Cremona Baroque Music 2018
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The Organ Ricercars of Hans Leo Hassler and Christian Erbach
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'Dream Job: Next Exit?'
Understanding Bach, 9, 9–24 © Bach Network UK 2014 ‘Dream Job: Next Exit?’: A Comparative Examination of Selected Career Choices by J. S. Bach and J. F. Fasch BARBARA M. REUL Much has been written about J. S. Bach’s climb up the career ladder from church musician and Kapellmeister in Thuringia to securing the prestigious Thomaskantorat in Leipzig.1 Why was the latter position so attractive to Bach and ‘with him the highest-ranking German Kapellmeister of his generation (Telemann and Graupner)’? After all, had their application been successful ‘these directors of famous court orchestras [would have been required to] end their working relationships with professional musicians [take up employment] at a civic school for boys and [wear] “a dusty Cantor frock”’, as Michael Maul noted recently.2 There was another important German-born contemporary of J. S. Bach, who had made the town’s shortlist in July 1722—Johann Friedrich Fasch (1688–1758). Like Georg Philipp Telemann (1681–1767), civic music director of Hamburg, and Christoph Graupner (1683–1760), Kapellmeister at the court of Hessen-Darmstadt, Fasch eventually withdrew his application, in favour of continuing as the newly- appointed Kapellmeister of Anhalt-Zerbst. In contrast, Bach, who was based in nearby Anhalt-Köthen, had apparently shown no interest in this particular vacancy across the river Elbe. In this article I will assess the two composers’ positions at three points in their professional careers: in 1710, when Fasch left Leipzig and went in search of a career, while Bach settled down in Weimar; in 1722, when the position of Thomaskantor became vacant, and both Fasch and Bach were potential candidates to replace Johann Kuhnau; and in 1730, when they were forced to re-evaluate their respective long-term career choices. -
Fabulously Tidal — Issue 117, 1 January 2018
Fabulously Tidal — Issue 117, 1 January 2018 SPONSORED FEATURE — PHILIP SAWYERS' THIRD SYMPHONY Alice McVeigh: 'This is a fabulously tidal symphony, with wild expanses of differing moods, but it begins with a ripple of unease. We in the cello section were told to play the opening with as much stillness as possible, allowing the first theme to grow as it weaves into violins and violas, into threads of flute and oboe, and — from there — into a tempestuous section of interweaving themes. The argument descends into a woodwind quarrel, resolved by flute and oboe, decorated by horns — while the strings continue to niggle and churn away at any sense of calm. 'Then solo bassoon ignites a new, still tenser, section. The violins take over, lightly but resolutely, answered by middle strings conveying a sense of tenderness — but with a bitter aftertaste. (This is incidentally one of Sawyers' most characteristic strengths: a tenderness, never saccharine, often undermined by subtle discontent.) From the brass comes the first glimpse of escape: the powerful broken octave theme over which the other themes furiously contend. 'The cellos at the recapitulation, now deepened and enriched, are twisted by Sawyers into something passionate and grounded in lower brass, reinforced by timpani. The movement ends with the heavy brass seemingly triumphant over the strings' stubborn reiteration of the theme. Still, the lower strings' pessimism prevails. 'Tutti violins kick-start the second movement with a dramatic leap from their richest register, only yielding to keening solo oboe. 'The sobered strings leave the solo winds to mourn, yet, with characteristic Sawyers intensity, something is brewing at subterranean depths: eventually, the violas' chuntering is answered by full insistent brass, in a stormily ecstatic tantrum. -
Christoph Graupner
QUANTZ COLLEGIUM ~ CHRISTOPH GRAUPNER · VIOLA CONCERTO IN D MAJOR, GWV 314 CHRISTOPH GRAUPNER (1683-1760) CONCERTO IN D-DUR, GWV 314 FÜR VIOLA, ZWEI VIOLINEN, VIOLA UND BASSO CONTINUO SOLISTIN: AGATA ZIEBA (VIOLA) I. VIVACE ~ II. ADAGIO ~ III. VIVACE Das Schloss Favorite bei Rastatt ist das älteste und einzige nahezu unverändert erhalten gebliebene „Porzel- lanschloss“ Deutschlands. Seine Ausstattung und seine reichhaltigen Sammlungen machen es zu einem Ge- samtkunstwerk von europäischer Bedeutung. Vor über 300 Jahren erbaut unter Markgräfin Sibylla Augusta von Baden-Baden (1675-1733) nach Plänen des Hofbaumeisters Michael Ludwig Rohrer, beherbergen die prächtig ausgestatteten Räume wie einst zu Zeiten der Markgräfin deren kostbare Porzellan-, Fayence- und Glassamm- lung. Das Schloss mit seinem idyllischen Landschaftsgarten war ein Ort der Feste und der Jagd. Markgräfin Sibylla Augusta und ihr Sohn Ludwig Georg fanden hier Erholung abseits des strengeren höfischen Zeremoni- ells in der Rastatter Residenz. Die Ausstattung birgt eine verschwenderische Fülle spätbarocker Dekorationen und viele ungewöhnliche Details. Zentrum des „Lustschlosses“ ist, wie in fast jedem barocken Schloss, die „Sala Terrena“, der Gartensaal, der für Feierlichkeiten diente und in dem auch dieses Konzert stattfand. In Schloss Favorite Rastatt fand man da- für eine ungewöhnliche Form. Der achteckige Saal im Erdgeschoss mit seinen vier Wasserbecken und Brun- nenfiguren, die die vier Jahreszeiten darstellen, öffnet sich nach oben bis zur Kuppel. Seine Wände sind mit blau-weißen Fayence-Fliesen belegt, die sich im ganzen Gebäude wiederfinden. Das Schloss und sein Garten sind eines von 60 historischen Monumenten im deutschen Südwesten. Die Staatli- chen Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg öffnen, vermitteln, entwickeln und bewahren diese landeseige- nen historischen Monumente mit dem Anspruch, das kulturelle Erbe in seiner Authentizität zu bewahren, es mit Leben zu fül- len und es für zukünftige Generationen zu erhalten. -
Oct 12 to 18.Txt
CLASSIC CHOICES PLAYLIST Oct. 12 - 18, 2020 PLAY DATE: Mon, 10/12/2020 6:02 AM Antonio Vivaldi Concerto for violin, 2 flutes, 2 oboes & 6:13 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 27 6:29 AM Arcangelo Corelli Concerto Grosso No. 6 6:44 AM Johann Nepomuk Hummel Gesellschafts Rondo 7:02 AM Michel Richard Delalande Suite No. 12 7:16 AM Muzio Clementi Piano Sonata 7:33 AM Mademoiselle Duval Suite from the Ballet "Les Génies" 7:46 AM Georg (Jiri Antonin) Benda Sinfonia No. 9 8:02 AM Johann David Heinichen Concerto for fl,ob,vln,clo,theorbo,st,bc 8:12 AM Franz Joseph Haydn String Quartet 8:31 AM Joan Valent Quatre Estacions a Mallorca 9:05 AM Ralph Vaughan Williams Symphony No. 3 9:41 AM Robert Schumann Fantasiestucke 9:52 AM Ralph Vaughan Williams Silent Noon 10:00 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart LA CLEMENZA DI TITO: Overture 10:06 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Violin Sonata No. 27 10:24 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Flute & Harp Concerto (mvmt 2) 10:34 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Divertimento No. 1 10:49 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sonata for 2 pianos 11:01 AM Mark Volker Young Prometheus 11:39 AM Georg Philipp Telemann Paris Quartet No. 2:TWV 43: a 3 12:00 PM Ludwig Van Beethoven Wellington's Victory (Battle Symphony) 12:14 PM Ludwig Van Beethoven Piano Sonata No. 6 12:28 PM Johann Strauss, Jr. Wine, Women & Song 12:40 PM John Ireland Piano Trio No. 2 12:54 PM Michael Kamen CRUSOE: Marooned 1:02 PM Mark O'Connor Trio No. -
Dido Reloaded / Go, Aeneas, Go! (Òpera Líquida De Cambra)
© Helena Moliné dido reloaded / go, aeneas, go! (òpera líquida de cambra) Òpera de Butxaca i Nova Creació temporada 2014/2015 www.teatrelliure.cat 1 Montjuïc Espai Lliure - del 26 al 30 de novembre Dido reloaded / Go, Aeneas, Go! (òpera líquida de cambra) Òpera de Butxaca i Nova Creació intèrprets Anna Alàs i Jové mezzo, Belinda i Europa / María Hinojosa soprano, Dido / Joan Ribalta tenor, Aeneas / clarinet Víctor de la Rosa / violoncel Cèlia Torres composició Xavier Bonfill, Raquel García-Tomás, Joan Magrané i Octavi Rumbau / dramatúrgia Cristina Cordero / direcció escènica Jordi Pérez Solé (La Mama Produccions) / direcció musical Francesc Prat escenografia Jorge Salcedo, Jordi Pérez Solé i Ulrike Reinhard / vestuari Isabel Velasco i Christina Kämper / caracterització Isabel Velasco i Anne-Claire Meyer / il·luminació Sylvia Kuchinow / vídeo Raquel García-Tomàs / moviment Anna Romaní i Èlia López / assessor dramatúrgic Marc Rosich ajudant d’escenografia Joana Martí / comunicació Neus Purtí / producció executiva Cristina Cordero / director de producció Dietrich Grosse coproducció Òpera de Butxaca i Nova Creació, Teatre Lliure, Neuköllner Oper i Berliner Opernpreis – GASAG amb el suport del Departament de Cultura de la Generalitat de Catalunya i l’Ajuntament de Barcelona agraïments Consolat d’Alemanya a Barcelona, Louise Higham, Helena Moliné i Paquita Crespo Go, Aeneas, Go! va ser guardonat amb el Berliner Opernpreis 14 von Neuköllner Oper und GASAG“, un premi berlinès dedicat a la nova creació operística i que dóna suport a creadors emergents perquè puguin produir una òpera a la Neuköllner Oper. espectacle multilingüe sobretitulat en català durada 1h. primera part / 15' pausa / 30' segona part / 10' epíleg seguiu #DidoAeneas al twitter horaris: de dimecres a divendres a les 21h. -
Opera Olimpiade
OPERA OLIMPIADE Pietro Metastasio’s L’Olimpiade, presented in concert with music penned by sixteen of the Olympian composers of the 18th century VENICE BAROQUE ORCHESTRA Andrea Marcon, conductor Romina Basso Megacle Franziska Gottwald Licida Karina Gauvin Argene Ruth Rosique Aristea Carlo Allemano Clistene Nicholas Spanos Aminta Semi-staged by Nicolas Musin SUMMARY Although the Olympic games are indelibly linked with Greece, Italy was progenitor of the Olympic operas, spawning a musical legacy that continues to resound in opera houses and concert halls today. Soon after 1733, when the great Roman poet Pietro Metastasio witnessed the premiere of his libretto L’Olimpiade in Vienna, a procession of more than 50 composers began to set to music this tale of friendship, loyalty and passion. In the course of the 18th century, theaters across Europe commissioned operas from the Olympian composers of the day, and performances were acclaimed in the royal courts and public opera houses from Rome to Moscow, from Prague to London. Pieto Metastasio In counterpoint to the 2012 Olympic games, Opera Olimpiade has been created to explore and celebrate the diversity of musical expression inspired by this story of the ancient games. Research in Europe and the United States yielded L’Olimpiade manuscripts by many composers, providing the opportunity to extract the finest arias and present Metastasio’s drama through an array of great musical minds of the century. Andrea Marcon will conduct the Venice Baroque Orchestra and a cast of six virtuosi singers—dare we say of Olympic quality—in concert performances of the complete libretto, a succession of 25 spectacular arias and choruses set to music by 16 Title page of David Perez’s L’Olimpiade, premiered in Lisbon in 1753 composers: Caldara, Vivaldi, Pergolesi, Leo, Galuppi, Perez, Hasse, Traetta, Jommelli, Piccinni, Gassmann, Mysliveek, Sarti, Cherubini, Cimarosa, and Paisiello. -
A Largely Unknown Chapter in Maltese History
Eighteenth-Century Music and its Political Configurations: a largely unknown Chapter in Maltese History Simon MERCIECA University of Malta The period of the rule of the Knights of Saint John (1530-1798) is currently remembered and celebrated as Malta's golden age. The Knights are typically perceived as benign Christian and Catholic rulers, and the Grand Masters considered among Malta's most famous historical characters. The Order is rightly credited with having brought a cultural Renaissance to the Island. During its rule, a number of far-reaching historical events took place. Conveniently, only the victory of the Knights of Saint John at the Great Siege of 1565, when a large Ottoman force was repelled following fierce fighting, is commemorated on a national scale. The arrival of Napoleon's forces in 1798, by contrast, does not receive the same acknowledgement or coverage in popular history. Yet the Order's rule was not necessarily as golden as it is sometimes made out to be, and the Knights' administration is tarnished by various miscarriages of justice. They were despotic rulers following ancien regime principles. The artistic and architectural grandeur of the time and the cultural renaissance fostered by the Order interested the few. It has been suggested that only two per cent of a country's population was really concerned with cultural issues during the early modern period.1 The arrival in Malta of Michelangelo Merisi di Caravaggio (the year 2007 marked the 400th anniversary of that event) and the engagement of other important artists, such as Mattia Preti together with the employment of important military engineers, provide proof of the Order's contribution to Malta's cultural history. -
9914396.PDF (12.18Mb)
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A Revolution in Information?
A Revolution in Information? The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Blair, Ann, and Devin Fitzgerald. 2014. "A Revolution in Information?" In The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern European History, 1350-1750, edited by Hamish Scott, 244-65. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Published Version doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199597253.013.8 Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:34334604 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#OAP Manuscript of Ann Blair and Devin Fitzgerald, "A Revolution in Information?" in the Oxford Handbook of Early Modern European History, ed. Hamish Scott (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 244-65. Chapter 10 A revolution in information?1 Ann Blair and Devin Fitzgerald The notion of a revolution in information in early modern Europe is a recent historiographical construct, inspired by the current use of the term to designate the transformations of the late 20th century. The notion, first propounded in the 1960s, that we live in an "information age" crucially defined by digital technologies for creating, storing, commoditizing, and disseminating information has motivated historians, especially since the late 1990s, to reflect on parallels with the past.2 Given the many definitions for "information" and related concepts, we will use the term in a nontechnical way, as distinct from data (which requires further processing before it can be meaningful) and from knowledge (which implies an individual knower). -
1. Lezione Di Acustica Forma D'onda, Frequenza, Periodo, Ampiezza
1. Lezione di acustica forma d’onda, frequenza, periodo, ampiezza, suoni periodici, altezza, ottava LA CATENA ACUSTICA Il suono è una sensazione uditiva provocata da una variazione della pressione dell’aria. L’onda sonora generata dalla vibrazione di un corpo elastico arriva al nostro orecchio dopo aver viaggiato lungo un altro materiale elastico (nella nostra esperienza più comune l’aria). Gli elementi necessari perché si verifichi un suono sono dunque tre: la sorgente sonora (il corpo vibrante) il mezzo di trasmissione dell’onda sonora (l’ambiente, anche non omogeneo, dove il suono si propaga) il ricevitore (l’ orecchio e il cervello) Della natura delle vibrazioni e delle onde sonore e della loro propagazione nel mezzo si occupa la acustica fisica, del rapporto tra onda sonora e il ricevente (il sistema orecchio – cervello), e quindi di come l’uomo interpreta i segnali acustici, si occupa la psicoacustica. VIBRAZIONE DI CORPI ELASTICI - MOTO ARMONICO SEMPLICE Alla base del comportamento di gran parte dei corpi vibranti degli strumenti musicali c’è il moto armonico semplice, un tipo di movimento oscillatorio che si ripete regolarmente e di cui possiamo calcolare il periodo, ossia la durata (sempre uguale) dei singoli cicli. Il moto armonico semplice si verifica quando un corpo dotato di massa, sottoposto a una forza (nel nostro caso di tipo elastico) oscilla periodicamente intorno a una posizione di equilibrio. Gli esempi più comunemente riportati nei libri di fisica sono quello del sistema massa-molla (una massa attaccata a una molla), e quello del pendolo. Molla Massa Per noi musicisti può essere più intuitivo pensare alla corda di una chitarra, adeguatamente tesa, fissata a due estremi: quando viene pizzicata al centro, si allontana fino a una distanza massima dalla posizione di equilibrio, quindi la tensione la riporta nella posizione iniziale, dopodiché, a causa dell’inerzia, prosegue il suo moto curvandosi nella direzione opposta (Pierce, fig. -
Romans Inspiration the Source of Classic Improvisation Supervisor
UPPSALA UNIVERSITY The Department of Musicology Pär Sandmark Östa Byväg 45 740 45 Tärnsjö Romans Inspiration The Source of Classic improvisation Supervisor: Professor Sten Dahlstedt The Department of musicology Table of contents Chapter 1: Sid. 1.1. Issues 3 1.1.2. The conceptual explanations 3 1.2 Previous research 4 1.3 Method 5 1.4 Demarcation 6 1.5 Order 7 Chapter 2: Background 7 2.1 18th century Sweden 7 2.1.1 Romance living history 7 2.2 Environment description of Romans surroundings 8 2.2.2. The working environment in the country 8 2.2.3 Church environment in the 18th century 9 2.3 Music as a science 10 Chapter 3: Investigation 11 3.1 Introduction 11 3.2 Carolina handwriting library 11 3. The examination of individual autograph manuscripts 15 3.3.1. The concepts of improvisation and composition 15 3.3.2. Källkritisk study in harmonik 18 3.3.3 Rhythmic study 23 3.4 Romans Improvisations material – Corelli's music 27 3.4.1. Contemporary recording of Corelli's music 28 .3.4.2 Comparison of Corelli and Roman 29 3.5 Method of composition analysis 30 Chapter 4: Discussion 35 Chapter 5: Summary 40 Chapter 6: Conclusions 41 The source and bibliography 42 Annexes 1-5 45 1. Introduction 1.1. Issues Bach, Mozart and Beethoven improvised. If today's technology with recording had been invented in their time we would have had lots of interesting music to listen to which documents and fraya of how the old masters of improvisation.