Naxos Catalog08
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Suggested Program for Concerts in Japan on the 2Nd and 4Th of November 2015
Suggested program for concerts in Japan on the 2nd and 4th of November 2015 Comments on the songs. Edvard Grieg: ( 1843 – 1907 ) Sangerhilsen (Song of Welcome) Written on the occasion of a choir festival in Trondheim 1883. 28 choirs took part and this song was performed by the choirs of Trondheim as a welcome to the visiting choirs. We often use this song as a starting song on our concerts. Welcome all singers! Let the song be loud and clear around our flag. Let us all sing together in an eternal chord of music. Before we leave each other we will be united in our minds. Johan Selmer: ( 1844 – 1910 ) Sangen har lysning (The singing is enlightening ) Written to a Norwegian choir in 1872 to celebrate their 25th Anniversary by the Norwegian poet Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson. The singing casts an explanatory light over your work; it has warmth and breaks down the coldness in your mind. It has eternity and combines past and future in an immense ocean of lights. The singing also unites and reconciles fighting opponents in united efforts to create beauty, deed and purity. Rikard Nordraak: ( 1842 – 1866 ) Olav Trygvason The composer also composed the Norwegian National Anthem together with the poet Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, who wrote the lyrics. Bjørnson has also written the lyrics for this song. The song describes the death of king Olav Trygvason (995-1000). A fleet of Viking ships is crossing the North Sea to Denmark to wait for the arrival of King Olav and his ship called Ormen Lange. Upon arrival to Denmark they see no sign of him or his ship. -
Edvard Grieg: Between Two Worlds Edvard Grieg: Between Two Worlds
EDVARD GRIEG: BETWEEN TWO WORLDS EDVARD GRIEG: BETWEEN TWO WORLDS By REBEKAH JORDAN A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts McMaster University © Copyright by Rebekah Jordan, April, 2003 MASTER OF ARTS (2003) 1vIc1vlaster University (1vIllSic <=riticisIll) HaIllilton, Ontario Title: Edvard Grieg: Between Two Worlds Author: Rebekah Jordan, B. 1vIus (EastIllan School of 1vIllSic) Sllpervisor: Dr. Hllgh Hartwell NUIllber of pages: v, 129 11 ABSTRACT Although Edvard Grieg is recognized primarily as a nationalist composer among a plethora of other nationalist composers, he is much more than that. While the inspiration for much of his music rests in the hills and fjords, the folk tales and legends, and the pastoral settings of his native Norway and his melodic lines and unique harmonies bring to the mind of the listener pictures of that land, to restrict Grieg's music to the realm of nationalism requires one to ignore its international character. In tracing the various transitions in the development of Grieg's compositional style, one can discern the influences of his early training in Bergen, his four years at the Leipzig Conservatory, and his friendship with Norwegian nationalists - all intricately blended with his own harmonic inventiveness -- to produce music which is uniquely Griegian. Though his music and his performances were received with acclaim in the major concert venues of Europe, Grieg continued to pursue international recognition to repudiate the criticism that he was only a composer of Norwegian music. In conclusion, this thesis demonstrates that the international influence of this so-called Norwegian maestro had a profound influence on many other composers and was instrumental in the development of Impressionist harmonies. -
Bellini's Norma
Bellini’s Norma - A discographical survey by Ralph Moore There are around 130 recordings of Norma in the catalogue of which only ten were made in the studio. The penultimate version of those was made as long as thirty-five years ago, then, after a long gap, Cecilia Bartoli made a new recording between 2011 and 2013 which is really hors concours for reasons which I elaborate in my review below. The comparative scarcity of studio accounts is partially explained by the difficulty of casting the eponymous role, which epitomises bel canto style yet also lends itself to verismo interpretation, requiring a vocalist of supreme ability and versatility. Its challenges have thus been essayed by the greatest sopranos in history, beginning with Giuditta Pasta, who created the role of Norma in 1831. Subsequent famous exponents include Maria Malibran, Jenny Lind and Lilli Lehmann in the nineteenth century, through to Claudia Muzio, Rosa Ponselle and Gina Cigna in the first part of the twentieth. Maria Callas, then Joan Sutherland, dominated the role post-war; both performed it frequently and each made two bench-mark studio recordings. Callas in particular is to this day identified with Norma alongside Tosca; she performed it on stage over eighty times and her interpretation casts a long shadow over. Artists since, such as Gencer, Caballé, Scotto, Sills, and, more recently, Sondra Radvanovsky have had success with it, but none has really challenged the supremacy of Callas and Sutherland. Now that the age of expensive studio opera recordings is largely over in favour of recording live or concert performances, and given that there seemed to be little commercial or artistic rationale for producing another recording to challenge those already in the catalogue, the appearance of the new Bartoli recording was a surprise, but it sought to justify its existence via the claim that it authentically reinstates the integrity of Bellini’s original concept in matters such as voice categories, ornamentation and instrumentation. -
Il Trovatore
Synopsis Act I: The Duel Count di Luna is obsessed with Leonora, a young noblewoman in the queen’s service, who does not return his love. Outside the royal residence, his soldiers keep watch at night. They have heard an unknown troubadour serenading Leonora, and the jealous count is determined to capture and punish him. To keep his troops awake, the captain, Ferrando, recounts the terrible story of a gypsy woman who was burned at the stake years ago for bewitching the count’s infant brother. The gypsy’s daughter then took revenge by kidnapping the boy and throwing him into the flames where her mother had died. The charred skeleton of a baby was discovered there, and di Luna’s father died of grief soon after. The gypsy’s daughter disappeared without a trace, but di Luna has sworn to find her. In the palace gardens, Leonora confides in her companion Ines that she is in love with a mysterious man she met before the outbreak of the war and that he is the troubadour who serenades her each night. After they have left, Count di Luna appears, looking for Leonora. When she hears the troubadour’s song in the darkness, Leonora rushes out to greet her beloved but mistakenly embraces di Luna. The troubadour reveals his true identity: He is Manrico, leader of the partisan rebel forces. Furious, the count challenges him to fight to the death. Act II: The Gypsy During the duel, Manrico overpowered the count, but some instinct stopped him from killing his rival. The war has raged on. -
Staged Treasures
Italian opera. Staged treasures. Gaetano Donizetti, Giuseppe Verdi, Giacomo Puccini and Gioacchino Rossini © HNH International Ltd CATALOGUE # COMPOSER TITLE FEATURED ARTISTS FORMAT UPC Naxos Itxaro Mentxaka, Sondra Radvanovsky, Silvia Vázquez, Soprano / 2.110270 Arturo Chacon-Cruz, Plácido Domingo, Tenor / Roberto Accurso, DVD ALFANO, Franco Carmelo Corrado Caruso, Rodney Gilfry, Baritone / Juan Jose 7 47313 52705 2 Cyrano de Bergerac (1875–1954) Navarro Bass-baritone / Javier Franco, Nahuel di Pierro, Miguel Sola, Bass / Valencia Regional Government Choir / NBD0005 Valencian Community Orchestra / Patrick Fournillier Blu-ray 7 30099 00056 7 Silvia Dalla Benetta, Soprano / Maxim Mironov, Gheorghe Vlad, Tenor / Luca Dall’Amico, Zong Shi, Bass / Vittorio Prato, Baritone / 8.660417-18 Bianca e Gernando 2 Discs Marina Viotti, Mar Campo, Mezzo-soprano / Poznan Camerata Bach 7 30099 04177 5 Choir / Virtuosi Brunensis / Antonino Fogliani 8.550605 Favourite Soprano Arias Luba Orgonášová, Soprano / Slovak RSO / Will Humburg Disc 0 730099 560528 Maria Callas, Rina Cavallari, Gina Cigna, Rosa Ponselle, Soprano / Irene Minghini-Cattaneo, Ebe Stignani, Mezzo-soprano / Marion Telva, Contralto / Giovanni Breviario, Paolo Caroli, Mario Filippeschi, Francesco Merli, Tenor / Tancredi Pasero, 8.110325-27 Norma [3 Discs] 3 Discs Ezio Pinza, Nicola Rossi-Lemeni, Bass / Italian Broadcasting Authority Chorus and Orchestra, Turin / Milan La Scala Chorus and 0 636943 132524 Orchestra / New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Orchestra / BELLINI, Vincenzo Vittorio -
Norway – Music and Musical Life
Norway2BOOK.book Page 273 Thursday, August 21, 2008 11:35 PM Chapter 18 Norway – Music and Musical Life Chapter 18 Norway – Music and Musical Life By Arvid Vollsnes Through all the centuries of documented Norwegian music it has been obvi- ous that there were strong connections to European cultural life. But from the 14th to the 19th century Norway was considered by other Europeans to be remote and belonging to the backwaters of Europe. Some daring travel- ers came in the Romantic era, and one of them wrote: The fantastic pillars and arches of fairy folk-lore may still be descried in the deep secluded glens of Thelemarken, undefaced with stucco, not propped by unsightly modern buttress. The harp of popular minstrelsy – though it hangs mouldering and mildewed with infrequency of use, its strings unbraced for want of cunning hands that can tune and strike them as the Scalds of Eld – may still now and then be heard sending forth its simple music. Sometimes this assumes the shape of a soothing lullaby to the sleep- ing babe, or an artless ballad of love-lorn swains, or an arch satire on rustic doings and foibles. Sometimes it swells into a symphony descriptive of the descent of Odin; or, in somewhat less Pindaric, and more Dibdin strain, it recounts the deeds of the rollicking, death-despising Vikings; while, anon, its numbers rise and fall with mysterious cadence as it strives to give a local habitation and a name to the dimly seen forms and antic pranks of the hol- low-backed Huldra crew.” (From The Oxonian in Thelemarken, or Notes of Travel in South-Western Norway in the Summers of 1856 and 1857, written by Frederick Metcalfe, Lincoln College, Oxford.) This was a typical Romantic way of describing a foreign culture. -
Jessica Pratt
JESSICA PRATT SerenadeVINCENZO SCALERA Serenade from Péchés de vieillesse (?G. Torre) Jules Massenet 1842–1912 Vincenzo Bellini 1801–1835 1 Ouvre tes yeux bleus 2.03 From Sei ariette No.3 from Poème d’Amour (P. Robiquet) 10 No.5 Per pietà, bell’idol mio 2.31 (P. Metastasio) Charles Gounod 1818–1893 11 No.1 Malinconia, ninfa gentile 1.29 2 Sérénade (V. Hugo) 4.07 (I. Pindemonte) Alfred Bachelet 1864–1944 12 La ricordanza (C. Pepoli) 5.25 3 Chère nuit (E. Adenis) 4.38 From Tre ariette (Anon.) Eva Dell’Acqua 1856–1930 13 No.2 Dolente immagine di Fille mia 3.04 4 Villanelle (F. van der Elst) 5.22 14 No.3 Vaga luna che inargenti 2.43 Léo Delibes 1836–1891 Gaetano Donizetti 1797–1848 5 Les Filles de Cadix (A. de Musset) 3.24 15 La zingara (C. Guaita) 3.53 16 Il barcaiolo 2.57 Gioachino Rossini 1792–1868 No.1 from Nuits d’été à Pausilippe 6 La separazione (F. Uccelli) 4.39 (L. Tarantini) 7 Mi lagnerò tacendo 2.32 17 Una lagrima (Preghiera) 4.09 from Péchés de vieillesse (P. Metastasio) from Matinée musicale (Anon.) 8 Addio ai viennesi (Anon.) 4.49 9 La fioraia fiorentina 3.56 62.18 Jessica Pratt soprano Vincenzo Scalera piano 3 Jessica Pratt Hailed by the New York Times as a soprano of ‘gleaming sound, free and easy high notes, agile coloratura runs and lyrical grace’, Jessica Pratt is considered one of today’s foremost interpreters of some of bel canto’s most challenging repertoire. -
Record Series 1121-105.4, W. W. Law Music Collection-Compact Discs, Inventory by Genre
Record Series 1121-105.4, W. W. Law Music Collection-Compact Discs, Inventory by Genre Genre Album title Contributor (s) Date Final Box # Item # Additional Notes Original CD Blues (music) James Cotton Living the Blues James Cotton; Larry McCray; John Primer; Johnny B. Gayden; Brian Jones; Dr. John; Lucky Peterson; Joe Louis Walker 1994 1121-105-242 19 Blues (music) Willie Dixon Willie Dixon; Andy McKaie; Don Snowden 1988 1121-105-249 01 Oversized case; 2 CD box set Blues (music) Cincinnati Blues (1928-1936) Bob Coleman's Cincinnati Jug Band and Associates; Walter Coleman; Bob Coleman no date 1121-105-242 17 Found with CD album in Box #10, Item #28; Case was found separately Blues (music) Willie Dixon, The Big Three Trio Willie Dixon; The Big Three Trio 1990 1121-105-242 18 Blues (music) The Best of Muddy Waters Muddy Waters 1987 1121-105-242 08 Blues (music) The Roots of Robert Johnson Robert Johnson 1990 1121-105-242 07 Blues (music) The Best of Mississippi John Hurt Mississippi John Hurt; Bob Scherl 1987 1121-105-242 06 Blues (music) Bud Powell: Blues for Bouffemont Bud Powell; Alan Bates 1989 1121-105-242 36 Friday, May 11, 2018 Page 1 of 89 Genre Album title Contributor (s) Date Final Box # Item # Additional Notes Original CD Blues (music) Big Bill Broonzy Good Time Tonight Big Bill Broonzy 1990 1121-105-242 04 Blues (music) Bessie Smith The Collection Bessie Smith; John Hammond; Frank Walker 1989 1121-105-242 38 Blues (music) Blind Willie Johnson Praise God I'm Satisfied Blind Willie Johnson 1989 1121-105-242 20 Post-it note was found on the back of this CD case, photocopy made and placed in envelope behind CD. -
Verdi's Simon Boccanegra: a Survey of the Discography
Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra: A survey of the discography by Ralph Moore I think of Simon Boccanegra as something of a connoisseur’s opera, insofar as it surely contains some of Verdi’s most inspired music, yet has from its premiere rightly been criticised for its labyrinthine plot – a caricature of typically operatic complications – and its consequent lack of accessibility for audiences. For that reason, the first version soon fell out of favour after its 1857 premiere, but Verdi, no doubt with justification, thought highly enough of the music to undertake a revision twenty-three years later with the help of Arrigo Boito, and the result, the 1881 version, is the one almost invariably performed today. The most important addition was the Council Chamber Scene; the opera would be much the poorer without it, but Verdi also revised a good deal of the music to render it far more ductile and atmospheric. The opera presents an admixture of personal and political turmoil such as we encounter in other mature operas like Les vêpres siciliennes and Don Carlos, but also capitalises on two archetypal themes very prevalent in Verdi’s operas and to which he frequently returned, both of which prompted the best of his music: the depiction of a loving but tortured father-daughter relationship of the kind we also see in Luisa Miller, Rigoletto and Aida and his concern for statesmanship, as exhibited in the appeals for peace, patriotism and brotherhood, rallying calls stretching right back to his earliest operas, such as Nabucco, I Lombardi, Attila and La battaglia di Legnano. -
The Concert Era’ – Innovation in Hardanger Fiddling Around 1900 Håkon Asheim
studying culture in context ‘The concert era’ – innovation in Hardanger fiddling around 1900 Håkon Asheim Excerpted from: Ón gCos go Cluas From Dancing to Listening Fiddle and Dance Studies from around the North Atlantic 5 Edited by Liz Doherty and Fintan Vallely First published in 2019 by The Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen, MacRobert Building, King’s College, Aberdeen, AB24 5UA ISBN: 978-1-85752-073-6 About the author: Håkon Asheim is an associate professor and coordinator of performance studies in traditional music at the Ole Bull Academy in Voss, Norway, and plays the Hardanger fiddle. His book Ole Bull og folkemusikken [Ole Bull and Folk Music] (2010), written in collaboration with Gunnar Stubseid, explores the history of Hardanger fiddling during the transition to modern times, particularly in the context of concert playing. In 1992 Asheim recorded Ulrik, an album of fiddle tunes based on old transcriptions. He has also contributed to a number of other recordings and has held concerts, workshops, and lectures in Norway and abroad. Copyright © 2019 the Elphinstone Institute and the contributors While copyright in the volume as a whole is vested in the Elphinstone Institute, copyright in individual contributions remains with the contributors. The moral rights of the contributors to be identified as the authors of their work have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/. 2 ‘The concert era’: innovation in Hardanger fiddling around 1900 HÅKON ASHEIM In pre-industrial rural Norwegian communities, the role of the fiddler or spelemann was clearly defined. -
Il Trovatore
Giuseppe Verdi Il Trovatore CONDUCTOR Opera in four parts Marco Armiliato Libretto by Salvadore Cammarano and Leone PRODUCTION Emanuele Bardare, based on the play El Trovador David McVicar by Antonio García Gutierrez SET DESIGNER Charles Edwards Saturday, April 30, 2011, 1:00–3:45 pm COSTUME DESIGNER Brigitte Reiffenstuel Last time this season LIGHTING DESIGNED BY Jennifer Tipton The production of Il Trovatore was made CHOREOGRAPHER possible by a generous gift from Leah Hausman The Annenberg Foundation. STAGE DIRECTOR Paula Williams The revival of this production is made possible by a gift from The Dr. M. Lee Pearce Foundation. GENERAL MANAGER Peter Gelb MUSIC DIRECTOR Il Trovatore is a co-production with Lyric Opera of James Levine Chicago and San Francisco Opera. 2010–11 Season The 625th Metropolitan Opera performance of Giuseppe Verdi’s Il Trovatore Conductor This performance Marco Armiliato is being broadcast live over The in order of vocal appearance Toll Brothers– Metropolitan Ferrando Opera Stefan Kocán International Radio Network, Inez sponsored by Maria Zifchak Toll Brothers, America’s luxury Leonora homebuilder®, Sondra Radvanovsky* with generous long-term Count di Luna support from Dmitri Hvorostovsky The Annenberg Manrico Foundation, the Marcelo Álvarez Vincent A. Stabile Endowment for Azucena Broadcast Media, Dolora Zajick and contributions from listeners A Gypsy worldwide. Robert Maher This performance is A Messenger also being broadcast Raymond Aparentado live on Metropolitan Opera Radio on Ruiz SIRIUS channel 78 Eduardo Valdes and XM channel 79. Saturday, April 30, 2011, 1:00–3:45 pm This performance is dedicated to Dr. Agnes Varis in grateful recognition of her generosity to the Metropolitan Opera as a member of the Council for Artistic Excellence. -
Parola Scenica: Towards Realism in Italian Opera Etdhendrik Johannes Paulus Du Plessis
Parola Scenica: Towards Realism in Italian Opera ETDHendrik Johannes Paulus du Plessis A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD by Thesis Abstract This thesis attempts to describe the emergence of a realistic writing style in nine- teenth-century Italian opera of which Giuseppe Verdi was the primary architect. Frequently reinforced by a realistic musico-linguistic device that Verdi would call parola scenica, the object of this realism is a musical syntax in which nei- ther the dramatic intent of the text nor the purely musical intent overwhelms the other. For Verdi the dramatically effective depiction of a ‘slice of a particular life’—a realist theatrical notion—is more important than the mere mimetic description of the words in musical terms—a romantic theatrical notion in line with opera seria. Besides studying the device of parola scenica in Verdi’s work, I also attempt to cast light on its impact on the output of his peers and successors. Likewise, this study investigates how the device, by definition texted, impacts on the orchestra as a means of realist narrative. My work is directed at explaining how these changes in mood of thought were instrumental in effecting the gradual replacement of the bel canto singing style typical of the opera seria of Rossini, Donizetti, and Bellini, by the school of thought of verismo, as exemplified by Verdi’s experiments. Besides the work of Verdi and the early nineteenth-cen- tury Italian operatic Romanticists, I touch also briefly on the œuvres of Puccini, ETDGiordano and the other veristi.