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Vocal Wisdom
CD 129015 -< /saom vcai nisaom Maxims of GIOVANNI BATTISTA LAMPERTI Master of MARCELLA SEMBRICH, STAGNO, HASTREITEK. and OTHER FAMOUS SINGERS Kfcorded and Explained by HIS PUPIL and ASSISTANT WILLIAM EARL BROWN Copyright, MCMXXXl by WILLIAM EARL BROWN New York Printed in the U. S. A. DEDICATION To the memory of my Master, Cavaliere Giovanni Battista Lamperti, the last great master of the old Italian manner of singing. WM. EARL BROWN. PREFACE our an- | strengthen own idea when we find other agreeing with us. Nevertheless, I consider it unwise, nay, even fatal, to be over-influenced by another's opinion, unless we are prepared to take it in understanding^ When it coincides with, or completes our own reason- ing, we have found a feather of truth. It is wise, however, to take note of things we do not agree with, without antagonism. To-morrow, or in two seconds, they may be just the ideas we have sought so long. Life is too brief to work out a problem of art alone. "We should profit through another's experience and research, avoiding his faults while emulating his virtues. All roads lead to Rome. A fact can be approached from all sides. Listen and learn, but trust yourself, for you must go your path and not another's. Select from the topics in the book any subject of interest to you personally. My deductions and explanations may help you to find your voice. W. E. B. INTRODUCTION HERE was a Golden of This | Age Song. period produced the greatest singers of all time, re- reflecting the art of the greatest masters of any period, These teachers made few rules, but in- sisted on obedience to natural laws, which were physi- cal, not anatomical. -
Deutsche Nationalbibliografie 2010 T 02
Deutsche Nationalbibliografie Reihe T Musiktonträgerverzeichnis Monatliches Verzeichnis Jahrgang: 2010 T 02 Stand: 17. Februar 2010 Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (Leipzig, Frankfurt am Main, Berlin) 2010 ISSN 1613-8945 urn:nbn:de:101-ReiheT02_2010-8 2 Hinweise Die Deutsche Nationalbibliografie erfasst eingesandte Pflichtexemplare in Deutschland veröffentlichter Medienwerke, aber auch im Ausland veröffentlichte deutschsprachige Medienwerke, Übersetzungen deutschsprachiger Medienwerke in andere Sprachen und fremdsprachige Medienwerke über Deutschland im Original. Grundlage für die Anzeige ist das Gesetz über die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (DNBG) vom 22. Juni 2006 (BGBl. I, S. 1338). Monografien und Periodika (Zeitschriften, zeitschriftenartige Reihen und Loseblattausgaben) werden in ihren unterschiedlichen Erscheinungsformen (z.B. Papierausgabe, Mikroform, Diaserie, AV-Medium, elektronische Offline-Publikationen, Arbeitstransparentsammlung oder Tonträger) angezeigt. Alle verzeichneten Titel enthalten einen Link zur Anzeige im Portalkatalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek und alle vorhandenen URLs z.B. von Inhaltsverzeichnissen sind als Link hinterlegt. Die Titelanzeigen der Musiktonträger in Reihe T sind, wie Katalogisierung, Regeln für Musikalien und Musikton-trä- auf der Sachgruppenübersicht angegeben, entsprechend ger (RAK-Musik)“ unter Einbeziehung der „International der Dewey-Dezimalklassifikation (DDC) gegliedert, wo- Standard Bibliographic Description for Printed Music – bei tiefere Ebenen mit bis zu sechs Stellen berücksichtigt ISBD -
Avant Première Catalogue 2018 Lists UNITEL’S New Productions of 2017 Plus New Additions to the Catalogue
CATALOGUE 2018 This Avant Première catalogue 2018 lists UNITEL’s new productions of 2017 plus new additions to the catalogue. For a complete list of more than 2.000 UNITEL productions and the Avant Première catalogues of 2015–2017 please visit www.unitel.de FOR CO-PRODUCTION & PRESALES INQUIRIES PLEASE CONTACT: Unitel GmbH & Co. KG Gruenwalder Weg 28D · 82041 Oberhaching/Munich, Germany Tel: +49.89.673469-613 · Fax: +49.89.673469-610 · [email protected] Ernst Buchrucker Dr. Thomas Hieber Dr. Magdalena Herbst Managing Director Head of Business and Legal Affairs Head of Production [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Tel: +49.89.673469-19 Tel: +49.89.673469-611 Tel: +49.89.673469-862 WORLD SALES C Major Entertainment GmbH Meerscheidtstr. 8 · 14057 Berlin, Germany Tel.: +49.30.303064-64 · [email protected] Elmar Kruse Niklas Arens Nishrin Schacherbauer Managing Director Sales Manager, Director Sales Sales Manager [email protected] & Marketing [email protected] [email protected] Nadja Joost Ira Rost Sales Manager, Director Live Events Sales Manager, Assistant to & Popular Music Managing Director [email protected] [email protected] CATALOGUE 2018 Unitel GmbH & Co. KG Gruenwalder Weg 28D 82041 Oberhaching/Munich, Germany CEO: Jan Mojto Editorial team: Franziska Pascher, Dr. Martina Kliem, Arthur Intelmann Layout: Manuel Messner/luebbeke.com All information is not contractual and subject to change without prior notice. All trademarks used herein are the property of their respective owners. Date of Print: February 2018 © UNITEL 2018 All rights reserved Front cover: Alicia Amatriain & Friedemann Vogel in John Cranko’s “Onegin” / Photo: Stuttgart Ballet ON THE OCCASION OF HIS 100TH BIRTHDAY UNITEL CELEBRATES LEONARD BERNSTEIN 1918 – 1990 Leonard Bernstein, a long-time exclusive artist of Unitel, was America’s ambassador to the world of music. -
Anna Bahr-Mildenburg in Den Augen Gustav Mahlers (Mit Dem Sie Auch Eine Längere Liebesbeziehung Verband) Die
Bahr-Mildenburg, Anna Mannes und in Inszenierungen von Max Reinhard) „Anna von Mildenburg war die erste, durch deren Künst- lerschaft Mahler die großen Frauengestalten des Musik- dramas in ihrer ganzen erschütternden Macht zeigen konnte: Brünnhilde und Isolde, Ortrud und Elisabeth, Fi- delio, Glucks Klytämnestra und die Donna Anna; und auch Amneris und Amelia, die Milada des Dalibor, Pfitz- ners Minneleide und die Santuzza. Das Leid der Frau ist von keiner Schauspielerin, auch von der Duse nicht, in solcher Größe gestaltet worden wie von dieser Sängerin, in der alle dunklen Gewalten der Tragödie lebendig ge- worden sind. Unsere Zeit hat keine größere tragische Künstlerin als sie.“ (Richard Specht. Gustav Mahler. Berlin 1913, zitiert nach Franz Willnauer. Gustav Mahler. „Mein lieber Trotzkopf, meine süße Mohnblume“. Briefe an Anna von Milden- burg. Wien: Zsolnay, 2006, S. 439 f.) Profil Aufgrund ihrer fulminanten Stimme (hochdramatischer Sopran), ihrer sängerischen und persönlichen Ausdrucks- kraft und ihrer darstellerischen Intelligenz war Anna Bahr-Mildenburg in den Augen Gustav Mahlers (mit dem sie auch eine längere Liebesbeziehung verband) die Die Sängerin Anna Bahr-Mildenburg, Rollenbild von Julius ideale „singende Tragödin“, die seine Forderung nach Weisz, o. J. emotionalem Tiefgang der musikdramatischen Interpre- tation erfüllte. Im Bayreuth der Ära Cosima Wagner bril- Anna Bahr-Mildenburg lierte sie als überzeugende Interpretin des von Richard Geburtsname: Marie Anna Wilhelmine Elisabeth Wagner übernommenen Ideals des „deutschen Belcan- Bellschan von Mildenburg to“. Großen Ruhm erwarb sie sich auch als Lehrerin mit der damals völlig neuen Methode, die übliche Gesangs- * 29. November 1872 in Wien, Österreich ausbildung durch musikdramatischen Unterricht zu er- † 27. Januar 1947 in Wien, Österreich gänzen und ihre Schüler zu wahrhaftiger Bühnendarstel- lung anzuhalten. -
From Page to Stage: Wagner As Regisseur
Wagner Ia 5/27/09 3:55 PM Page 3 Copyrighted Material From Page to Stage: Wagner as Regisseur KATHERINE SYER Nowadays we tend to think of Richard Wagner as an opera composer whose ambitions and versatility extended beyond those of most musicians. From the beginning of his career he assumed the role of his own librettist, and he gradually expanded his sphere of involvement to include virtually all aspects of bringing an opera to the stage. If we focus our attention on the detailed dramatic scenarios he created as the bases for his stage works, we might well consider Wagner as a librettist whose ambitions extended rather unusually to the area of composition. In this light, Wagner could be considered alongside other theater poets who paid close attention to pro- duction matters, and often musical issues as well.1 The work of one such figure, Eugène Scribe, formed the foundation of grand opera as it flour- ished in Paris in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. Wagner arrived in this operatic epicenter in the fall of 1839 with work on his grand opera Rienzi already under way, but his prospects at the Opéra soon waned. The following spring, Wagner sent Scribe a dramatic scenario for a shorter work hoping that the efforts of this famous librettist would help pave his way to success. Scribe did not oblige. Wagner eventually sold the scenario to the Opéra, but not before transforming it into a markedly imaginative libretto for his own use.2 Wagner’s experience of operatic stage produc- tion in Paris is reflected in many aspects of the libretto of Der fliegende Holländer, the beginning of an artistic vision that would draw him increas- ingly deeper into the world of stage direction and production. -
Progrmne the DURABILITY Of
PRoGRmnE The DURABILITY of PIANOS and the permanence of their tone quality surpass anything that has ever before been obtained, or is possible under any other conditions. This is due to the Mason & Hamlin system of manufacture, which not only carries substantial and enduring construction to its limit in every detail, but adds a new and vital principle of construc- tion— The Mason & Hamlin Tension Resonator Catalogue Mailed on Jtpplication Old Pianos Taken in Exchange MASON & HAMLIN COMPANY Establishea;i854 Opp. Institute of Technology 492 Boylston Street SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTON HUNTINGTON 6-MASSACHUSETTS AVENUES , ( Ticket Office, 1492 J Telephones_, , Back^ ^ Bay-d \ Administration Offices. 3200 \ TWENTY-NINTH SEASON, 1909-1910 MAX FIEDLER, Conductor prngramm^ of % Nineteenth Rehearsal and Concert WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIP- TIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 18 AT 2.30 O'CLOCK SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 19 AT 8.00 O'CLOCK COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY C. A. ELLIS PUBLISHED BY C. A.ELLIS, MANAGER 1417 Mme. TERESA CARRENO On her tour this season will use exclusively j^IANO. THE JOHN CHURCH CO. NEW YORK CINCINNATI CHICAGO REPRESENTED BY 6. L SGHIRMER & CO., 338 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. Boston Symphony Orchestra PERSONNEL |J.M.^w^^w^»l^^^R^^^^^^^wwJ^^w^J^ll^lu^^^^wR^^;^^;^^>^^^>u^^^g,| Perfection in Piano Makinrf THE -^Mamtin Qaartcr Grand Style V, in figured Makogany, price $650 It is tut FIVE FEET LONG and in Tonal Proportions a Masterpiece of piano building^. It IS Cnickering & Sons most recent triumpLi, tke exponent of EIGHTY-SEVEN YEARS experience in artistic piano tuilding, and tlie lieir to all tne qualities tkat tke name of its makers implies. -
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 -
Developing the Young Dramatic Soprano Voice Ages 15-22 Is Approved in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Of
DEVELOPING THE YOUNG DRAMATIC SOPRANO VOICE AGES 15-22 By Monica Ariane Williams Bachelor of Arts – Vocal Arts University of Southern California 1993 Master of Music – Vocal Arts University of Southern California 1995 A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Musical Arts School of Music College of Fine Arts The Graduate College University of Nevada, Las Vegas December 2020 Copyright 2021 Monica Ariane Williams All Rights Reserved Dissertation Approval The Graduate College The University of Nevada, Las Vegas November 30, 2020 This dissertation prepared by Monica Ariane Williams entitled Developing the Young Dramatic Soprano Voice Ages 15-22 is approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts School of Music Alfonse Anderson, DMA. Kathryn Hausbeck Korgan, Ph.D. Examination Committee Chair Graduate College Dean Linda Lister, DMA. Examination Committee Member David Weiller, MM. Examination Committee Member Dean Gronemeier, DMA, JD. Examination Committee Member Joe Bynum, MFA. Graduate College Faculty Representative ii ABSTRACT This doctoral dissertation provides information on how to develop the young dramatic soprano, specifically through more concentrated focus on the breath. Proper breathing is considered the single most important skill a singer will learn, but its methodology continues to mystify multitudes of singers and voice teachers. Voice professionals often write treatises with a chapter or two devoted to breathing, whose explanations are extremely varied, complex or vague. Young dramatic sopranos, whose voices are unwieldy and take longer to develop are at a particular disadvantage for absorbing a solid vocal technique. First, a description, classification and brief history of the young dramatic soprano is discussed along with a retracing of breath methodologies relevant to the young dramatic soprano’s development. -
Mahler's Third Symphony and the Languages of Transcendence
Mahler’s Third Symphony and the Languages of Transcendence Megan H. Francisco A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Washington 2016 Stephen Rumph, Chair JoAnn Taricani Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Music ©Copyright 2016 Megan H. Francisco University of Washington Abstract Mahler’s Third Symphony and the Languages of Transcendence Megan H. Francisco Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor Stephen Rumph Music History A work reaching beyond any of his previous compositional efforts, Gustav Mahler’s Third Symphony embodies cultural, political, and philosophical ideals of the Viennese fin-de- siècle generation. Comprising six enormous movements and lasting over ninety minutes, the work stretches the boundaries of symphonic form while simultaneously testing the patience of its listeners. Mahler provided a brief program to accompany his symphony, which begins with creation, moves through inanimate flowers to animals, before finally reaching humanity in the fourth movement. In this movement, Mahler used an excerpt from Friedrich Nietzsche’s Also sprach Zarathustra to introduce spoken language into the symphony. The relationship of music and language plays an integral role in Mahler’s expressive design of the Third Symphony, specifically in his vision of transcendence. Mahler creates a subtle transformation from elevated language (the fourth) to a polytextuality of folksong and onomatopoeia (the fifth) that culminates in the final, transcendent sixth movement. Throughout these last three movements, Mahler incorporates philosophical concepts from Nietzsche and his beloved Arthur Schopenhauer. In studying the treatment of language in these culminating movements, this thesis shows how Nietzsche’s metaphysical philosophies help listeners encounter and transcend Schopenhauer’s Will at the climactic end of the Third Symphony. -
Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Season 31
CONVENTION HALL . ROCHESTER Thirty-first Season, 1911-1912 MAX FIEDLER, Conductor Programme WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIP- TIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 29 AT 8.15 COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY C. A. ELLIS PUBLISHED BY C. A. ELLIS, MANAGER : : Vladimir De Pachmann The Greatest Pianist Of the 20th Century ON TOUR IN THE UNITED STATES SEASON: 1911-1912 For generations the appearance of new stars on the musical firmament has been announced — then they came with a temporary glitter — soon to fade and to be forgotten. De Pachmann has outlived them all. With each return he won additional resplendence and to-day he is acknowl- edged by the truly artistic public to be the greatest exponent of the piano of the twentieth century. As Arthur Symons, the eminent British critic, says "Pachmann is the Verlaine or Whistler of the Pianoforte the greatest player of the piano now living." Pachmann, as before, uses the BALDWIN PIANO for the expression of his magic art, the instrument of which he himself says " .... It cries when I feel like crying, it sings joyfully when I feel like singing. It responds — like a human being — to every mood. I love the Baldwin Piano." Every lover of the highest type of piano music will, of course, go to hear Pachmann — to revel in the beauty of his music and to marvel at it. It is the beautiful tone quality, the voice which is music itself, and the wonderfully responsive action of the Baldwin Piano, by which Pachmann's miraculous hands reveal to you the thrill, the terror and the ecstasy of a beauty which you had never dreamed was hidden in sounds. -
Florida State University Libraries
Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2009 Gustav Mahler, Alfred Roller, and the Wagnerian Gesamtkunstwerk: Tristan and Affinities Between the Arts at the Vienna Court Opera Stephen Carlton Thursby Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MUSIC GUSTAV MAHLER, ALFRED ROLLER, AND THE WAGNERIAN GESAMTKUNSTWERK: TRISTAN AND AFFINITIES BETWEEN THE ARTS AT THE VIENNA COURT OPERA By STEPHEN CARLTON THURSBY A Dissertation submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2009 The members of the Committee approve the Dissertation of Stephen Carlton Thursby defended on April 3, 2009. _______________________________ Denise Von Glahn Professor Directing Dissertation _______________________________ Lauren Weingarden Outside Committee Member _______________________________ Douglass Seaton Committee Member Approved: ___________________________________ Douglass Seaton, Chair, Musicology ___________________________________ Don Gibson, Dean, College of Music The Graduate School has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii To my wonderful wife Joanna, for whose patience and love I am eternally grateful. In memory of my grandfather, James C. Thursby (1926-2008). iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The completion of this dissertation would not have been possible without the generous assistance and support of numerous people. My thanks go to the staff of the Austrian Theater Museum and Austrian National Library-Music Division, especially to Dr. Vana Greisenegger, curator of the visual materials in the Alfred Roller Archive of the Austrian Theater Museum. I would also like to thank the musicology faculty of the Florida State University College of Music for awarding me the Curtis Mayes Scholar Award, which funded my dissertation research in Vienna over two consecutive summers (2007- 2008). -
Narrative Construction in Dostoyevsky's and Janacek's 'From the House of the Dead'
SBORNlK PRACf FILOZOFICKE FAKULTY BRNENSKE UNIVERZITY STUDIA MINORA FACULTATIS PH1LOSOPHICAE UNIVERSITATIS BRUNENSIS H33, 1998 GEOFFREY CHEW — ROBERT VILAIN EVASIVE REALISM: NARRATIVE CONSTRUCTION IN DOSTOYEVSKY'S AND JANACEK'S 'FROM THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD' Tolstoy famously regarded The House of the Dead (1860-61) as Dos- toyevsky's finest work; indeed, he elevated it to a supreme position among nineteenth-century books written by Russian authors: 1 have read The House of the Dead. I do not know a book better than this in all our literature, not even excepting Pushkin. Not its tone, but its point of view is admirable: sincere, natural and Christian. A good, instructive book.1 This verdict significantly makes no reference to The House of the Dead as a novel; and George Steiner has indeed suggested that it reflects the fact that the book is the least 'Tolstoyan' of all Dostoyevsky's works — not really a novel at all, but 'plainly an autobiography'.2 In this he takes his cue from Tolstoy him self, for in a postscript to War and Peace, Tolstoy categorized both The House of the Dead and Gogol's Dead Souls as works that cannot properly be called novels.3 The work's full title, Notes from the House of the Dead, itself in some respects confirms the work's distance from the novel genre, and in his massive biography of Dostoyevsky, Joseph Frank is (significantly) content to use The House of the Dead as a primary source for the sections on the author's impris onment.4 Thus, at the outset, there are some uncertainties attaching to The 1.