Komponisten Der Gegenwart (KDG)
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Kalendár Výročí 2018
Úvod Kultúra je od nepamäti súčasťou človeka. Pramení z tvorivého ducha jednotlivca, ktorý prostredníctvom svojho diela zušľachťuje seba a okolie. Vďaka kultúrnemu dedičstvu si spoločnosť uvedomuje, vytvára a obnovuje svoju identitu. Kultúrne dedičstvo je nositeľom informácií o histórii ľudstva a národov, spája society žijúce vedľa seba a tie sa rešpektujú podľa stupňa svojej kultúrnej vyspelosti. Týka sa nielen umenia, ale aj správania, ktoré je poznávacím znakom konkrétneho človeka, society, etnika a národa. Väčšinou nepotrebuje tlmočenie do cudzích jazykov a prostredníctvom pozdvihovania ľudského ducha je jedným z najlepších prostriedkov na udržiavanie mieru. Jeho význam si intenzívne pripomíname práve v roku 2018, ktorý vyhlásila Európska komisia za Európsky rok kultúrneho dedičstva. Kultúrne dedičstvo uchovávame a zveľaďujeme pre svoju silnú vnútornú potrebu byť človekom, ako aj z lásky a úcty k predkom, súčasníkom a k potomstvu. V tejto myšlienke predkladáme Kalendár výročí 2018. Tento rok je jubilejným 240. výročím narodenia bratislavského rodáka Johanna Nepomuka Hummela. Kalendár výročí nám pripomína aj výnimočne vysoký vek slovenských osobností: Gizela Veclová – 95 rokov, Danica Móžiová-Nováková – 90 rokov, Naďa Földváriová, Dagmar Rohová-Boksová, Zdenka Bernátová a Božena Ormisová – 85 rokov, Boris Banáry, Ľudovít Štassel – 95 rokov, Ladislav Dóša, Ján Kende a Pavol Zelenay – 90 rokov, Ladislav Déczi a Ivan Palovič – 80. rokov. Zo zahraničných umelcov oslávi 90 rokov Ennio Morricone, 85 rokov Montserrat Caballé a 80 rokov Jevgenij Nesterenko a ďalší. Významné výročia majú aj umelci, ktorí preslávili Slovensko vo svete: Lucia Popp, Marta Beňačková, Sergej Kopčák, Peter Lipa. Vďaka Kalendáru výročí 2018 nezabudneme ani na výnimočných ľudí, ktorí v tichu archívov a knižníc vytvárali pevné podložie pre prácu vedcov, pedagógov, umelcov: Mária Jana Terrayová, Vladimír Dvořák, Jozef Šátek. -
Damiani Davide
René MASSIS Agent artistique +33 6 80 57 94 62 +49 160 93835013 [email protected] 132 Boulevard Pereire 75017 Paris - France www.amo-massis.com Davide DAMIANI Baritone Italian baritone Davide Damiani studied voice, double bass, composition and orchestral conducting in Pesaro, Parma and Bologna. In 1992, he was assistant to Chief conductor Gustav Kuhn in Macerata, which earned him engagements in Italy and Europe. He made his debut as a baritone in a production of Don Giovanni in Tel Aviv. As a member of the Vienna Staatsoper company from 1995 to 1999, he performed in Madama Butterfly, Le Nozze di Figaro, L’Elisir d’Amore, Giordano’s Fedora with Placido Domingo and José Cura, Enescu’s Oedipe (recorded on CD) and Verdi’s Jerusalem with José Carreras conducted by Zubin Mehta (and broadcast on television). He has performed in Naples in L’Elisir d’Amore with Luciano Pavarotti ; in Turin, Cardiff, Palm Beach, Toronto and Verona in Don Giovanni ; in Palermo in Manon Lescaut ; in Genoa and Florence in The Rape of Lucretia ; in Ravenna, Catania and Modena in The Rake’s Progress ; in St. Gallen in Don Giovanni, L’Elisir d’Amore, Ariadne auf Naxos ; in Tokyo in Madama Butterfly and La Traviata ; in Tel- Aviv in Lucia di Lammermoor ; in Düsseldorf in Le Nozze di Figaro and Don Giovanni ; in Berlin and Bergamo in La Bohème ; in Cagliari in Granados’ Goyescas (recorded on CD) ; in Bologna in Fabio Vacchi’s Les oiseaux de passage and in Guido Turchi’s Exil ; in Bari in Piccinni’s Didon (recorded on CD) ; in Basel in Falstaff ; in Wexford in Mercadante’s Il Giuramento (recorded on CD) and in Rigoletto. -
Milan and Seregno
MILAN AND SEREGNO LIDA EMILIANA MELETAKI VICTORIA MILIARAKI NIKOLETA XENAKI C’3 MILAN Milan is the capital of Lombardy and the second most populous city in Italy after Rome. It is located in the north- western section of the Po Valley, approximately halfway between the river Po to the south and the foothills of the Alps with the great lakes (Lake Como, Lake Maggiore, Lake Lugano) to the north, the Ticino river to the west and the Adda to the east. MUSEUMS Some of the most popular museums are: • Pinacoteca di Brera • The Last Supper • Fondazione Prada • Museo del Novecento • Mudec • Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano • Museo Poldi Pezzoli • Villa Necchi Campiglio PINACOTECA DI BRERA FONDAZIONE PRADA MONUMENTS/LANDMARKS Santa Maria delle Grazie This church was built between 1466 and 1490 by Giuniforte Solari and later partly modified by Bramante who re- designed the apse, the Tribuna, the Cloister and the Old Sacristy. In the Refectory there is one of the most famous paintings of Leonardo da Vinci: the “Last Supper”. The works of the fresco started in 1495 and finished in 1498. Monumental Cemetery Carlo Maciachini built the Monumental Cemetery between 1863 and 1866 at Porta Volta. Villa Reale (Royal Villa) One of the most important Milanese neo- classical buildings, the Royal Villa, was built in 1790 by Leopoldo Pollak. It has been the residence of Napolen and Josephine and also of Eugene Beauharnais and the General Radetzky. Pilasters and columns decorate all the building that is surrounded by an English- style garden. The insides are finely decorated with candelabras, sculptures, frescoes and other decorations typical of Lombard neo- classicism. -
16 November 2018 Page 1 of 12
Radio 3 Listings for 10 – 16 November 2018 Page 1 of 12 SATURDAY 10 NOVEMBER 2018 Aufforderung zum Tanz : rondo brillant for piano Op.65 of Lent, settings of texts from the Old Testament Book of Artur Schnabel (Piano) Lamentations. SAT 01:00 Through the Night (m000127l) Rhapsodie espagnole 05:18 AM Although modestly scored for one and two voices and organ, Music for two pianos by Debussy, Ravel & Bartok performed Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) the music makes a deeply expressive and satisfying sequence, by Yuka Oechslin & Anton Kernjak. Presented by John Shea. Mentre ti lascio, o figlia - aria for bass and orchestra (K.513) by turns meditative, dramatic and contemplative as it deals with Robert Holl (Bass), Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, the captivity of the Jews and the destruction of the temple of 01:01 AM Kenneth Montgomery (Conductor) Jerusalem in 587 BC and demands top-flight singers. Claude Debussy (1862-1918) En Blanc et Noir 05:26 AM 10.20am New Releases Yuka Oechslin (Piano), Anton Kernjak (Piano) Erik Satie (1866-1925), Darius Milhaud (Arranger) Jack-in-the-box pantomime (Prelude; Entr'acte; Finale) Mozart: ‘Les Trois Derniers Symphonies’ 01:18 AM CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (Conductor) Ensemble Appassionata Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) Mathieu Herzog (conductor) La Valse 05:33 AM NAÏVE V 5457 (2CDs) Yuka Oechslin (Piano), Anton Kernjak (Piano) Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) Les Indes Galantes (excerpts) Mozart: ‘Sonatas for fortepiano & violin’ Vol.1 01:33 AM Norwegian Chamber Orchestra, Terje Tønnesen -
Programmheft (PDF 2.3
… und der Zukunft zugewandt … SA 9. NOV 2019 | KULTURPALAST Spartacus FR 29. NOV 2019 | 19.30 Uhr SA 30. NOV 2019 | 19.30 Uhr KULTURPALAST TSCHAIKOWSKI ›Manfred‹-Sinfonie h-Moll PROKOFJEW Violinkonzert Nr. 2 g-Moll CHATSCHATURJAN Auszüge aus dem Ballett ›Spartacus‹ DMITRIJ KITAJENKO | Dirigent SERGEJ KRYLOV | Violine DRESDNER PHILHARMONIE Tickets 39 | 34 | 29 | 23 | 18 € [email protected] dresdnerphilharmonie.de 9 € Schüler, Studenten © Klaus Rudolph PROGRAMM 17.00 Uhr, Konzertsaal Musik – Demokratie – Europa Harald Muenz (* 1965) [ funda'men de'nit ] per dieci voci, für zehn Stimmen, para diez voces, for ten voices, pour dix voix auf Textauszüge aus dem Grundgesetz der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (1949) und der Charta der Grundrechte der Europäischen Union (2000), eingerichtet vom Komponisten (2019) Stefan Beyer (* 1981) »Vi« für Vokalensemble und Elektronik (2019) Hakan Ulus (* 1991) »Auslöschung II« für zehn Stimmen (2019) Chatori Shimizu (* 1990) »Rightist Mushrooms« für zehn Stimmen (2019) Fojan Gharibnejad (* 1995) Zachary Seely (* 1988) »hēmi« für zehn Sänger (2019) Olaf Katzer | Leitung AUDITIVVOKAL DRESDEN Die fünf Werke entstanden im Auftrag von AUDITIVVOKAL DRESDEN und erklingen als Urauührungen. PROGRAMM 18.30 Uhr, Konzertsaal I have a dream Kurzeinführung: Zeitzeugen im Gespräch mit Jens Schubbe Friedrich Schenker (1942 – 2013) Sinfonie »In memoriam Martin Luther King« (1969/70) Sehr langsam – Schnell – Ruhige Halbe (in der Art eines Chorals) – Tempo I Schnell und rigoros – Langsam – Ruhig ießend – Tempo I Jonathan -
BRUCE CALE, SERIALISM and the LYDIAN CONCEPT by Eric Myers* ______
BRUCE CALE, SERIALISM AND THE LYDIAN CONCEPT by Eric Myers* ____________________________________________________ [This article appeared in the October, 1985 edition of APRA, the magazine of the Australasian Performing Right Association.] hen the Australia** Music Centre's film on Australian composers Notes On A Landscape came out in 1980, it was apparent that most of the ten W composers included, picked themselves: Don Banks, Anne Boyd, Colin Brumby, Barry Conyngham, Keith Humble, Elena Kats, Graeme Koehne, Richard Meale, Peter Sculthorpe. In addition to them, there was one composer who, on the face of it, might not have been regarded as such an automatic choice: Bruce Cale. Bruce Cale on the verandah of his house in the Blue Mountains, with his dog Muffin… PHOTO CREDIT MARGARET SULLIVAN __________________________________________________________________ *When this was written in October, 1985, Eric Myers was editor of the Australian Jazz Magazine, and writing jazz reviews for The Australian. **Australia Music Centre was at the time the correct spelling. Sometime later ‘Australia’ was changed to ‘Australian’. 1 After all, he was principally known as a jazz composer and performer, and when the film was planned, had been back in Australia only two years, following 13 years in Britain and the United States. On the other hand, there were some eyebrows raised in the Australian jazz world that Cale was "the only jazz composer" included in the film. But those who were aware of Cale's work knew that he had been included because of his orchestral writing as well as his jazz composition; his work had certainly emerged from jazz but, in a highly individual way, he was seeking to merge jazz and classical traditions. -
EAST-CENTRAL EUROPEAN & BALKAN SYMPHONIES from The
EAST-CENTRAL EUROPEAN & BALKAN SYMPHONIES From the 19th Century To the Present A Discography Of CDs And LPs Prepared by Michael Herman Composers K-P MILOSLAV KABELÁČ (1908-1979, CZECH) Born in Prague. He studied composition at the Prague Conservatory under Karel Boleslav Jirák and conducting under Pavel Dedeček and at its Master School he studied the piano under Vilem Kurz. He then worked for Radio Prague as a conductor and one of its first music directors before becoming a professor of the Prague Conservatoy where he served for many years. He produced an extensive catalogue of orchestral, chamber, instrumental, vocal and choral works. Symphony No. 1 in D for Strings and Percussion, Op. 11 (1941–2) Marko Ivanovič/Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra ( + Symphonies Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8) SUPRAPHON SU42022 (4 CDs) (2016) Symphony No. 2 in C for Large Orchestra, Op. 15 (1942–6) Marko Ivanovič/Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra ( + Symphonies Nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8) SUPRAPHON SU42022 (4 CDs) (2016) Symphony No. 3 in F major for Organ, Brass and Timpani, Op. 33 (1948-57) Marko Ivanovič//Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra ( + Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8) SUPRAPHON SU42022 (4 CDs) (2016) Libor Pešek/Alena Veselá(organ)/Brass Harmonia ( + Kopelent: Il Canto Deli Augei and Fišer: 2 Piano Concerto) SUPRAPHON 1110 4144 (LP) (1988) Symphony No. 4 in A major, Op. 36 "Chamber" (1954-8) Marko Ivanovic/Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra, Pardubice ( + Martin·: Oboe Concerto and Beethoven: Symphony No. 1) ARCO DIVA UP 0123 - 2 131 (2009) Marko Ivanovič//Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra ( + Symphonies Nos. -
Bankks Butterley Mealee Werder
BANKS BUTTERLEY MEALE WERDER Like so many string quartets, the maestoso’, but the music is hard and changes texture in a more flexible manner. pieces recorded here engage with the concrete. These blocks of sound vary The moments when the quartet comes relationship of the ensemble’s four in length – the rhythmic notation is together in rhythmically regular music are players. Some of the works continue flexible – and the performers decide the striking and climactic. the tradition of cohesive playing, and length of each block in the moment of The second seating configuration, ‘far others question that aspect of the genre’s performance. The effect is that both the away’, begins with, is sustained by, and history. start and end of notes are highly charged. ends with clouds of harmonics. If the first In live performances of Meale’s String In some cases Meale further heightens section retains some hint of progression Quartet No. 1 his direct challenge to this idea, and the fourth chord, marked in its procession of variations, this section the performers is plain to see, for the dolce, ends with a left-hand pizzicato as is totally still. Through the harmonics piece is in two sections: in the first the the bow leaves the string. The abruptness Meale traces lines of pitches that lead us performers sit in the usual configuration, of the gesture is not at all what one might across the stage, but nowhere else. These and for the second section the performers think of as dolce, but this is a piece that three sequences are labelled ‘Tropes’. -
Central Opera Service Bulletin
CENTRAL OPERA SERVICE BULLETIN WINTER, 1972 Sponsored by the Metropolitan Opera National Council Central Opera Service • Lincoln Center Plaza • Metropolitan Opera • New York, N.Y. 10023 • 799-3467 Sponsored by the Metropolitan Opera National Council Central Opera Service • Lincoln Canter Plaza • Metropolitan Opera • New York, NX 10023 • 799.3467 CENTRAL OPERA SERVICE COMMITTEE ROBERT L. B. TOBIN, National Chairman GEORGE HOWERTON, National Co-Chairman National Council Directors MRS. AUGUST BELMONT MRS. FRANK W. BOWMAN MRS. TIMOTHY FISKE E. H. CORRIGAN, JR. CARROLL G. HARPER MRS. NORRIS DARRELL ELIHU M. HYNDMAN Professional Committee JULIUS RUDEL, Chairman New York City Opera KURT HERBERT ADLER MRS. LOUDON MEI.LEN San Francisco Opera Opera Soc. of Wash., D.C. VICTOR ALESSANDRO ELEMER NAGY San Antonio Symphony Ham College of Music ROBERT G. ANDERSON MME. ROSE PALMAI-TENSER Tulsa Opera Mobile Opera Guild WILFRED C. BAIN RUSSELL D. PATTERSON Indiana University Kansas City Lyric Theater ROBERT BAUSTIAN MRS. JOHN DEWITT PELTZ Santa Fe Opera Metropolitan Opera MORITZ BOMHARD JAN POPPER Kentucky Opera University of California, L.A. STANLEY CHAPPLE GLYNN ROSS University of Washington Seattle Opera EUGENE CONLEY GEORGE SCHICK No. Texas State Univ. Manhattan School of Music WALTER DUCLOUX MARK SCHUBART University of Texas Lincoln Center PETER PAUL FUCHS MRS. L. S. STEMMONS Louisiana State University Dallas Civic Opera ROBERT GAY LEONARD TREASH Northwestern University Eastman School of Music BORIS GOLDOVSKY LUCAS UNDERWOOD Goldovsky Opera Theatre University of the Pacific WALTER HERBERT GIDEON WALDKOh Houston & San Diego Opera Juilliard School of Music RICHARD KARP MRS. J. P. WALLACE Pittsburgh Opera Shreveport Civic Opera GLADYS MATHEW LUDWIG ZIRNER Community Opera University of Illinois See COS INSIDE INFORMATION on page seventeen for new officers and members of the Professional Committee. -
Friedrich Goldmann
© Astrid Karger Friedrich Goldmann Contemporary BIOGRAPHY Friedrich Goldmann Born in 1941 in Chemnitz, Friedrich Goldmann first studied at the Ferienkurse für Neue Musik in Darmstadt with Karlheinz Stockhausen in 1959. He went on to study composition in Dresden and Berlin until 1964. While still a student he became an assistant composer at Berliner Ensemble, where he met future collaborators Heiner Müller, Luigi Nono and Ruth Berghaus. Since the early 1970s Goldmann emerged as the leading exponent of a new music avant-garde in East Germany, and soon also became widely performed in West Germany and, subsequently, in Western Europe. His oeuvre includes numerous chamber works, four symphonies, four solo concertos, orchestral works and one opera. Around 1969 Goldmann developed a technique of composing with heterogenous layers, appropriating traditional forms (sonata, symphony etc.) and ‘breaking them open from within’ with new techniques. This allowed for highlighting the friction between divergent layers as a distinct aesthetic parameter, predating developments regarding the use of historical references and ‘multiple coding’. In the 1970s Goldmann developed a method of composition that holistically integrates the full range of formal possibilities of new music. He explored perceptual continuums and amalgamations, such as transitions between noise and tone, or chromatic and microtonal material. With parameter boundaries dissolving, he thus challenged the conventional concept of musical parameters as discrete entities. Goldmann received commissions from Berliner Philharmonie, Staatsoper Berlin, Semperoper Dresden and most radio symphony orchestras in Germany, with Konzerthaus Berlin, Wittener Tage Festival and Ensemble Modern being among his most frequent commissioners. Since 1980 he taught at Berlin’s Akademie der Künste and became professor of composition at Universität der Künste in Berlin in 1991. -
Radio 3 Listings for 10 – 16 October 2020 Page
Radio 3 Listings for 10 – 16 October 2020 Page 1 of 11 SATURDAY 10 OCTOBER 2020 Duo concertante in G major Benjamin Grosvenor (piano) Alexandar Avramov (violin), Ivan Peev (violin) Royal Scottish National Orchestra SAT 01:00 Through the Night (m000n6mk) Elim Chan (conductor) Nordic landscapes 05:47 AM Decca 4850365 Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) https://www.deccaclassics.com/en/catalogue/products/chopin- Grieg and Sibelius from Auckland, New Zealand. Jonathan 4 Lieder from the Schemelli songbook (BWV.443, 468, 470 & piano-concertos-grosvenor-11989 Swain presents. 439) Bernarda Fink (mezzo soprano), Domen Marincic (gamba), Arion: Voyage of A Slavic Soul 01:01 AM Dalibor Miklavcic (organ) Songs by Rimsky-Korsakov, Dvořák, Tchaikovsky, John Anthony Ritchie (1921-2014) Rachmaninov, Janáček & Novák Suite No. 1 for Strings 05:57 AM Natalya Romaniw (soprano) Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, Daniel Blendulf (conductor) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Lada Valešová (piano) Piano Trio in B flat major, K 502 Orchid Classics ORC100131 01:16 AM Amatis Piano Trio https://www.orchidclassics.com/releases/orc100131-natalya- Edvard Grieg (1843-1907) romaniw-lada-valesova/ Piano Concerto in A minor, op. 16 06:20 AM Alessio Bax (piano), Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, Daniel Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Veress: String Trio & Bartók: Piano Quintet Blendulf (conductor) Hungarian dances for piano duet (Nos.1; 11; 13; 17; 8) Vilde Frang (violin) Noel Lee (piano), Christian Ivaldi (piano) Barnabás Kelemen (violin) 01:45 AM Lawrence Power (viola) Alexander Scriabin (1871-1915) 06:33 AM Nicolas Altstaedt (cello) Prelude for the Left Hand, op. 9/1 Valborg Aulin (1860-1928) Alexander Lonquich (piano) Alessio Bax (piano) Quartet for strings in F major (1884) Alpha ALPHA458 Tale String Quartet https://outhere-music.com/en/albums/veress-string-trio-bartok- 01:48 AM piano-quintet-alpha458 Jean Sibelius (1865-1957) Symphony No. -
Bruno Walter (Ca
[To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.] Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky Yale University Press New Haven and London Frontispiece: Bruno Walter (ca. ). Courtesy of Österreichisches Theatermuseum. Copyright © by Yale University. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections and of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Designed by Sonia L. Shannon Set in Bulmer type by The Composing Room of Michigan, Grand Rapids, Mich. Printed in the United States of America by R. R. Donnelley,Harrisonburg, Va. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ryding, Erik S., – Bruno Walter : a world elsewhere / by Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references, filmography,and indexes. ISBN --- (cloth : alk. paper) . Walter, Bruno, ‒. Conductors (Music)— Biography. I. Pechefsky,Rebecca. II. Title. ML.W R .Ј—dc [B] - A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. For Emily, Mary, and William In memoriam Rachel Kemper and Howard Pechefsky Contents Illustrations follow pages and Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Bruno Schlesinger Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg,– Kapellmeister Walter Breslau, Pressburg, Riga, Berlin,‒