Classical Music Repertoire from Carmen O Entr’Acte J.S
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Season 2014-2015
23 Season 2014-2015 Wednesday, January 28, at 8:00 The Philadelphia Orchestra Friday, January 30, at 2:00 Saturday, January 31, Yannick Nézet-Séguin Conductor at 8:00 Kirill Gerstein Piano Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67 I. Allegro con brio II. Andante con moto III. Allegro— IV. Allegro Intermission Shostakovich Piano Concerto No. 2 in F major, Op. 102 I. Allegro II. Andante III. Allegro Shostakovich/from Suite from The Gadfly, Op. 97a: arr. Atovmyan I. Overture: Moderato con moto III. People’s Holiday: [Allegro vivace] VII. Prelude: Andantino XI. Scene: Moderato This program runs approximately 1 hour, 40 minutes. The January 28 concert is sponsored by MEDCOMP. designates a work that is part of the 40/40 Project, which features pieces not performed on subscription concerts in at least 40 years. Philadelphia Orchestra concerts are broadcast on WRTI 90.1 FM on Sunday afternoons at 1 PM. Visit www.wrti.org to listen live or for more details. 24 Please join us immediately following the January 30 concert for a Chamber Postlude, featuring members of The Philadelphia Orchestra. Brahms Piano Quartet No. 3 in C minor, Op. 60 I. Allegro non troppo II. Scherzo: Allegro III. Andante IV. Finale: Allegro lomodo Mark Livshits Piano Kimberly Fisher Violin Kirsten Johnson Viola John Koen Cello 3 Story Title 25 The Philadelphia Orchestra Jessica Griffin The Philadelphia Orchestra is one of the preeminent orchestras in the world, renowned for its distinctive sound, desired for its keen ability to capture the hearts and imaginations of audiences, and admired for a legacy of imagination and innovation on and off the concert stage. -
CHAN 3036 BOOK COVER.Qxd 22/8/07 2:50 Pm Page 1
CHAN 3036 BOOK COVER.qxd 22/8/07 2:50 pm Page 1 CHAN 3036(2) CHANDOS O PERA I N ENGLISH Il Trovatore David Parry PETE MOOES FOUNDATION CHAN 3036 BOOK.qxd 22/8/07 3:15 pm Page 2 Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) Il trovatore (The Troubadour) Opera in four parts AKG Text by Salvatore Cammarano, from the drama El trovador by Antonio Garcia Gutiérrez English translation by Tom Hammond Count di Luna, a young nobleman of Aragon ....................................................................Alan Opie baritone Ferrando, captain of the Count’s guard ..................................................................................Clive Bayley bass Doña Leonora, lady-in-waiting to the Princess of Aragon ..............................................Sharon Sweet soprano Inez, confidante of Leonora ........................................................................................Helen Williams soprano Azucena, a gipsy woman from Biscay ....................................................................Anne Mason mezzo-soprano Manrico (The Troubadour), supposed son of Azucena, a rebel under Prince Urgel ........Dennis O’Neill tenor Ruiz, a soldier in Manrico’s service ..................................................................................Marc Le Brocq tenor A Gipsy, a Messenger, Servants and Retainers of the Count, Followers of Manrico, Soldiers, Gipsies, Nuns, Guards Geoffrey Mitchell Choir London Philharmonic Orchestra Nicholas Kok and Gareth Hancock assistant conductors David Parry Further appearances in Opera in English Dennis O’Neill: -
28Apr2004p2.Pdf
144 NAXOS CATALOGUE 2004 | ALPHORN – BAROQUE ○○○○ ■ COLLECTIONS INVITATION TO THE DANCE Adam: Giselle (Acts I & II) • Delibes: Lakmé (Airs de ✦ ✦ danse) • Gounod: Faust • Ponchielli: La Gioconda ALPHORN (Dance of the Hours) • Weber: Invitation to the Dance ○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○ Slovak RSO / Ondrej Lenárd . 8.550081 ■ ALPHORN CONCERTOS Daetwyler: Concerto for Alphorn and Orchestra • ■ RUSSIAN BALLET FAVOURITES Dialogue avec la nature for Alphorn, Piccolo and Glazunov: Raymonda (Grande valse–Pizzicato–Reprise Orchestra • Farkas: Concertino Rustico • L. Mozart: de la valse / Prélude et La Romanesca / Scène mimique / Sinfonia Pastorella Grand adagio / Grand pas espagnol) • Glière: The Red Jozsef Molnar, Alphorn / Capella Istropolitana / Slovak PO / Poppy (Coolies’ Dance / Phoenix–Adagio / Dance of the Urs Schneider . 8.555978 Chinese Women / Russian Sailors’ Dance) Khachaturian: Gayne (Sabre Dance) • Masquerade ✦ AMERICAN CLASSICS ✦ (Waltz) • Spartacus (Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia) Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet (Morning Dance / Masks / # DREAMER Dance of the Knights / Gavotte / Balcony Scene / A Portrait of Langston Hughes Romeo’s Variation / Love Dance / Act II Finale) Berger: Four Songs of Langston Hughes: Carolina Cabin Shostakovich: Age of Gold (Polka) •␣ Bonds: The Negro Speaks of Rivers • Three Dream Various artists . 8.554063 Portraits: Minstrel Man •␣ Burleigh: Lovely, Dark and Lonely One •␣ Davison: Fields of Wonder: In Time of ✦ ✦ Silver Rain •␣ Gordon: Genius Child: My People • BAROQUE Hughes: Evil • Madam and the Census Taker • My ■ BAROQUE FAVOURITES People • Negro • Sunday Morning Prophecy • Still Here J.S. Bach: ‘In dulci jubilo’, BWV 729 • ‘Nun komm, der •␣ Sylvester's Dying Bed • The Weary Blues •␣ Musto: Heiden Heiland’, BWV 659 • ‘O Haupt voll Blut und Shadow of the Blues: Island & Litany •␣ Owens: Heart on Wunden’ • Pastorale, BWV 590 • ‘Wachet auf’ (Cantata, the Wall: Heart •␣ Price: Song to the Dark Virgin BWV 140, No. -
A Listening Guide for the Indispensable Composers by Anthony Tommasini
A Listening Guide for The Indispensable Composers by Anthony Tommasini 1 The Indispensable Composers: A Personal Guide Anthony Tommasini A listening guide INTRODUCTION: The Greatness Complex Bach, Mass in B Minor I: Kyrie I begin the book with my recollection of being about thirteen and putting on a recording of Bach’s Mass in B Minor for the first time. I remember being immediately struck by the austere intensity of the opening choral singing of the word “Kyrie.” But I also remember feeling surprised by a melodic/harmonic shift in the opening moments that didn’t do what I thought it would. I guess I was already a musician wanting to know more, to know why the music was the way it was. Here’s the grave, stirring performance of the Kyrie from the 1952 recording I listened to, with Herbert von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philharmonic. Though, as I grew to realize, it’s a very old-school approach to Bach. Herbert von Karajan, conductor; Vienna Philharmonic (12:17) Today I much prefer more vibrant and transparent accounts, like this great performance from Philippe Herreweghe’s 1996 recording with the chorus and orchestra of the Collegium Vocale, which is almost three minutes shorter. Philippe Herreweghe, conductor; Collegium Vocale Gent (9:29) Grieg, “Shepherd Boy” Arthur Rubinstein, piano Album: “Rubinstein Plays Grieg” (3:26) As a child I loved “Rubinstein Plays Grieg,” an album featuring the great pianist Arthur Rubinstein playing piano works by Grieg, including several selections from the composer’s volumes of short, imaginative “Lyrical Pieces.” My favorite was “The Shepherd Boy,” a wistful piece with an intense middle section. -
Abstracts James Hepokoski Oberlin College
Verdi Forum Number 11 Article 3 3-1-1983 Abstracts James Hepokoski Oberlin College David Lawton SUNY Stony Brook Martin Chusid New York University Andrew Hornick New York University John Nádas University of California, Santa Barbara See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/vf Part of the Musicology Commons, Music Performance Commons, and the Music Theory Commons Recommended Citation Hepokoski, James; Lawton, David; Chusid, Martin; Hornick, Andrew; Nádas, John; Tomlinson, Gary; Garrison, Leonard; Powers, Harold S.; Harwood, Gregory W.; Beams, Richard B.; Cole, William P.; Cordell, Albert O.; Davis, Marianne; Frye, Loryn E.; King, Ben; Mason, James; McCauley, William E.; and Town, Stephen (1983) "Abstracts," Verdi Forum: No. 11, Article 3. Available at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/vf/vol1/iss11/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Verdi Forum by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstracts Abstract Abstracts of papers about Giuseppe Verdi and his works, presented at joint meetings of the AIVS and Greater NY Chapter of the American Musicological Society, 1979-81 (Hepokoski, Lawton, Chusid, Hornick, Nádas, Tomlinson, Garrison, Powers), at the 1982 national meeting of the American Musicological Society (Harwood), and at an NEH-sponsored summer seminar at NYU in 1980 (Beams, Cole, Cordell, Davis, Fry, King, Mason, McCauley, Town). Keywords Giuseppe Verdi, opera Authors James Hepokoski, David Lawton, Martin Chusid, Andrew Hornick, John Nádas, Gary Tomlinson, Leonard Garrison, Harold S. Powers, Gregory W. -
Download Booklet
2 CDs the ultimate DDD VERDI 8.578068-69 opera album CD 1 innovative style. His effective use of the spectacular, the supernatural, the superstitious, the sentimental, the scandalous, even the downright silly, are evident to everyone familiar with 1 Prelude to La Traviata 3:53 these great operas. But Verdi cannily uses these melodramatic conventions of Romantic opera Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Rahbari (conductor) to reveal his characters’ psychological situations both directly (through their own words and actions, which of course give rise to their predicaments) and indirectly (as mirrored by, say, the 2 Brindisi: Libiamo ne’ lieti calici from La Traviata 2:54 famous storm in Rigoletto, or by contrasting Aïda’s inner turmoil when she discovers her father Monika Krause (soprano), Yordy Ramiro (tenor), Slovak Philharmonic Chorus, has been taken captive with the Egyptian’s public victory celebrations over the Ethiopians). Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Rahbari (conductor) Few may find it credible when the old gypsy Azucena reveals that she had mistakenly thrown her own baby into the flames instead of the son of the man who burned her mother at the stake 3 La donna è mobile from Rigoletto 2:55 as a witch, but the disastrous consequences are tragic for all concerned. And the wide-ranging Yordy Ramiro (tenor), Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, grand guignol plot of La forza del destino may beggar belief, but it remains a gothic classic, Alexander Rahbari (conductor) complete with its own legendary ‘curse’ which apparently originated when the American baritone Leonard Warren died on the Metropolitan Opera stage on 4 March 1960 while singing Morir, 4 Va, pensiero ‘Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves’ from Nabucco 4:39 tremenda cosa (‘to die, a momentous thing’). -
Reconsidering the Nineteenth-Century Potpourri: Johann Nepomuk Hummel’S Op
Reconsidering the Nineteenth-Century Potpourri: Johann Nepomuk Hummel’s Op. 94 for Viola and Orchestra A document submitted to The Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts in the Performance Studies Division of the College-Conservatory of Music 2018 by Fan Yang B. M., Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, 2008 M. M., Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, 2010 D. M. A. Candidacy, University of Cincinnati, 2013 Abstract The Potpourri for Viola and Orchestra, Op. 94 by Johann Nepomuk Hummel is available in a heavily abridged edition, entitled Fantasy, which causes confusions and problems. To clarify this misperception and help performers choose between the two versions, this document identifies the timeline and sources that exist for Hummel’s Op. 94 and compares the two versions of this work, focusing on material from the Potpourri missing in the Fantasy, to determine in what ways it contributes to the original work. In addition, by examining historical definitions and composed examples of the genre as well as philosophical ideas about the faithfulness to a work—namely, idea of the early nineteenth-century work concept, Werktreue—as well as counter arguments, this research aims to rationalize the choice to perform the Fantasy or Potpourri according to varied situations and purposes, or even to suggest adopting or adapting the Potpourri into a new version. Consequently, a final goal is to spur a reconsideration of the potpourri genre, and encourage performers and audiences alike to include it in their learning and programming. -
Boléro." : Bruno Bozzetto’S Animated Music
Bellano, Marco. "Boléro." : Bruno Bozzetto’s Animated Music. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. 165–176. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 8 Oct. 2021. <http:// dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501350894.ch-007>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 8 October 2021, 07:21 UTC. Copyright © Marco Bellano 2021. Released under a CC BY-NC-ND licence (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 7 Bol é ro Description A Coca-Cola glass bottle, thrown away by the angry conductor, gets drawn on paper and used as an inspirational piece by the animator. As the short fi lm begins, the bottle is now fl ying over an empty and eerie landscape, while high-pitched electronic sound effects accompany its trajectory. In the distance stays the silhouette of a landed space vehicle, with a shape not far from that of the command module of the Apollo Moon missions. The bottle seems to have come from there; with a loud thud, it plunges into the ground and leans to the left. Being very close to the point of view, it almost fi lls the screen transversally. It still contains a few drops of Coca-Cola. The spaceship takes off with a roar: the light from its engines outlines the profi le of the bottle. When the sound of the spaceship wanes away, the music of the Bol é ro slowly fades in. -
Naxcat2005 ABRIDGED VERSION
CONTENTS Foreword by Klaus Heymann . 4 Alphabetical List of Works by Composer . 6 Collections . 88 Alphorn 88 Easy Listening 102 Operetta 114 American Classics 88 Flute 106 Orchestral 114 American Jewish Music 88 Funeral Music 106 Organ 117 Ballet 88 Glass Harmonica 106 Piano 118 Baroque 88 Guitar 106 Russian 120 Bassoon 90 Gypsy 109 Samplers 120 Best Of series 90 Harp 109 Saxophone 121 British Music 92 Harpsichord 109 Trombone 121 Cello 92 Horn 109 Tr umpet 121 Chamber Music 93 Light Classics 109 Viennese 122 Chill With 93 Lute 110 Violin 122 Christmas 94 Music for Meditation 110 Vocal and Choral 123 Cinema Classics 96 Oboe 111 Wedding 125 Clarinet 99 Ondes Martenot 111 White Box 125 Early Music 100 Operatic 111 Wind 126 Naxos Jazz . 126 Naxos World . 127 Naxos Educational . 127 Naxos Super Audio CD . 128 Naxos DVD Audio . 129 Naxos DVD . 129 List of Naxos Distributors . 130 Naxos Website: www.naxos.com NaxCat2005 ABRIDGED VERSION2 23/12/2004, 11:54am Symbols used in this catalogue # New release not listed in 2004 Catalogue $ Recording scheduled to be released before 31 March, 2005 † Please note that not all titles are available in all territories. Check with your local distributor for availability. 2 Also available on Mini-Disc (MD)(7.XXXXXX) Reviews and Ratings Over the years, Naxos recordings have received outstanding critical acclaim in virtually every specialized and general-interest publication around the world. In this catalogue we are only listing ratings which summarize a more detailed review in a single number or a single rating. Our recordings receive favourable reviews in many other publications which, however, do not use a simple, easy to understand rating system. -
Enrico Caruso
NI 7924/25 Also Available on Prima Voce ENRICO CARUSO Opera Volume 3 NI 7803 Caruso in Opera Volume One NI 7866 Caruso in Opera Volume Two NI 7834 Caruso in Ensemble NI 7900 Caruso – The Early Years : Recordings from 1902-1909 NI 7809 Caruso in Song Volume One NI 7884 Caruso in Song Volume Two NI 7926/7 Caruso in Song Volume Three 12 NI 7924/25 NI 7924/25 Enrico Caruso 1873 - 1921 • Opera Volume 3 and pitch alters (typically it rises) by as much as a semitone during the performance if played at a single speed. The total effect of adjusting for all these variables is revealing: it questions the accepted wisdom that Caruso’s voice at the time of his DISC ONE early recordings was very much lighter than subsequently. Certainly the older and 1 CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA, Mascagni - O Lola ch’ai di latti la cammisa 2.50 more artistically assured he became, the tone became even more massive, and Rec: 28 December 1910 Matrix: B-9745-1 Victor Cat: 87072 likewise the high A naturals and high B flats also became even more monumental in Francis J. Lapitino, harp their intensity. But it now appears, from this evidence, that the baritone timbre was 2 LA GIOCONDA, Ponchielli - Cielo e mar 2.57 always present. That it has been missed is simply the result of playing the early discs Rec: 14 March 1910 Matrix: C-8718-1 Victor Cat: 88246 at speeds that are consistently too fast. 3 CARMEN, Bizet - La fleur que tu m’avais jetée (sung in Italian) 3.53 Rec: 7 November 1909 Matrix: C-8349-1 Victor Cat: 88209 Of Caruso’s own opinion on singing and the effort required we know from a 4 STABAT MATER, Rossini - Cujus animam 4.47 published interview that he believed it should be every singers aim to ensure ‘that in Rec: 15 December 1913 Matrix: C-14200-1 Victor Cat: 88460 spite of the creation of a tone that possesses dramatic tension, any effort should be directed in 5 PETITE MESSE SOLENNELLE, Rossini - Crucifixus 3.18 making the actual sound seem effortless’. -
Media Release
Media Release FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 16, 2019 Contact: Edward Wilensky (619) 232-7636 [email protected] San Diego Opera’s 2019-2020 Season Opens with Verdi’s masterpiece Aida Verdi specialist Michelle Bradley to make Company debut as Aida Theatrical Concert Opera will use sets, costumes, and lighting with the San Diego Symphony, San Diego Opera Chorus, and principal singers on stage Tenor Carl Tanner makes welcome return as Radames San Diego, CA – Verdi’s beloved opera Aida opens San Diego Opera’s 2019-2020 season in an entirely new theatrical concert performance utilizing set elements, costumes, lighting, and featuring the San Diego Symphony and San Diego Opera chorus onstage, alongside some of the greatest interpreters of Verdi’s music performing today. Aida opens on October 19, 2019 for four performances. Additional performances are October 22, 25, and 27 (matinee), 2019. All evening performances for the 2019-2020 season will begin at 7:30 PM for the convenience of our audiences. The matinee will remain at 2 PM. Assembled for the opening opera of the season is an exciting cast of singers including the Company debut of soprano Michelle Bradley as Aida who is quickly becoming one of the most sought after Verdi sopranos performing today. Making a welcome return to San Diego Opera in the role of Radames is tenor Carl Tanner who was last heard in San Diego Opera’s 2018 production of Turandot as Calaf. Also making house debuts are mezzo-soprano Olesya Petrova as Amneris and baritone Nelson Martinez as Amonasro. Bass Mikhail Svetlov returns to sing the King of Egypt, having last been heard as Ambimelech in 2013’s Samson and Delilah. -
Aida-Dossier-Pedagogique-.Pdf
AIDA GIUSEPPE VERDI © Christian-DRESSE DOSSIER PÉDAGOGIQUE 2016-2017 CONTACTS ACTION CULTURELLE Marjorie Piquette / 01 69 53 62 16 / [email protected] Eugénie Boivin / 01 69 53 62 26 / [email protected] RETROUVEZ NOTRE ACTUALITÉ SUR NOTRE BLOG : BLOG.OPERA-MASSY.COM 2 Vendredi 4 novembre | 20h Dimanche 6 novembre | 16h Durée : 3h15 (avec entracte) Aïda Direction musicale Paolo Olmi Mise en scène Charles Roubaud Assisté de Jean-Christophe Mast Chorégraphie Julien Lestel Décors Emmanuelle Favre Costumes Katia Duflot Eclairages Philippe Grosperrin Chef de Chant Hélène Blanic Opéra de massy Aïda Cécile Perrin Amneris Sylvie Brunet-Grupposo La grande prêtresse Ludivine Gombert Radamès Carl Tanner 2016-2017 Amonasro Tito You Ramphis Wojtek Smilek Le roi d’Égypte Jérôme Varnier Un messager Rémy Mathieu Orchestre National d’Île-de-France Chœur de l’Opéra Grand Avignon et de l’Opéra de Massy L’Opéra de massy est subventionné par: et remercie ses partenaires : Le service d’Action Culturelle de l’Opéra de Massy est membre du Réseau Européen pour la Sensibilisation à l’Opéra 3 SOMMAIRE 4 – COMPOSITEUR 6 – ANTONIO GHISLANZONI, LE LIBRETTISTE 6 – AUGUSTE MARIETTE, LA SOURCE LITTÉRAIRE. 7 – RÉSUMÉ Aïda 10 – PISTES D'ÉCOUTE 14 – CONTEXTE HISTORIQUE 15 – QUE S'EST-IL PASSÉ EN 1871 16 – PRODUCTION 17 – EN SAVOIR PLUS...SUR LA VOIX Opéra de massy 18 – LES INSTRUMENTS DE L'ORCHESTRE 21 – LES INGRÉDIENTS DE L'ORCHESTRE 2016-2017 © Christian-DRESSE 4 LE COMPOSITEUR GIUSEPPE VERDI (1813 - 1901) D’origine modeste, d’abord formé par l’organiste du village, Baistrocchi, il suit des études à Busseto avec le chef de fanfare Provesi.