Maria Carbone News
Italian singer
- soprano
- Italy, Kingdom of Italy
- opera singer
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2024-04-22
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2024-01-26 10:02:00
BPO/Petrenko - Schoenberg, 25 January 2024
Philharmonie Chamber Symphony no.1 in E major, op.9 Die Jakobsleiter Gabriel – Wolfgang Koch One who is called – Daniel Behle One who protests – Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke One who struggles – Johannes Martin Kränzle The chosen one – Gyula Orendt The monk – Stephan Rügamer The dying one – Nicola Beller Carbone The soul – Liv Redpath, Jasmin Delfs Berlin Radio Chorus (chorus director: Gijs Leenaars)Berlin Philharmonic OrchestraKirill Petrenko (conductor)Image: © Stephan Rabold 150 years on from the birth of Arnold Schoenberg, we could be forgiven for lamenting this world still does not know what to do with him and his music. The most important of twentieth-century composers, he languishes respected yet for the most part unperformed. The muted tones in which even this, his anniversary year, is being celebrated – if not now, then when? – are such that it could readily be missed altogether. There are exceptions, not least my […]
Norman Lebrecht - Slipped disc
2023-08-23 09:37:20
The specialist Spanish pianist Pedro Carboné, an authority... The post Sudden death of Spanish pianist, 63 appeared first on Slippedisc.
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ArtsJournal: music
2018-12-19 19:54:59
Falla and Flamenco — “The Birth of Spanish Music”
According to my friend the remarkably loquacious Spanish pianist Pedro Carboné, the “birth of Spanish music” occurs during the third of Manuel de Falla’s Nights in the Gardens of Spain. — Joe Horowitz
2016-09-27 20:30:53
Well, summer break is finally over and the new school year started just yesterday. With the start of the new school year also comes the start of the performance season of Chicago’s many arts organizations. And so, yesterday after classes ended (and a couple hours spent working on a quantum mechanics problem set…homework on the first day??), I got to head down to Symphony Center for the first Civic Open Rehearsal of the season – conducted by Maestro Muti! He led them in the first two movements of Brahms 4th Symphony, which served as a pretty good preview of how he’s going to approach the cycle of Brahms’ symphonies later in the season. Like I’ve said before, one of Maestro Muti’s strengths, which derives from his years of experience conducting opera and learning from/working closely with singers (Maria Carbone taught him a lot about the voice), is his ability to make […]
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