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570895bk RStrauss US:557541bk Kelemen 3+3 3/8/09 8:42 PM Page 1 Antoni Wit Staatskapelle Weimar Antoni Wit, one of the most highly regarded Polish conductors, studied conducting with Founded in 1491, the Staatskapelle Weimar is one of the oldest orchestras in the world, its reputation inextricably linked Richard Henryk Czyz˙ and composition with Krzysztof Penderecki at the Academy of Music in to some of the greatest works and musicians of all time. Franz Liszt, court music director in the mid-nineteenth Kraków, subsequently continuing his studies with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. He also century, helped the orchestra gain international recognition with premières that included Wagner’s Lohengrin in graduated in law at the Jagellonian University in Kraków. Immediately after completing 1850. As Weimar’s second music director, Richard Strauss conducted first performances of Guntram and STRAUSS his studies he was engaged as an assistant at the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra by Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel. The orchestra was also the first to perform Strauss’s Don Juan, Macbeth and Death Witold Rowicki and was later appointed conductor of the Poznan´ Philharmonic. He and Transfiguration. After World War II Hermann Abendroth did much to restore the orchestra’s former status and Symphonia domestica collaborated with the Warsaw Grand Theatre, and from 1974 to 1977 was artistic director quality, ultimately establishing it as one of Germany’s leading orchestras. The Staatskapelle Weimar cultivates its of the Pomeranian Philharmonic, before his appointment as director of the Polish Radio historic tradition today, while exploring innovative techniques and wider repertoire, as reflected in its many recordings. -
Chloë Hanslip, Violin Royal Philharmonic
559302 bk Adams US 7/14/06 12:41 PM Page 5 Charles Owen Royal Philharmonic Orchestra AMERICAN CLASSICS Charles Owen began his musical studies at the Yehudi Menuhin The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra was established in 1946 by Sir Thomas Beecham, who set about creating a world- School with Seta Tanyel and continued at the Royal College of class ensemble from the finest musicians in Britain. Since his death in 1961 the orchestra has continued under a Music under the guidance of Irina Zaritskaya. There he won all the number of very distinguished conductors, including Rudolf Kempe, Antal Doráti, André Previn and Vladimir major piano prizes before completing his studies with Imogen Ashkenazy, followed in 1996 by their present Music Director, Daniele Gatti. Based in London, with a resident series Cooper. He received the Silver Medal at the Scottish International at both the Royal Albert Hall and Cadogan Hall, the orchestra also has a comprehensive United Kingdom and JOHN ADAMS Piano Competition (1995) and was a finalist in the 1996 London overseas touring programme. Recent highlights have included playing for the late Pope John Paul II in the Vatican, Philharmonic/Pioneer Young Soloist of the year competition. In for the President of China in Tiananmen Square and at the tenth anniversary celebration of Kazakhstan’s 1997 he won the prestigious Parkhouse award in partnership with independence, in addition to touring regularly throughout Europe and the United States. The orchestra has made the violinist Katharine Gowers. His concert activities are diverse many recordings and has a commitment to community and education projects, as well as to contemporary composers. -
IIJ and the NHK Symphony Orchestra to Stream Hi-Res Audio Performances
For Immediate Release IIJ and the NHK Symphony Orchestra to Stream Hi-Res Audio Performances --This technological partnership is the first hi-res streaming of NHKSO concerts, confirming the feasibility of regular streaming services-- TOKYO—April 28, 2017—Internet Initiative Japan Inc. (IIJ, NASDAQ: IIJI, TSE1: 3774), one of Japan's leading Internet access and comprehensive network solutions providers, and the NHK Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo, (NHKSO) today announced that they are making hi-res recordings of the public performances of “The Meidensha 120th Anniversary | NHKSO Afternoon Classic Series” that are being held in April, May, and June 2017. They will then make these recordings available for on-demand streaming starting on May 19, 2017. This is the first time that performances of the NHKSO—a prominent orchestra in Japan—will be streamed in hi-res audio. IIJ will record three matinee performances at the Muza Kawasaki Symphony Hall in hi-res audio, using DSD 5.6 MHz (*1) and PCM 96 kHz / 24 bit (*2) formats. These recordings will be available for free and on demand as programs on IIJ's hi-res streaming service, PrimeSeat (*3). At the same time, IIJ will stream on-demand videos of the concerts for multiple devices, including PCs and smartphones. High-resolution audio formats—including the popular DSD and PCM systems—faithfully reproduce analog sound without compression, allowing listeners to enjoy the immersive, high-quality acoustic experience of a concert hall right in their homes. After evaluating this project's technological partnership for hi-res audio streaming, IIJ and the NHKSO will consider expanding the number of concerts they stream, to deliver even more NHKSO performances in high-quality audio to customers living room. -
Folk Roots, Urban Roots
Thursday 13 December 2018 7.30–9.55pm Barbican Hall LSO SEASON CONCERT FOLK ROOTS, URBAN ROOTS Bartók Hungarian Peasant Songs Szymanowski Harnasie Interval Stravinsky Ebony Concerto Osvaldo Golijov arr Gonzalo Grau Nazareno Bernstein Prelude, Fugue and Riffs ROOTS & Sir Simon Rattle conductor Edgaras Montvidas tenor Chris Richards clarinet Katia and Marielle Labèque pianos Gonzalo Grau percussion Raphaël Séguinier percussion London Symphony Chorus ORIGINS Simon Halsey chorus director In celebration of the life of Jeremy Delmar-Morgan Streamed live on youtube.com/lso Recorded by BBC Radio 3 for broadcast on Tuesday 18 December Welcome Jeremy Delmar-Morgan In Memory 1941–2018 We are also delighted to welcome Katia and Jeremy Delmar-Morgan was a member of Marielle Labèque, who perform Nazareno, the LSO Advisory Council for over 20 years, a double piano suite drawn from Osvaldo a Director of LSO Ltd from 2002 to 2013, and Golijov’s La Pasión según San Marco, thereafter a Trustee of the LSO Endowment arranged by Gonzalo Grau, who appears Trust. He was also Honorary President of alongside Raphaël Séguinier as one of this the Ronald Moore Sickness and Benevolent evening’s percussion soloists. We then close Fund, where he brought invaluable advice with Prelude, Fugue and Riffs by the LSO’s to the LSO musicians on the investment former President, Leonard Bernstein, with strategy for the fund. After studying LSO Principal Clarinet Chris Richards as soloist. medicine at Cambridge he went into the City for a career in stock-broking, latterly elcome to this LSO concert at Tonight’s concert is performed in combining the two in the financing of the Barbican. -
The Ethics of Orchestral Conducting
Theory of Conducting – Chapter 1 The Ethics of Orchestral Conducting In a changing culture and a society that adopts and discards values (or anti-values) with a speed similar to that of fashion as related to dressing or speech, each profession must find out the roots and principles that provide an unchanging point of reference, those principles to which we are obliged to go back again and again in order to maintain an adequate direction and, by carrying them out, allow oneself to be fulfilled. Orchestral Conducting is not an exception. For that reason, some ideas arise once and again all along this work. Since their immutability guarantees their continuance. It is known that Music, as an art of performance, causally interlinks three persons: first and closely interlocked: the composer and the performer; then, eventually, the listener. The composer and his piece of work require the performer and make him come into existence. When the performer plays the piece, that is to say when he makes it real, perceptive existence is granted and offers it to the comprehension and even gives the listener the possibility of enjoying it. The composer needs the performer so that, by executing the piece, his work means something for the listener. Therefore, the performer has no self-existence but he is performer due to the previous existence of the piece and the composer, to whom he owes to be a performer. There exist a communication process between the composer and the performer that, as all those processes involves a sender, a message and a receiver. -
Richard Lert Papers 0210
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt638nf3ww No online items Finding Aid of the Richard Lert papers 0210 Finding aid prepared by Rebecca Hirsch The processing of this collection and the creation of this finding aid was funded by the generous support of the National Historic Publications and Records Commission. USC Libraries Special Collections Doheny Memorial Library 206 3550 Trousdale Parkway Los Angeles, California, 90089-0189 213-740-5900 [email protected] June 2010 Finding Aid of the Richard Lert 0210 1 papers 0210 Title: Richard Lert papers Collection number: 0210 Contributing Institution: USC Libraries Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 58.51 Linear feet70 boxes Date (inclusive): 1900-1981 Abstract: This collection consists of Richard Lert's video and audio recordings of performances, rehearsals and lectures, personal papers and his music score library. Lert was born in Vienna and trained as an orchestral conductor in Germany. He moved to the United States in 1932 with his family and was the conductor of the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra from 1932 until his retirement in 1972. creator: Lert, Richard, 1885-1980 Biographical Note Richard Lert was born September 19, 1885, in Vienna, Austria. He trained as an orchestral conductor under Arthur Nikisch and began his career in Darmstadt, Germany, where he met and married his wife, Vicki Baum, in 1916. They had two sons. Lert held posts in Frankfurt, Kiel and Hannover before becoming the music director of the Berlin National Opera. Lert and his family moved to Los Angeles in 1932, where he became the music director of the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra. -
886448056478.Pdf
1 Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881) Pictures at an Exhibition [34:10] K The Marketplace of Limoges (The Big News) [1:30] Tondichtung für großes Orchester (frei nach Friedrich Nietzsche) Limoges. Le Marché (La Grande Nouvelle) Tableaux d’une exposition Allegretto vivo, sempre scherzando Orchestrated by Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) L Catacombae, sepulchrum Romanum [2:16] A Promenade [1:37] Largo Allegro giusto, nel modo russico; senza allegrezza, ma poco sostenuto M Cum mortuis in lingua mortua [1:57] B Gnomus [2:47] Andante non troppo, con lamento Vivo N The Hut on Chicken’s Legs (Baba-Yaga) [3:24] C Promenade [0:56] La Cabane sur des pattes de poule (Baba-Yaga) Moderato comodo e con delicatezza Allegro con brio, feroce – Andante mosso – Allegro molto D Il vecchio castello [4:42] O The Great Gate of Kiev [5:40] Andante Le Grande Porte de Kiev E Promenade [0:31] Allegro alla breve. Maestoso. Con grandezza Moderato non tanto, pesamente P F Tuileries Gardens (Children Quarrelling at Play) [1:03] Khovanstchina: Entr’acte to Act IV, Scene 2 Tuileries (Disspute d’enfants aprèes jeux) “Prince Galitzin’s Journey into Exile” [4:41] Allegretto non troppo, capriccioso Orchestrated by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908) G Bydlo [3:14] Q Sempre moderato, pesande St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain (A Night at Bare Mountain, Original version) [12:57] H Promenade [0:42] Tranquillo Total Playing Time [52:05] I Ballet of Chicks in Their Shells [1:14] Ballet des poussins dans leurs coques Scherzino. Vivo leggiero J Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle [2:31] Andante 2 NHK Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo Recorded: September 14 & 15, 2016, Suntory Hall, Tokyo (Live Recording at The Subscription Concerts No. -
Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden
Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden Matthias Claudi PR und Marketing T 0351 4911 380 Christian Thielemann, Chefdirigent F 0351 4911 328 [email protected] Myung-Whun Chung, Erster Gastdirigent Herbert Blomstedt, Ehrendirigent Durch Kurfürst Moritz von Sachsen 1548 gegründet, ist die Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden eines der ältesten und traditionsreichsten Orchester der Welt. Seit ihrem Bestehen haben bedeutende Kapellmeister und international geschätzte Instrumentalisten die Geschichte der einstigen Hofkapelle geprägt. Zu ihren Leitern gehörten u. a. Heinrich Schütz, Johann Adolf Hasse, Carl Maria von Weber und Richard Wagner, der das Orchester als seine »Wunderharfe« bezeichnete. Bedeutende Chefdirigenten der letzten 100 Jahre waren Ernst von Schuch, Fritz Reiner, Fritz Busch, Karl Böhm, Joseph Keilberth, Rudolf Kempe, Otmar Suitner, Kurt Sanderling, Herbert Blomstedt und Giuseppe Sinopoli. Ab 2002 standen Bernard Haitink (bis 2004) und Fabio Luisi (2007-2010) an der Spitze des Orchesters. Seit der Saison 2012 / 2013 ist Christian Thielemann Chefdirigent der Sächsischen Staatskapelle. Im Mai 2016 wurde der ehemalige und langjährige Chefdirigent Herbert Blomstedt zum Ehrendirigenten des Orchesters ernannt. Diesen Titel hatte bislang einzig Sir Colin Davis von 1990 bis zu seinem Tod 2013 inne. Myung-Whun Chung trägt seit der Spielzeit 2012 / 2013 den Titel des Ersten Gastdirigenten. Richard Strauss war der Staatskapelle mehr als sechzig Jahre lang freundschaftlich verbunden. Neun seiner Opern, darunter »Salome«, »Elektra« und »Der Rosenkavalier« wurden in Dresden uraufgeführt; seine »Alpensinfonie« widmete er der Staatskapelle. Auch zahlreiche andere berühmte Komponisten schrieben Werke, die von der Staatskapelle uraufgeführt wurden bzw. ihr gewidmet sind. An diese Tradition knüpft das Orchester seit 2007 mit dem Titel »Capell-Compositeur« an. -
Heidi Grant Murphy, Soprano
Master Class Heidi Grant Murphy, soprano March 23, 2021 Tuesday Presented Virtually 3:30 pm Program Del Cabello más sutil Fernando Obradors (1897–1945) “Mein Herr Marquis” from Die Fledermaus Johann Strauss, Jr. (1825–1899) Gretchen Enterline, soprano Il pleure dans mon cœur Claude Debussy (1862–1918) “Steal Me, Sweet Thief” from The Old Maid and the Thief Gian Carlo Menotti (1911–2007) Becka Lundy, soprano Ideale Francesco Paolo Tosti (1846–1916) “Inkslinger's Song” from Paul Bunyan Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) Colin Kase, tenor “Chacun le sait” from La Fille du Régiment Gaetano Donizetti (1797–1848) Villanelle Eva Dell’acqua (1856–1930) Yaqi Yang, soprano "Or sai chi l'onore" from Don Giovanni Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) "September" from Vier letzte Lieder Richard Strauss (1864–1949) Patricia Luecken, soprano One hundred eighty-fourth performance of the 2020-2021 season. About the Artist A shimmering soprano with enchanting stage presence, HEIDI GRANT MURPHY is one of the outstanding vocal talents of her generation. A native of Bellingham, Washington, she began vocal studies while attending Western Washington and the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. Her graduate studies were interrupted when she was named a winner of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and engaged by Maestro James Levine to participate in the Metropolitan Opera's Lindemann Young Artist Development Program. Today, she has established a reputation not only for her radiant musicianship and impeccable vocal technique but also for her warm personality and generosity of spirit. Murphy has appeared with many of the world's finest opera companies and symphony orchestras, working with many of the world's most esteemed conductors. -
May 2018 List
May 2018 Catalogue Issue 25 Prices valid until Wednesday 27 June 2018 unless stated otherwise 0115 982 7500 [email protected] Your Account Number: {MM:Account Number} {MM:Postcode} {MM:Address5} {MM:Address4} {MM:Address3} {MM:Address2} {MM:Address1} {MM:Name} 1 Welcome! Dear Customer, Glorious sunshine and summer temperatures prevail as this foreword is being written, but we suspect it will all be over by the time you are reading it! On the plus side, at least that means we might be able to tempt you into investing in a little more listening material before the outside weather arrives for real… We were pleasantly surprised by the number of new releases appearing late April and into May, as you may be able to tell by the slightly-longer-than-usual new release portion of this catalogue. Warner & Erato certainly have plenty to offer us, taking up a page and half of the ‘priorities’ with new recordings from Nigel Kennedy, Philippe Jaroussky, Emmanuel Pahud, David Aaron Carpenter and others, alongside some superbly compiled boxsets including a Massenet Opera Collection, performances from Joseph Keilberth (in the ICON series), and two interesting looking Debussy collections: ‘Centenary Discoveries’ and ‘His First Performers’. Rachel Podger revisits Vivaldi’s Four Seasons for Channel Classics (already garnering strong reviews), Hyperion offer us five new titles including Schubert from Marc-Andre Hamelin and Berlioz from Lawrence Power and Andrew Manze (see ‘Disc of the Month’ below), plus we have strong releases from Sandrine Piau (Alpha), the Belcea Quartet joined by Piotr Anderszewski (also Alpha), Magdalena Kozena (Supraphon), Osmo Vanska (BIS), Boris Giltberg (Naxos) and Paul McCreesh (Signum). -
The Blake Collection Click on Item Titles Or in Memory of Nancy M
(Scroll to the end of this document for an Index to all items. Please note that this Archive contains Live Links: The Blake Collection click on item titles or pictures to go to the In Memory of Nancy M. Blake Library’s catalog, and click on citations to see full articles.) BELLINI’S NORMA featuring CECILIA BARTOLI This tragic opera is set in Roman-occupied, first-century Gaul, features a title character, who although a Druid priestess, is in many ways a modern woman. Norma has secretly taken the Roman proconsul Pollione as her lover and had two children with him. Political and personal crises arise when the locals turn against the occupiers and Pollione turns to a new paramour. Norma “is a role with emotions ranging from haughty and demanding, to desperately passionate, to vengeful and defiant. And the singer must convey all of this while confronting some of the most vocally challenging music ever composed. And if that weren't intimidating enough for any singer, Norma and its composer have become almost synonymous with the specific and notoriously torturous style of opera known as bel canto — literally, ‘beautiful singing’” (“Love Among the Druids: Bellini's Norma,” NPR World of Opera, May 16, 2008). And Bartoli, one of the greatest living opera divas, is up to the challenges the role brings. (New York Public Radio’s WQXR’s “OperaVore” declared that “Bartoli is Fierce and Mercurial in Bellini's Norma,” Marion Lignana Rosenberg, June 09, 2013.) If you’re already a fan of this opera, you’ve no doubt heard a recording spotlighting the great soprano Maria Callas (and we have such a recording, too), but as the notes with the Bartoli recording point out, “The role of Norma was written for Giuditta Pasta, who sang what today’s listeners would consider to be mezzo-soprano roles,” making Bartoli more appropriate than Callas as Norma. -
A Survey of the Career of Baritone, Josef Metternich: Artist and Teacher Diana Carol Amos University of South Carolina
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Theses and Dissertations 2015 A Survey of the Career of Baritone, Josef Metternich: Artist and Teacher Diana Carol Amos University of South Carolina Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd Part of the Music Performance Commons Recommended Citation Amos, D. C.(2015). A Survey of the Career of Baritone, Josef Metternich: Artist and Teacher. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/etd/3642 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you by Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A SURVEY OF THE CAREER OF BARITONE, JOSEF METTERNICH: ARTIST AND TEACHER by Diana Carol Amos Bachelor of Music Oberlin Conservatory of Music, 1982 Master of Music University of South Carolina, 2011 Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance School of Music University of South Carolina 2015 Accepted by: Walter Cuttino, Major Professor Donald Gray, Committee Member Sarah Williams, Committee Member Janet E. Hopkins, Committee Member Lacy Ford, Senior Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies ©Copyright by Diana Carol Amos, 2015 All Rights Reserved. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I gratefully acknowledge the help of my professor, Walter Cuttino, for his direction and encouragement throughout this project. His support has been tremendous. My sincere gratitude goes to my entire committee, Professor Walter Cuttino, Dr. Donald Gray, Professor Janet E. Hopkins, and Dr. Sarah Williams for their perseverance and dedication in assisting me.