Vltava the Bartered Bride Slavonic Rhapsody Scherzo Capriccioso

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vltava the Bartered Bride Slavonic Rhapsody Scherzo Capriccioso SLAVONIC FESTIVAL Vltava The Bartered Bride Slavonic Rhapsody Scherzo Capriccioso Rusalka Moravian Dances Slovak Philharmonic CSSR State Philharmonic Kosler Pesek Stankovsky Wordsworth Slavonic Festival Rusalka, Op. 11 4 Antonin Dvok4k (1841 - 1904) The Bartered Bride ~edfichSmetana (1824 - 1884) Scherzo capriccioso, Op. 66 Antonin Dvoiak Moravian Dances Slavonic Rhapsody, Op. 45, No. 2 Antonin Dvokk Vltava (Moldau) ~ediichSmetana The country formed in 1918 from Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia, established in freedom from Vienna as the republic of Czechoslovakia, had long served the Habsburg Empire as a fertile source of music and musicians. Prague, after all, had been the preferred residence of the earlier Habsburgs, Ferdinand I, Maximilian II and Rudolf I, until, after the defeat of the Czech nobility at the Battle of the White Mountain in 1620, the centre of imperial interest shifted to Vienna. Styles of music, however, were much in accordance with those generally prevalent in the courts of German-speaking countries. It was principally in the second half of the nineteenth century that music of an overtly national flavour appeared, as national consciousness grew. A revival of interest in the Czech language at the end of the eighteenth century had its later parallel in music. It was with Bedrich Smetana that Czech national music came of age. Bohemian by birth, the son of a master-brewer in the service of Count Waldstein, he enjoyed an early education that allowed only intermittent attention to music. He was later able to support himself as a piano teacher in the house of a nobleman in Prague, while taking lessons privately, his aim, as he put it, to be a Liszt in piano technique and a Mozart in composition. He was involved in the,abortive nationalist rising of 1848 and took refuge for a time in Sweden, before settling again in Bohemia after the Austrian defeat in 1859 bv Napoleon Ill. His int&egt now centred on the new Provisional Theatre i; Prague, where he became conductor in 1866 after earlier disappointment. His Czech opera The Brandenburgers in Bohemia, completed in 1863, was first performed there on 5th January, 1866. On 30th May the new opera The Bartered Bride followed, without dances in its first version. It was revised in 1869, when, among other additions, the Polka of Act II was included. Further revision followed, with the final version staged at the Provisional Theatre in September, 1870. The Bartered Bride of the title, Marenka, is to marry the son of Tobias Mfcha, who turns out to be the simpleton Vaiek. She already has a handsome lover, Jenlk, who barters her away with the marriage-broker, agreeing, for a consideration, that Marenka should marry only a son of Mlcha. All complications are finally resolved when it turns out that Jenik, always aware of his own true identity, is Mfcha's long lost son. Vagek, meanwhile, has found his own delight in the circus dancer Esmeralda, and a role for himself playing the part of a performing bear in the circus. The opera opens with a sparkling Overture. The Polka and the Furiant, in the final version of the opera, provide dances for the villagers, while the so-called Dance of the Comedians introduces the travelling circus of Act Ill. The symphonic poem Vltava (Moldau) is one of a cycle of six such works under the title Ma Vlast (My Fatherland), compositions that combine. a geographical and patriotic survey of Bohemia. The River Vltava, the second of the whole cycle, completed in 1880, flows on with growing majesty, after the gentle ripples with which it begins, passing through the countryside, witness to the events of past history. The principal viola-player in Smetana's Provisional Theatre orchestra was Antonfn Dvorlk, the son of avillage butcher-cum- inn-keeper. As a composer he was to build a much securer reputation for himself internationally than Smetana. With the encouragement of Brahms, he was able to devote himself principally to composition from 1871, when he left the orchestra. Although he had a continuing and absorbing interest in opera, it is chiefly for his instrumental compositions that he has been known abroad. His penultimate opera, Rusalka, described as a lyric fairy-tale, was completed in 1900 and first staged at what was now the Czech National Theatre in the following year. The story is a version of the legend of Undine, in which a water-spirit, Rusalka, falls in love with a mortal, who eventually, after at first deserting her, gives up his own life to join her in watery union. The Polonaise forms part of the second act wedding scene, which includes a ballet. ~voilkwrote his Scherzo capriccioso in the spring of 1883. It is among his most successful works, composed at a time when his reputation had resulted in an invitation to London and an offer from Vienna for a German opera. The first he accepted in the following year, but hedecided against Vienna, preferring to remain loyal to Bohemia and the cause of opera in the Czech language. The three Slavonic Rhapsodies, Opus 45, were written in 1878, the year of the first set of the popular Slavonic Dances. The second Rhapsody, in G minor, is an attractive work, containing, at its heart, a particularly charming waltz. Leo5 JanB6ek spent the greater part of his life in his native province of Moravia, where he won a considerable local reputationfor himself as a teacher and as a composer. It was not until 1916, when he was already 62, that he won wider fame, with the production of his opera Jenufa in Prague. There followed a remarkable series of six operas, the last completed in the year of his death, 1928. The five Moravian Dances for orchestra were arranged in 1889 and 1890 at a time when Janlzek was immersed in the collection and stuay of Moravian folk-music, particularly from the north of the province, where he was born. This provided some distraction for him after the disappointment of his opera Slrka, where trouble had arisen over the unauthorised use of the libretto, after much of his own work had been completed. SLAVONIC FESTIVAL Dvokk Smetana ~an~c"ek Time : DVO~~:Polonaise from JANA~EK:Moravian Rusalka (455) Dances (8:56) a. Kozich SMETANA: The Bartered b. Kahmajka Bride (18:48) c. Wjky a. OvedWe d. Silnice b. Polka e. Rozek c. Furiant d. Dance of the Comedians DVO~AK:Slavonic Rhapsody, Op. 45, No. 2 (12:Oa) Ci] DVO&~:Scherzo Capriccioso, Op. 66 SMETANA: Vltava (Moldau) CSSR State Philharmonic (No. I); Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra (Nos.2-6) Conducted by Robert Stankmsky (No. 1); Barry Wordsworth (Nos.2 & 6): ZdenEk Kogler (Nos. 3 & 5); Libor P&k (No. 4). Music Nofes: Keith Anderson Cover: Prague (1900) (Painting by C%za Zicrer) .
Recommended publications
  • Gustav Mahler : Conducting Multiculturalism
    GUSTAV MAHLER : CONDUCTING MULTICULTURALISM Victoria Hallinan 1 Musicologists and historians have generally paid much more attention to Gustav Mahler’s famous career as a composer than to his work as a conductor. His choices in concert repertoire and style, however, reveal much about his personal experiences in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and his interactions with cont- emporary cultural and political upheavals. This project examines Mahler’s conducting career in the multicultural climate of late nineteenth-century Vienna and New York. It investigates the degree to which these contexts influenced the conductor’s repertoire and questions whether Mahler can be viewed as an early proponent of multiculturalism. There is a wealth of scholarship on Gustav Mahler’s diverse compositional activity, but his conducting repertoire and the multicultural contexts that influenced it, has not received the same critical attention. 2 In this paper, I examine Mahler’s connection to the crumbling, late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century depiction of the Austro-Hungarian Empire as united and question whether he can be regarded as an exemplar of early multiculturalism. I trace Mahler’s career through Budapest, Vienna and New York, explore the degree to which his repertoire choices reflected the established opera canon of his time, or reflected contemporary cultural and political trends, and address uncertainties about Mahler’s relationship to the various multicultural contexts in which he lived and worked. Ultimately, I argue that Mahler’s varied experiences cannot be separated from his decisions regarding what kinds of music he believed his audiences would want to hear, as well as what kinds of music he felt were relevant or important to share.
    [Show full text]
  • There's a Real Buzz and Sense of Purpose About What This Company Is Doing
    15 FEBRUARY 7.15PM & 17 FEBRUARY 2PM “There’s a real buzz and sense of purpose about what this company is doing” ~ The Guardian www.niopera.com Grand Opera House, Belfast Welcome to The Grand Opera House for this new production of The Flying Dutchman. This is, by some way, NI Opera’s biggest production to date. Our very first opera (Menotti’s The Medium, coincidentally staged two years ago this month) utilised just five singers and a chamber band, and to go from this to a grand opera demanding 50 singers and a full symphony orchestra in such a short space of time indicates impressive progress. Similarly, our performances of Noye’s Fludde at the Beijing Music Festival in October, and our recent Irish Times Theatre Award nominations for The Turn of the Screw, demonstrate that our focus on bringing high quality, innovative opera to the widest possible audience continues to bear fruit. It feels appropriate for us to be staging our first Wagner opera in the bicentenary of the composer’s birth, but this production marks more than just a historical anniversary. Unsurprisingly, given the cost and complexities involved in performing Wagner, this will be the first fully staged Dutchman to be seen in Northern Ireland for generations. More unexpectedly, perhaps, this is the first ever new production of a Wagner opera by a Northern Irish company. Northern Ireland features heavily in this production. The opera begins and ends with ships and the sea, and it does not take too much imagination to link this back to Belfast’s industrial heritage and the recent Titanic commemorations.
    [Show full text]
  • Hailed As One of the Leading Exponents of the Bel Canto and Lyric
    JOHN KANEKLIDES, TENOR Hailed by Opera News as “the very picture of youthful optimism and potential,” John Kaneklides is quickly establishing himself as a celebrated tenor of his time. After being named a finalist in the Nico Castel International Master Singer Competition in 2011, Kaneklides was personally championed by the prolific diction coach and opera translator - a mentorship that propelled his career in opera, art song, and oratorio. This season Kaneklides will create the role of the Guide who mysteriously transforms into Narciso Borgia in the world premiere of Harold Blumenfeld’s Borgia Infami with Winter Opera Saint Louis. He will also reprise the title role in Les contes d’Hoffmann with Skylight Music Theatre and make his role debut as Ralph Rackstraw in H.M.S. Pinafore with the Young Victorian Theatre Company. Additionally, Kaneklides will return to St. Petersburg Opera as Alfredo in La traviata. On the concert stage he can be heard as the tenor soloist in Orff’s Carmina Burana with the Florida Orchestra, under the baton of Michael Francis. Kaneklides will also be concertizing with Lyric Opera Baltimore, Gulfshore Opera and throughout North Carolina. The 2016-2017 season brought Kaneklides rave reviews for his role debut in the title role of Les contes d’Hoffmann. The Tampa Bay Times said he, “makes for a mesmerizing lead as the poet Hoffmann, equipped with matinee idol looks and a electric sound that continues to surprise.” Kaneklides also starred as Villiers, The Duke of Buckingham in the highly anticipated New York premier of Carlisle Floyd’s most recent opera, The Prince of Players, with the Little Opera Theatre of New York.
    [Show full text]
  • Revista Música Em Contexto 27-11-2009 - N3 2009.Indd 27 29/11/2009 12:26:28 28 Música Em Contexto Knust, M
    The diSSemiNatioN OF the ‘GeSamtkUNSTWerk’ aroUND 1900 – A SUrveY Martin Knust University of Stockholm, Suécia [email protected] Abstract: The article explores the reception of Richard Wagner’s work (1813-1883) and especially the concept of the ‘Gesamtkuns- twerk’ within the European context around 1900, in Germany and Austria as well as in France, Italy and Nordic Countries such as Sweden and Finland. It also discusses the relationships between Wagner and Brazil especially those established with D. Pedro II, as well as the Wagnerian reception within the Latin-American context. Keywords: Music reception; Richard Wagner; ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’; D. Pedro II; Brazil. A disseminação do ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ à volta de 1900 – um panorama. Resumo: O artigo explora a recepção da obra de Richard Wagner (1813-1883) e especialmente do conceito do ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ no contexto Europeu à volta de 1900, seja na Alemanha e Áustria como na França, Itália e nos Países Nórdicos Suécia e Finlândia. Considera ainda as relações entre Wagner e Brasil especialmente aquelas estabelecidas por e com D. Pedro II, e da recepção Wag- neriana no contexto latino-americano. Palavras-chave: Recepção musical; Richard Wagner; ‘Gesa- mtkunstwerk’; D. Pedro II; Brazil. Revista do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Música da Universidade de Brasília Ano III, v. 1, dezembro de 2009 Revista Música em contexto 27-11-2009 - N3 2009.indd 27 29/11/2009 12:26:28 28 Música em Contexto Knust, M. The dissemination of the ‘gesamtkunstwerk’... Música em contexto, Brasília, n. 1, 2008, p. 27-51 The term ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ is related to the name and work of Richard Wagner (1813–1883).
    [Show full text]
  • 4532.Pdf (166.8Kb)
    PROGRAM PART ONE PART TWO Jonathan Pasternack, conductor Peter Erös, conductor Overture to LA FORZA DEL DESTINO ..... GIUSEPPE VERDI (1813-1901) from DIE WALKÜRE ..............................RICHARD WAGNER (1813-1883) Aria: “LEB’ WOHL” David Borning, baritone from LES CONTES D’HOFFMANN ... JACQUES OFFENBACH (1819-1880) Aria: “LES OISEAUX DANS LA CHARMILLE” Cecile Farmer, soprano from THE BARTERED BRIDE ............... BEDRICH SMETANA (1824-1884) Aria: “NOW, NOW MY DEAR” (VASHEK’S STUTTERING SONG) URELY YOU MUST BE THE BRIDEGROOM OF RU INA S ARIE from LA TRAVIATA ..................................................................... G. VERDI Duet: “S K ’ M ” Aria: “DE’ MIEI BOLLENTI SPIRITI” Nataly Wickham, soprano / Thomas Harper, tenor Duet: “UN DÌ FELICE” Aria: “AH FORS’ È LUI…SEMPRE LIBERA” from DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE ................................................. W. A. MOZART Tess Altiveros, soprano / David Margulis, tenor Aria: “EIN MÄDCHEN ODER WEIBCHEN” Duet: “PAPAGENA, PAPAGENO” from DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE ..................... WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Faina Morozov, soprano / Drew Dresdner, baritone Aria: “ACH, ICH FÜHL’S” (1756-1791) Arian Ashworth, soprano from AÏDA .................................................................................. G. VERDI Duet: “CIEL! MIO PADRE” from CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA ........... PIETRO MASCAGNI (1863-1945) Rebecca Paul, soprano / David Borning, baritone Aria: “VOI LO SAPETE” Brittany Hines-Hill, soprano from DER ROSENKAVALIER ................ RICHARD STRAUSS (1864-1949) Trio: “MARIE THERES! HAB’
    [Show full text]
  • RICHARD STRAUSS Three Hymns / Opera Arias
    RICHARD STRAUSS (1864–1949) Three Hymns / Opera arias When Richard Strauss began to devote himself to opera at the turn of the century, he was already a famous man. He had composed eight of his brilliant tone poems within only twelve years. His dramatic talent and ability as an orchestrator had developed to their full potential. Whereas in the symphonic poems he grappled with his thoughts and RICHARD feelings about the world’s adversities (Ein Heldenleben, op. 40) or transformed the STRAUSS fiery passion of unrestrained love into music Don( Juan, op. 20), from then on he was THREE HYMNS OPERA ARIAS fascinated by the complexity of the female character. After several love affairs and as a popular socialite of his day, he already had a good deal of experience. Richard Strauss was interested in a particular type, however – the fin-de-sièclewoman: sensitive, highly strung, full of yearning and dreams, ready for the dawn of a new era, with a sense of emancipation but still afraid of the responsibility associated with it. She baffled him, and he wanted to comprehend her in her entirety. The psychological and creative interplay between men and women resulting from the breakdown of social conventions at the turn of the century occupied Strauss well into his late work. For example, in the Baroque ambience of the opera Capriccio he allows the Countess to violate two taboos: she must choose between two commoners, the poet Olivier and the musician Flamand, as her lover, and she wants sensual pleasure – without further commitment. “If you choose the one, you will lose the other.
    [Show full text]
  • Czech Opera Singers
    311 _ Czech Opera Singers Stanislav Bohadlo Legendary Supraphon Recordings SUDJXHFRQWHPSRUDU\PXVLFIHVWLYDO 4 . 11 . / 11 . 11 . / 16 . 11 . 2011 La Fabrika, Komunardů 30, Praha 7 WK\HDU 4 1RYHPEHUWK 1RYHPEHUWK 1RYHPEHUWK Eric Wubbels (USA) Miguel Azguime & Miso Jiří Bárta (CZ) and guest Ablinger: Voices and Piano Ensemble (Portugal) Bryars, Kopelent, ensemble recherche (D) Itinerário do Sal Pálka, Smolka, Štochl Lachenmann, Zemek Quatuor Diotima (F) Reich, Srnka www.contempuls.cz Dear readers, 11 The decline of the record industry has been a constant 3 _ topic of debate in musical circles over the past few Contents: years. Although there is no doubt that there has been a paradigm shift and that “conserved music” is again beginning to become secondary in relation to the live concert, it remains a sphere of classical music and other minority artistic genres that has tolerably withstood the crisis of the music carriers market – the drop in Stanislav Bohadlo: sales hasn’t been entirely catastrophic. This is relatively Nothing compares to Kuks understandable: on the one hand, sophisticated long by Dita Hradecká compositions require a certain quality of listening, on page 2 the other, we more readily accord them the status of an artefact that deserves a certain handling, i.e. being placed on a shelf for CDs (or even gramophone Czech opera soloists – a colourful gallery discs) and not being downloaded from the internet against the backdrop of the gray rushing in a compressed form. And above all, although in motorway of the opera bussines comparison with pop music successful recordings of artful music sell in relatively small numbers, they by Helena Havlíková continue to sell for years, sometimes decades.
    [Show full text]
  • The Girl of the Golden West Performer Biographies
    THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST PERFORMER BIOGRAPHIES Deborah Voight (Minnie) Deborah Voigt is hailed by the worldʼs critics and audiences as todayʼs foremost dramatic soprano. The former Adler Fellow and Merola Opera Program alumna made her main stage debut in Don Carlos and has since returned to the Company in nine subsequent productions, most recently as Amelia Anckarström in Un Ballo in Maschera (2006). In addition to the role of Amelia in the 1990 production of Un Ballo in Maschera, her other performances at San Francisco Opera include Anna (Nabucco), Elisabeth (Tannhäuser), the title role of Ariadne auf Naxos, and Sieglinde (Die Walküre); these performances in La Fanciulla del West mark her role debut as Minnie. Voigt is a regular artist at the Metropolitan Opera—recent appearances there include the roles of Chrysothemis (Elektra), Senta (Der Fliegende Holländer), Isolde (Tristan und Isolde), Leonora (La Forza del Destino), the Empress (Die Frau ohne Schatten), Sieglinde, and the title roles of Tosca, Aida, Die Ägyptische Helena, and La Gioconda. She also performs regularly with Vienna State Opera (Tosca, the title roles of Salome and Ariadne auf Naxos, the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier, Isolde, Brünnhilde in Siegfried); Paris Opera (Senta, Lady Macbeth in Macbeth); the Royal Opera, Covent Garden (Ariadne, the Empress in Die Frau ohne Schatten, and the title role of Die Ägyptische Helena); Lyric Opera of Chicago (Salome, Isolde, Sieglinde, Tosca), Barcelonaʼs Gran Teatre del Liceu (Maddalena in Andrea Chénier, the title role of La Gioconda, Isolde) and the Salzburg Festival (the title role of Die Liebe der Danae). The Illinois native was a gold medalist in the 1990 Tchaikovsky Competition and received first prize in Italyʼs Verdi Competition.
    [Show full text]
  • An Exploration of Smetana's Z Domoviny (From My Homeland)
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--Music Music 2020 AN EXPLORATION OF SMETANA’S Z DOMOVINY (FROM MY HOMELAND), TWO PIECES FOR VIOLIN AND PIANO, JB 1:118 Yeseul Kim University of Kentucky, [email protected] Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.13023/etd.2020.407 Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Kim, Yeseul, "AN EXPLORATION OF SMETANA’S Z DOMOVINY (FROM MY HOMELAND), TWO PIECES FOR VIOLIN AND PIANO, JB 1:118" (2020). Theses and Dissertations--Music. 169. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/music_etds/169 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Music at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--Music by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STUDENT AGREEMENT: I represent that my thesis or dissertation and abstract are my original work. Proper attribution has been given to all outside sources. I understand that I am solely responsible for obtaining any needed copyright permissions. I have obtained needed written permission statement(s) from the owner(s) of each third-party copyrighted matter to be included in my work, allowing electronic distribution (if such use is not permitted by the fair use doctrine) which will be submitted to UKnowledge as Additional File. I hereby grant to The University of Kentucky and its agents the irrevocable, non-exclusive, and royalty-free license to archive and make accessible my work in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known.
    [Show full text]
  • FACULTY RECITAL of Music
    FACULTY RECITAL Frances Bible, mezzo-soprano Jeanette Lombard, soprano Eugene Talley-Schmidt, tenor Mary Norris, piano Tuesday, March 12, 1985 8:00 p.m. in Hamman Hall the RICE UNIVERSITY ~~rd Of Music PROGRAM 11 Trovatore (Act I~ Finale) Giuseppe Verdi Duet, "Madre, non dormi?" (Miss Bible, Mr. Talley-Schmidt) (1813-1901) Trio , "Chef Non m'inganno" Werther Jules Massenet Aria, "Les Lettres" (Miss Bible) (1842-1912) Andriana Lecouvreur Francesco Cilea Duet, "Ma, dunque, e vero?" (Miss Lombard, Mr. Talley-Schmidt) (1866-1950) La Gioconda Amilcare Ponchielli Duet, ''Ah! chi sei?" (Miss Bible, Miss Lombard) (1834-1886) INTERMISSION Tosca Giacomo Puccini Aria, "Recondita armonia" (Mr. Talley-Schmidt) (1858-1924) Aida (Acts I & II) Giuseppe Verdi Duet, "Quale insolita gioia" (Miss Bible, Mr. Talley-Schmidt) (1813-1901) Trio , "Dessa!" Aria, "Ritorna vincitor!" (Miss Lombard) Duet, "Fu la sorte dell'armi" (Miss Bible, Miss Lombard) Photographing and sound recording are prohibited. We further request that audible paging devices not be used during the performance. Paging arrangements may be made with the ushers. BIOGRAPHIES FRANCES BIBLE, Artist-in-Residence, is a graduate of Juilliard receiving the Alice Breen Memorial Prize for the highest rating in singing. Ms. Bible was the leading mezzo-soprano of the New York City Opera from 1948-1978 where she is the only singer ever to receive a citation commemorating her artistic contribution to that company. She created the leading role in several world premieres, among them, The Ballad of Baby Doe and The Crucible. Ms. Bible has concertized > extensively in the United States, Canada, and Australia, and sung with most of the world's leading orchestras, including the London Philharmonic, the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Cleveland.
    [Show full text]
  • Please Silence All Electronic Mobile Devices. WELCOME!
    Please silence all electronic mobile devices. WELCOME! At the age of sixty-two, Jules Massenet attended Francis de Croisset’s boulevard comedy Chérubin and was so taken with it that he decided to adapt it as his 17th opera. He called in the seasoned librettist Henri Cain to convert the play into an opera libretto, creating the standard arias, ensembles, and recitatives his audience would expect. The score is a wonderful mixture of Massenet’s own idea of the 18th century and the musical language of his day. He quotes his own well-known operas and tips his hat to the musical language of Debussy’s impressionism, the rich harmonies of Wagner, and the fluid dialogue of Verdi and Puccini. While the story is only a loose continuation of Beaumarchais’ Marriage of Figaro, Massenet honors Mozart’s setting by casting Cherubino as a mezzo-soprano, thus creating another great operatic ‘trouser role.’ It has been a great pleasure to have Eli Villanueva as our guest Stage Director; he has been generous with his time, creative, and extremely supportive of these young artists, many singing their first operatic role. We are grateful to our Design Team as well as to Ted Abenheim and the professional crew he has assembled; they all make very hard work seem effortless! Finally … the libretto calls for Ensoleillad to marry the King of Spain. In our version there is no king. We are delighted that faculty violinist Moni Simeonov joins us to contribute a famous tune from another Massenet opera, allowing us – in our own way – to include this narrative turn of events!
    [Show full text]
  • Autographs, Prints, & Memorabilia from the Collection of Marilyn Horne
    J & J LUBRANO MUSIC ANTIQUARIANS Autographs, Prints, & Memorabilia From the Collection of Marilyn Horne 6 Waterford Way, Syosset, NY 11791 USA Telephone 516-922-2192 [email protected] www.lubranomusic.com CONDITIONS OF SALE Please order by catalogue name (or number) and either item number and title or inventory number (found in parentheses preceding each item’s price). Please note that all material is in good antiquarian condition unless otherwise described. All items are offered subject to prior sale. We thus suggest either an e-mail or telephone call to reserve items of special interest. Orders may also be placed through our secure website by entering the inventory numbers of desired items in the SEARCH box at the upper right of our homepage. We ask that you kindly wait to receive our invoice to insure availability before remitting payment. Libraries may receive deferred billing upon request. Prices in this catalogue are net. Postage and insurance are additional. An 8.625% sales tax will be added to the invoices of New York State residents. We accept payment by: - Credit card (VISA, Mastercard, American Express) - PayPal to [email protected] - Checks in U.S. dollars drawn on a U.S. bank - International money order - Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT), inclusive of all bank charges (details at foot of invoice) - Automated Clearing House (ACH), inclusive of all bank charges (details at foot of invoice) All items remain the property of J & J Lubrano Music Antiquarians LLC until paid for in full. v Please visit our website at www.lubranomusic.com Fine Items & Collections Purchased v Members Antiquarians Booksellers’ Association of America International League of Antiquarian Booksellers Professional Autograph Dealers’ Association Music Library Association American Musicological Society Society of Dance History Scholars &c.
    [Show full text]