in a multi- lingual household and neighborhood in Portland, Oregon. Growing up in a single-parent home amid economically adverse circumstances, she learned early lessons in the meaning of perseverance and moral character from the role model whom she holds in the highest regard to this day – her mother. But even with a rock-solid role model, school did not come easy to Spalding, although not for any lack of intellectual acumen. She was both blessed and cursed with a highly intuitive learning style that often put her at odds with the traditional education system. On top of that, she was shut in by a lengthy illness as a child, and as a result, was home-schooled for a significant portion of her elementary school years. In the end, she never quite adjusted to learning by rote in the conventional school setting. “It was just hard for me to fit into a setting where I was expected to sit in a room and swallow everything that was being fed to me,” she recalls. -
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center New World Spirit Sunday, October 13, 2019 3:00 Pm Photo: Tristan Cook Tristan Photo
The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center New World Spirit Sunday, October 13, 2019 3:00 pm Photo: Tristan Cook Tristan Photo: 2019/2020 SEASON The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center GLORIA CHIEN, Piano NICHOLAS CANELLAKIS, Cello CHAD HOOPES, Violin DAVID FINCKEL, Cello KRISTIN LEE, Violin ANTHONY MANZO, Double Bass ARNAUD SUSSMANN, Violin RANSOM WILSON, Flute ANGELO XIANG YU, Violin DAVID SHIFRIN, Clarinet MATTHEW LIPMAN, Viola MARC GOLDBERG, Bassoon PAUL NEUBAUER, Viola Sunday, October 13, 2019, at 3:00 pm Hancher Auditorium, The University of Iowa PROGRAM New World Spirit This concert celebrates the intrepid American spirit by featuring two pairs of composers that shaped the course of American music. Harry T. Burleigh was a star student of Dvorákˇ at the National Conservatory in New York. A talented composer and singer, he exposed the Czech composer to American spirituals and was in turn encouraged by Dvorákˇ to perform his native African American folk music. Two generations later, Copland and Bernstein conceived a clean, clear American sound that conveys the wonder and awe of open spaces and endless possibilities. Southland Sketches for violin and piano (1916) Henry T. Burleigh I. Andante (1866–1949) II. Adagio ma non troppo III. Allegretto grazioso IV. Allegro Chad Hoopes and Gloria Chien Quintet in E-flat Major for two violins, two violas, Antonín Dvorákˇ and cello, Op. 97, (“American”) (1893) (1841–1904) I. Allegro non tanto II. Allegro vivo III. Larghetto IV. Finale: Allegro giusto Arnaud Sussmann, Angelo Xiang Yu, Paul Neubauer, Matthew Lipman, and Nicholas Canellakis INTERMISSION Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (1941–42) Leonard Bernstein I. -
21-Asis Aktualios Muzikos Festivalis GAIDA 21Th Contemporary Music Festival
GAIDA 21-asis aktualios muzikos festivalis GAIDA 21th Contemporary Music festival 2011 m. spalio 21–29 d., Vilnius 21–29 October, 2011, Vilnius Festivalio viešbutis Globėjai: 21-asis tarptautinis šiuolaikinės muzikos festivalis GAIDA 21th International Contemporary Music Festival Pagrindiniai informaciniai rėmėjai: MINIMAL | MAXIMAL • Festivalio tema – minimalizmas ir maksimalizmas muzikoje: bandymas Informaciniai rėmėjai: pažvelgti į skirtingus muzikos polius • Vienos didžiausių šiuolaikinės muzikos asmenybių platesnis kūrybos pristatymas – portretas: kompozitorius vizionierius Iannis Xenakis • Pirmą kartą Lietuvoje – iškiliausio XX a. pabaigos lenkų simfoninio kūrinio, Henryko Mikołajaus Góreckio III simfonijos, atlikimas • Dėmesys tikriems šiuolaikinės muzikos atlikimo lyderiams iš Prancūzijos, Vokietijos ir Italijos Partneriai ir rėmėjai: • Intriguojantys audiovizualiniai projektai – originalios skirtingų menų sąveikos ir netikėti sprendimai • Keletas potėpių M. K. Čiurlioniui, pažymint kompozitoriaus 100-ąsias mirties metines • Naujų kūrinių užsakymai ir geriausi Lietuvos bei užsienio atlikėjai: simfoniniai orkestrai, ansambliai, solistai Festivalis GAIDA yra europinio naujosios muzikos kūrybos ir sklaidos tinklo Réseau Varése, remiamo Europos Komisijos programos Kultūra, narys. The GAIDA Festival is a member of the Réseau Varése, European network Rengėjai: for the creation and promotion of new music, subsidized by the Culture Programme of the European Commission. TURINYS / CONTENT Programa / Programme.......................................................................................2 -
Poems, Letters, and Premieres
Poems, Letters, and Premieres Thursday, May 28, 2015, 8:00 PM Saint Ignatius of Antioch Episcopal Church 552 West End Avenue, New York City New Amsterdam Singers Clara Longstreth, Music Director David Recca, Assistant Conductor Nathaniel Granor, Chamber Chorus Assistant Conductor Pen Ying Fang, Accompanist Andrew Adelson, oboe, English horn Petites Voix Francis Poulenc (1899 - 1963) La petite fille sage Le chien perdu En rentrant de l’école Le petit garçon malade Le hérisson Women’s voices She Weeps Over Rahoon Eric Whitacre (b. 1970) Women’s voices with English horn, piano French Choruses from The Lark Leonard Bernstein (1918 - 1990) Spring Song Jason Hill, baritone Court Song Jason Hill, baritone; Robert Thorpe, tenor Soldier’s Song Men’s voices with drum Drinking Song (samba) Matthew Harris (b. 1956) Nobody Michael Dellaira (b. 1949) Robin Beckhard, soprano Chorus with oboe New York City premiere INTERMISSION Six Chansons Paul Hindemith (1895 - 1963) La Biche Un Cygne Puisque tout passe Printemps En Hiver Verger Chamber Chorus Dear Theo Ben Moore (b. 1960) Allison Gish, soprano; Rebecca Dee, alto; Nathaniel Granor, tenor; Rick Bonsall, bass Chamber Chorus New York City premiere Four Pastorales Cecil Effinger (1914 - 1990) No Mark Noon Basket Wood Chorus with oboe Please turn off all phones and other devices during the performance. PROGRAM NOTES, TEXTS, AND TRANSLATIONS This concert has no single, overarching theme, but is connected by unusually appealing texts, both in French and in English. The secular poetry chosen by composers from 1936 to 2011 is in some cases dark, but the dark poems are balanced by ones with humor (Poulenc on the hedgehog, Bernstein on love, Matt Harris with his samba Drinking Song). -
The Seventh Season Being Mendelssohn CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL and INSTITUTE July 17–August 8, 2009 David Finckel and Wu Han, Artistic Directors
The Seventh Season Being Mendelssohn CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL AND INSTITUTE July 17–August 8, 2009 David Finckel and Wu Han, Artistic Directors Music@Menlo Being Mendelssohn the seventh season july 17–august 8, 2009 david finckel and wu han, artistic directors Contents 3 A Message from the Artistic Directors 5 Welcome from the Executive Director 7 Being Mendelssohn: Program Information 8 Essay: “Mendelssohn and Us” by R. Larry Todd 10 Encounters I–IV 12 Concert Programs I–V 29 Mendelssohn String Quartet Cycle I–III 35 Carte Blanche Concerts I–III 46 Chamber Music Institute 48 Prelude Performances 54 Koret Young Performers Concerts 57 Open House 58 Café Conversations 59 Master Classes 60 Visual Arts and the Festival 61 Artist and Faculty Biographies 74 Glossary 76 Join Music@Menlo 80 Acknowledgments 81 Ticket and Performance Information 83 Music@Menlo LIVE 84 Festival Calendar Cover artwork: untitled, 2009, oil on card stock, 40 x 40 cm by Theo Noll. Inside (p. 60): paintings by Theo Noll. Images on pp. 1, 7, 9 (Mendelssohn portrait), 10 (Mendelssohn portrait), 12, 16, 19, 23, and 26 courtesy of Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, NY. Images on pp. 10–11 (landscape) courtesy of Lebrecht Music and Arts; (insects, Mendelssohn on deathbed) courtesy of the Bridgeman Art Library. Photographs on pp. 30–31, Pacifica Quartet, courtesy of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Theo Noll (p. 60): Simone Geissler. Bruce Adolphe (p. 61), Orli Shaham (p. 66), Da-Hong Seetoo (p. 83): Christian Steiner. William Bennett (p. 62): Ralph Granich. Hasse Borup (p. 62): Mary Noble Ours. -
2O21-22 Season
CELEBRATING 2O21-22 SEASON EST. 1996 2021-22 contents 5 Welcome 6 Season Calendar 8 Subscribe 10 Series 22 Performances 86 Performances for Young People 88 How to Order 89 Discounts 91 Helpful Information 92 Beyond the Footlights 94 Support On the cover: Hodgson Concert Hall 2Camerata RCO Painting: J.N. Smith 3 Welcome Back What a time it has been! Our world has experienced unprecedented disruption since we last gathered in the spring of 2020 in our beautiful venues to witness exquisite music, dance, and theatre together. Throughout these many long and painful months of separation and isolation, I have been yearning for the time when we can be together once again. It appears that time is finally now upon us! I am absolutely thrilled to share our plans for celebrating the University of Georgia Performing Arts Center’s historic 25th anniversary season throughout the fall of 2021 and spring of 2022. Our silver anniversary season will feature a variety of acclaimed guest artists—some new to us and some returning favorites—with an equally wide variety of personal life experiences. They will come to us from across the United States and several different countries. Their experiences inform their work, and we will, for a brief moment in time, commune together as the universal languages of music, spoken word, and movement unite us in hope and healing. Not only has the world changed significantly since we first opened our doors 25 years ago, it has changed dramatically in the last year as we have endured the devastating impact of a global pandemic, social injustice, political uncertainty, and any number of other things.