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Carl Nielsen Studies 3 (2008)
BIBLIOGRAPHY CARL NIELSEN BIBLIOGRAPHY 2004-2007 By Kirsten Flensborg Petersen Bubert, Dennis: ‘Orchestral Excerpt Class’, ITA Journal 31:4 (2003) pp. 20-22. The bibliographies published in Carl Niel- sen Studies – including the following Carl Nielsen brevudgaven [The Letters of bibliography – are also to be found on Carl Nielsen], John Fellow (ed.), Køben- the internet at www.kb.dk/da/kb/nb/mta/ havn 2005-, volume 1, 1886-1897, Køben- cnu/studies.html. havn 2005, 571 p. Anderson, Martin: ‘Thomas Dausgaard: Carl Nielsen brevudgaven [The Letters of Conductor in a hurry’, Nordic Sounds 4 Carl Nielsen], John Fellow (ed.), Køben- (2003) pp. 9-13. havn 2005-, volume 2, 1898-1905, Køben- havn 2006, 598 p. Austen, Jill: ‘Behind ‘The Mother’’, Flutist Quarterly – The Official Magazine of the Carl Nielsen brevudgaven [The Letters of National Flute Association 30/4 (2005) pp. Carl Nielsen], John Fellow (ed.), Køben- 46-48. havn 2005-, volume 3, 1906-1910, Køben- havn 2007, 589 p. Benestad, Finn and Dag Schjelderup-Ebbe: ‘To åndsbeslektede tonemestre: Johan Carl Nielsens Barndomshjem 1956-2006: Jubi- Svendsen og Carl Nielsen’ [Two spiritu- læumsskrift [Carl Nielsen’s home 1956- ally related masters: Johan Svendsen and 2006: Jubilee publication], Nr. Lyndelse Carl Nielsen], in Musikvidenskabelige Kom- 2006, 16 p. positioner: Festskrift til Niels Krabbe 1941 – 3. oktober – 2006, Anne Ørbæk Jensen et Chandler, Beth E.: The ‘Arcadian’ flute: Late al. (eds.), København 2006, pp. 425-436. style in Carl Nielsen’s works for flute, diss., University of Cincinnati 2004, 168 p. Brown, Peter: The symphonic repertoire. Vol. 3. Part A, The European symphony from ca Christensen, Erik: ‘Danish music: The 1800 to ca 1930: Germany and the Nordic transition from tradition to modernism’, Countries, Bloomington 2007, 1168 p. -
UCLA Symphony Programs 2005-2019
UCLA SYMPHONY 2005 - 2019 November 30, 2005 Haydn Symphony No. 88 Shostakovich Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 102 Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 2, Op. 17 (Little Russian) Neal Stulberg, conductor and pianist Schoenberg Hall; UCLA * * * * * March 6, 2006 Stravinsky Suite No. 2 for Small Orchestra Mozart Clarinet Concerto, K. 622 Beethoven Symphony No. 1, Op. 21 Denexxel Domingo, clarinet Masters and doctoral students of Donald Neuen, conductors Schoenberg Hall; UCLA * * * * * June 9, 2006 Fauré Suite from Pélléas et Mélisande Tchaikovsky Rococo Variations, Op. 33 Rimsky-Korsakov Scheherazade, Op. 35 Isaac Melamed, cello John Carter and Daniel Cummings, conductors Schoenberg Hall; UCLA * * * * * November 29, 2006 Bernstein Overture to Candide Haydn Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Cello, Oboe and Bassoon, Op. 84 Puccini Preludio Sinfonico Liszt Les Préludes (Symphonic Poem No. 3) Mary Hofman, violin Isaac Melamed, cello Michelle An, oboe Amy Gillick, bassoon Daniel Cummings, Georgios Kountouris, Neal Stulberg, conductors Schoenberg Hall; UCLA * * * * * March 14, 2007 DANCE PARTY! Dvorak Slavonic Dance No. 7 in C major, Op. 72 Saint-Saens Danse Macabre, Op. 40 Falla Ritual Fire Dance from El Amor Brujo Piazzolla Tangazo Tchaikowsky Three Dances from Swan Lake Debussy Danse Sacrée et Danse Profane for harp and strings Glière Russian Sailors' Dance from The Red Poppy Copland Hoedown from Rodeo Sousa Hands Across the Sea Lindsay Strand-Polyak, violin Jacque Marshall, harp Masters and doctoral students of Donald Neuen, conductors Schoenberg Hall; UCLA * * * * * May 30, 2007 Mozart Symphony No. 35 (Haffner), K. 385 Ney Rosauro Concerto for Marimba and String Orchestra Moussorgsky/Ravel Pictures from an Exhibition Jamie Strowbridge, marimba Daniel Cummings and Georgios Kountouris, conductors Schoenberg Hall; UCLA December 5, 2007 Mozart Overture to Don Giovanni Rheinberger Concerto for Organ No. -
Osmo Vänskä, Conductor Augustin Hadelich, Violin
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra 2019-2020 Mellon Grand Classics Season December 6 and 8, 2019 OSMO VÄNSKÄ, CONDUCTOR AUGUSTIN HADELICH, VIOLIN CARL NIELSEN Helios Overture, Opus 17 WOLFGANG AMADEUS Concerto No. 2 in D major for Violin and Orchestra, K. 211 MOZART I. Allegro moderato II. Andante III. Rondeau: Allegro Mr. Hadelich Intermission THOMAS ADÈS Violin Concerto, “Concentric Paths,” Opus 24 I. Rings II. Paths III. Rounds Mr. Hadelich JEAN SIBELIUS Symphony No. 3 in C major, Opus 52 I. Allegro moderato II. Andantino con moto, quasi allegretto III. Moderato — Allegro (ma non tanto) Dec. 6-8, 2019, page 1 PROGRAM NOTES BY DR. RICHARD E. RODDA CARL NIELSEN Helios Overture, Opus 17 (1903) Carl Nielsen was born in Odense, Denmark on June 9, 1865, and died in Copenhagen on October 3, 1931. He composed his Helios Overture in 1903, and it was premiered by the Danish Royal Orchestra conducted by Joan Svendsen on October 8, 1903. These performances mark the Pittsburgh Symphony premiere of the work. The score calls for piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani and strings. Performance time: approximately 12 minutes. On September 1, 1889, three years after graduating from the Copenhagen Conservatory, Nielsen joined the second violin section of the Royal Chapel Orchestra, a post he held for the next sixteen years while continuing to foster his reputation as a leading figure in Danish music. His reputation as a composer grew with his works of the ensuing decade, most notably the Second Symphony and the opera Saul and David, but he was still financially unable to quit his job with the Chapel Orchestra to devote himself fully to composition. -
Classical Music Listening Suggestions by Nature Topic
Classical Music Listening Suggestions by Nature Topic FAUNA Primary Topic Secondary Topic Composer Work Period / Style Form Instrumentation Fauna Animals Rutter All Creatures of Our God and King Romantic - 20th Century Song/Lied Choral Fauna Bears Haydn Symphony #82: L'Ours The Bear - Finale Classical Symphony Orchestral Fauna Bees Bridge The Bee Romantic - 20th Century Song/Lied Male Vocalists Fauna Bees Rimsky-Korsakov Flight of the Bumblebee Romantic Song/Lied Balalaika Fauna Bees Rimsky-Korsakov Flight of the Bumblebee Romantic Solo Piano Fauna Birds Canteloube Chants D'auvergne, Series I, The Quail Romantic - 20th Century Song/Lied Soprano Fauna Birds Dvorak The Wood Dove Romantic Overture Orchestral Fauna Birds Glazunov Spring: Birds Romantic Ballet Orchestral Fauna Birds Handel Concerto for Organ & Orchestra #13 in F, Cuckoo and the Nightengale Baroque Concerto Organ Fauna Birds Handel L’allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato: “Sweet Bird” Baroque Aria Soprano Fauna Birds Hanson Birds of Paradise, Op. 34 Romantic - 20th Century Solo Piano Fauna Birds Liszt St. Francis of Assisi Preaching to the Birds Romantic Tone Poem Piano Fauna Birds Liszt St. Francis Preaching to the Birds Romantic Tone Poem Piano Fauna Birds Messiaen Illumination of the Beyond: Plusieurs Oiseaux des arbres de Vie Modern Suite Orchestral Fauna Birds Messiaen Le Reveil des oiseaux Modern Overture Piano/Concerto Fauna Birds Messiaen Quartet for the End of Time: Abime des oiseaux Modern Suite Quartet Fauna Birds Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition: Ballet of the -
95.3 Fm 95.3 Fm
October/NovemberMarch/April 2013 2017 VolumeVolume 41, 46, No. No. 3 1 !"#$%&'95.3 FM Brahms: String Sextet No. 2 in G, Op. 36; Marlboro Ensemble Saeverud: Symphony No. 9, Op. 45; Dreier, Royal Philharmonic WHRB Orchestra (Norwegian Composers) Mozart: Clarinet Quintet in A, K. 581; Klöcker, Leopold Quartet 95.3 FM Gombert: Missa Tempore paschali; Brown, Henry’s Eight Nielsen: Serenata in vano for Clarinet,Bassoon,Horn, Cello, and October-November, 2017 Double Bass; Brynildsen, Hannevold, Olsen, Guenther, Eide Pokorny: Concerto for Two Horns, Strings, and Two Flutes in F; Baumann, Kohler, Schröder, Concerto Amsterdam (Acanta) Barrios-Mangoré: Cueca, Aire de Zamba, Aconquija, Maxixa, Sunday, October 1 for Guitar; Williams (Columbia LP) 7:00 am BLUES HANGOVER Liszt: Grande Fantaisie symphonique on Themes from 11:00 am MEMORIAL CHURCH SERVICE Berlioz’s Lélio, for Piano and Orchestra, S. 120; Howard, Preacher: Professor Jonathan L. Walton, Plummer Professor Rickenbacher, Budapest Symphony Orchestra (Hyperion) of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister in The Memorial 6:00 pm MUSIC OF THE SOVIET UNION Church,. Music includes Kodály’s Missa brevis and Mozart’s The Eve of the Revolution. Ave verum corpus, K. 618. Scriabin: Sonata No. 7, Op. 64, “White Mass” and Sonata No. 9, 12:30 pm AS WE KNOW IT Op. 68, “Black Mass”; Hamelin (Hyperion) 1:00 pm CRIMSON SPORTSTALK Glazounov: Piano Concerto No. 2 in B, Op. 100; Ponti, Landau, 2:00 pm SUNDAY SERENADE Westphalian Orchestra of Recklinghausen (Turnabout LP) 6:00 pm HISTORIC PERFORMANCES Rachmaninoff: Vespers, Op. 37; Roudenko, Russian Chamber Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2 in g, Op. -
Nielsen Flute Concerto Clarinet Concerto Aladdin Suite
SIGCD477_BookletFINAL*.qxp_BookletSpread.qxt 22/12/2016 13:24 Page 1 CTP Template: CD_DPS1 COLOURS Compact Disc Booklet: Double Page Spread CYAN MAGENTA Customer YELLOW Catalogue No. BLACK Job Title Page Nos. Also available… NIELSEN FLUTE CONCERTO CLARINET CONCERTO 1 1 3 6 4 4 ALADDIN SUITE D D C C G G I I S S SAMUEL COLES FLUTE Bruckner: Symphony No.9 Schubert: Symphony No.9 Philharmonia Orchestra Philharmonia Orchestra MARK VAN DE WIEL CLARINET Christoph von Dohnányi Christoph von Dohnányi SIGCD431 SIGCD461 PAAVO JÄRVI “Beautifully prepared account ... Dohnányi’s new recording "This performance ... goes for broke and succeeds, to the is distinguished by the clarity with which it presents evident rapture of the audience. The Philharmonia is up to Bruckner’s score as well as the excellence of its sound.” all Dohnanyi's and Schubert's steep demands, and I was left Gramophone with a feeling of exhausted exhilaration." BBC Music Magazine Flute Concerto Producer – Andrew Cornall recorded live at Royal Festival Hall, 19 November 2015 Engineer – Jonathan Stokes Editor, Mixing & Mastering – Jonathan Stokes Clarinet Concerto Cover Image – Shutterstock recorded live at Royal Festival Hall, 19 May 2016 Design – Darren Rumney Aladdin Suite P2017 Philharmonia Orchestra recorded at Henry Wood Hall, 20 May 2016 C2017 Signum Records 20 1 291.0mm x 169.5mm SIGCD477_BookletFINAL*.qxp_BookletSpread.qxt 22/12/2016 13:24 Page 23 CTP Template: CD_DPS1 COLOURS Compact Disc Booklet: Double Page Spread CYAN MAGENTA Customer YELLOW Catalogue No. BLACK Job Title Page Nos. PAAVO JÄRVI CARL NIELSEN 1865-1931 reflection and prettiness. 15 years had passed NIELSEN Flute Concerto since the first performance of Nielsen’s Violin PaavFo LJäUrvTi iEs cCurrOenNtlyC CEhiRefT COonductor of the NHK Symphony Orchestra, Artistic Director of the Concerto when the Flute Concerto was DeutCschLeA KRamImNeErpThi lChaOrmNonCie EanRdT thOe founder of the Estonian Festival Orchestra, which brings Allegro moderato introduced in Paris in 1927. -
(1756-1791) Completed Wind Concertos: Baroque and Classical Designs in the Rondos of the Final Movements
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's (1756-1791) Completed Wind Concertos: Baroque and Classical Designs in the Rondos of the Final Movements Item Type text; Electronic Thesis Authors Koner, Karen Michelle Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 10/10/2021 21:25:51 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/193304 1 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s (1756-1791) Completed Wind Concertos: Baroque and Classical Designs in the Rondos of the Final Movements By Karen Koner __________________________________ Copyright © Karen Koner 2008 A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the School of Music In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Music In the Graduate College The University of Arizona 2008 2 STATEMENT BY THE AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for an advanced degree at the University of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgement of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the copyright holder. Signed: Karen Koner Approval By Thesis Director This thesis has been approved on the date shown below: J. Timothy Kolosick 4/30/2008 Dr. -
Senior Recital
Kennesaw State University College of the Arts School of Music presents Senior Recital Alexander Sifuentes, oboe Brenda Brent, piano Thursday, May 8, 2014 8:00 p.m. Music Building Recital Hall One Hundred Forty-fourth Concert of the 2013-14 Concert Season Program RICHARD STRAUSS (1864-1949) Concerto in D Major for Oboe and Small Orchestra I. Allegro moderato II. Andante III. Vivace- Allegro CARL NIELSEN (1865-1931) Wind Quintet I. Allegro ben moderato II. Menuetto III. Praeludium: Adagio. Tema con variazioni: Un poco andantino Dirk Stanfield, flute Alex Sifuentes, oboe Tyler Eisenbarth, clarinet Kristen Arvold, French horn FRANCIS POULENC (1899-1963) Trio for Oboe, Bassoon and Piano I. Presto II. Andante III. Rondo Jordan Alfredson, bassoon This recital is presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music in Performance. Mr. Sifuentes studies oboe with Elizabeth Koch Tiscione. Program Notes Concerto in D Major for Oboe and Small Orchestra RICHARD STRAUSS Richard Georg Strauss was born in Munich, Bavaria, on June 11, 1864, and died in Garmisch, Germany, on September 8, 1949. He completed his Oboe Concerto on October 25, 1945, slightly revising the end on February 1, 1948. American oboist John de Lancie was in the U.S. Army unit which secured the area round the Bavarian town of Garmisch where Strauss's was living in April 1945, following WWII. As principal oboist of the Pittsburgh Orchestra in civilian life, he knew Strauss's orchestral writing for oboe thoroughly, visited the composer in his home, and in the course of a long conversation asked him if he had ever consid- ered writing an oboe concerto. -
Classics 1 Program Notes
Classics 1: Program Notes The Sights and Sounds of Stockton: Cityscape John Wineglass and San Joaquin Delta College media students In accordance with its mission to inspire joy and build community through music—and with the aim of generating community pride and awareness through art—the Stockton Symphony teamed up with award-winning composer John Wineglass and San Joaquin Delta College media students under the direction of Adriana Brogger and Kirstyn Russell to create a project titled The Sights and Sounds of Stockton. The Delta College media students, all of whom are from the area and live in the various quadrants of our city, fanned out into the community to gather pictures and videos of their daily environment. They brought the raw footage to class and collaborated to edit the “sights” of Stockton into a feature approximately ten to twelve minutes long. Wineglass visited Stockton several times to get a feel for the area, and he worked with the students on the overall scope of the project as well as details of compilation to achieve a compelling outcome. He then composed the accompanying symphonic score for tonight’s live performance with the Stockton Symphony. This week he has also been meeting with composition students to discuss the composition process and how a composer works with visual components, and he engaged in a public forum with students and members of our community to discuss his work on this project. Winner of three Daytime Emmy Awards and recipient of four additional Emmy nominations, John Wineglass has performed on five continents, before five U.S. -
The 119 Show - Live in London
The 119 Show - Live In London Available as: Blu-ray+DVD+2CD, 2CD+DVD, Digital Album Release Date: November 9th, 2018 DON’T BELIEVE IN TOMORROW The two-decade mark will be smashed. Twenty years young will be noted. And a vicennial triumph will be celebrated. For Italy’s LACUNA COIL, turning 20 will be a once-in-a-lifetime experience, not only for the Milan-based outfit, but also for their diehard fans around the globe. Together, they’ll commemorate the past—with a super-special one-off show in London and a new book titled Nothing Stands in Our Way—to venture bravely into the future. While the big Two-O is often an unkind benchmark, LACUNA COIL are facing down decade two with renewed strength, unfettered passion, and relentless drive. “We never thought we’d get to this point,” beams LACUNA COIL co-vocalist Cristina Scabbia. “That we’re still an active and growing band—we got a lot of new fans on Delirium—is exciting. I’m excited about the 20th Anniversary of LACUNA COIL. I’m excited about the book, the special show we have in London, and the shows to come. We look forward to accomplishing more things in the years to come with LACUNA COIL.” The road to now wasn’t always paved with lofty chart positions, high-profile tours, and viral music videos. LACUNA COIL worked tirelessly for their position as global metal phenoms. That they’re Italy’s top metal export shouldn’t surprise anyone. Amazingly, it all started in 1994, then as Sleep of Right and briefly as Ethereal. -
Foreign Visitors and the Post-Stalin Soviet State
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2016 Porous Empire: Foreign Visitors And The Post-Stalin Soviet State Alex Hazanov Hazanov University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Hazanov, Alex Hazanov, "Porous Empire: Foreign Visitors And The Post-Stalin Soviet State" (2016). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2330. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2330 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2330 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Porous Empire: Foreign Visitors And The Post-Stalin Soviet State Abstract “Porous Empire” is a study of the relationship between Soviet institutions, Soviet society and the millions of foreigners who visited the USSR between the mid-1950s and the mid-1980s. “Porous Empire” traces how Soviet economic, propaganda, and state security institutions, all shaped during the isolationist Stalin period, struggled to accommodate their practices to millions of visitors with material expectations and assumed legal rights radically unlike those of Soviet citizens. While much recent Soviet historiography focuses on the ways in which the post-Stalin opening to the outside world led to the erosion of official Soviet ideology, I argue that ideological attitudes inherited from the Stalin era structured institutional responses to a growing foreign presence in Soviet life. Therefore, while Soviet institutions had to accommodate their economic practices to the growing numbers of tourists and other visitors inside the Soviet borders and were forced to concede the existence of contact zones between foreigners and Soviet citizens that loosened some of the absolute sovereignty claims of the Soviet party-statem, they remained loyal to visions of Soviet economic independence, committed to fighting the cultural Cold War, and profoundly suspicious of the outside world. -
C a R L N I E L S E N S T U D I
CARL NIELSEN STUDIES V O L U M E V I • 2 0 2 0 CARL NIELSEN STUDIES V O L U M E V I • 2 0 2 0 Edited by Michelle Assay, David Fanning (editor-in-chief), Daniel Grimley, Niels Krabbe (consultant), and Christopher Tarrant Copenhagen 2020 The Royal Library Honorary board John Bergsagel, prof.emer., Copenhagen Jean Christensen, prof., University of Louisville, Kentucky Ludwig Finscher, prof.emer., Wolfenbüttel Jim Samson, prof., Royal Holloway, London Arnold Whittall, prof.emer., King’s College, London Editorial board Michelle Assay David Fanning (editor-in-chief) Daniel Grimley Niels Krabbe (consultant) Christopher Tarrant Translation or linguistic amendment of texts by Eskildsen, Røllum-Larsen, and Caron has been carried out by David Fanning, Marie-Louise Zervides, and Michelle Assay. Graphic design Kontrapunkt A/S, Copenhagen Layout and formatting Hans Mathiasen Text set in Swift ISSN 1603-3663 Sponsored by The Carl Nielsen and Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen Foundation © 2020 The authors and Carl Nielsen Studies, The Royal Library All rights reserved 2020 Permission for the use of quotations from the Carl Nielsen Edition has been kindly given by The Royal Library. NIELSEN AND GADE Landmarks of Musical Denmarks By Karsten Eskildsen Where did it all come from? This is a fair question not only in relation to Nielsen but also to most artists. So where did Nielsen collect all his skills, ideas and ambitions? For decades, Danish musical tradition has had it that young Nielsen was a country lad who through his own will, professional musicianship at the military band in Odense, and three years at Copenhagen Conservatoire was able in his maturity to transform the folk music experience of his childhood into mastery and universal art.