Henrietta Treffz Vídeos
cantante, cantante de ópera
- mezzosoprano
- Austria
Última actualización
2024-05-08
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Johann Strauss Dolci Jetty Treffz Carl Haslinger Haslinger Sigismund Thalberg Verdi Zimmermann Blatt 1818 1862 1863 1864
Very sweet and romantic ! WONDERFUL ! "Dolci pianti", Lied (Romanze) ("Sweet Tears", Song (Romance)) o. op. Feigning illness, Johann Strauss interrupted his summer 1862 concert season at Pavlovsk, near St. Petersburg, and returned to Vienna. His "illness" was short-lived: once back in his native city his motives became apparent when, on 27 August 1862, he married Henrietta Carolina Josepha Chalupetzky +••.••(...)). 'Jetty Treffz', as the 44-year-old Frau Strauss was known to the musical world, was an internationally acclaimed mezzo-soprano. Although no longer at the peak of her career, she was still sufficiently admired to perform before the Russian Imperial Court when she accompanied her husband to Pavlovsk in the summer of 1863. During the course of a long letter, written to Johann's Viennese publisher, Carl Haslinger, on 8 July 1863 (= 26 June, Russian calendar), Jetty announced: "My dear, dear Jeany-boy [= Johann] was seduced by me into writing a song for me in the Italian style, but good Italian style, and it came off so splendidly that it is my cheval de bataille [= current fad]. [Sigismund] Thalberg has also set the same text to music, only Jeany's composition is far, far better, more beautiful and more rewarding. It is written with cello and harp, and was sung exquisitely well (naturally!) by my humble self. Would you like to have absolute ownership of this composition, possibly dedicated to the Emperor of all the Russias and graciously accepted by him? If so, I request that you inform Jeany immediately and specify how many hundreds you are prepared to give for it. The song is for mezzo-soprano and will sell as quickly as hot rolls after a famine". In the event, Haslinger declined to publish the song, entitled "Dolci pianti" (Sweet Tears), and regrettably the original version sung by Jetty has been lost. However, an arrangement of the piece for cello and piano is extant: bearing a dedication to Jetty Treffz, it survived among the papers of Strauss's estate and is now housed in the collection of the Wiener Stadt- und Landesbibliothek in Vienna. Johann himself had referred to the same piece of music during June 1863, adding in a postscript to Haslinger: "You'll be getting a little song from me which, fashioned in Verdi's style, is a disgrace". In a subsequent letter, written from Pavlovsk on 16 August that year, the composer again mentioned the piece: "The song will very shortly be in your possession. I am playing it for the first time in my benefit concert on Tuesday (arranged for cello and harp) ...". The first performance of the work in the version for cello and harp (with orchestral accompaniment) took place, as Johann announced, at his second benefit concert held at the Vauxhall Pavilion in Pavlovsk on 18 August 1863 (= 6 August, Russian calendar). The enthusiastic audience at once demanded a repetition of the work, which the orchestra's diarist, F.A. Zimmermann, entered in his programme details under the title Neue Romanze (New Romance). Commenting on this benefit concert, Jetty wrote to Haslinger on 24 August (= 12 August) that "a new polka-mazurka (Invitation à la Polka Mazurka) caused a furore, and so did my song, which Johann has written for cello and harp and orchestra; it always has to be repeated and sounds absolutely delightful". Between its première and the final concert of the 1863 Pavlovsk season on 27 September (= 15 September), Strauss conducted the piece a further sixteen times - most notably on 11 September (= 30 August) during a ball given by the Russian Emperor, Alexander II, at his palace in Tsarskoye-Selo (= Pushkin), situated some 3 miles/5 km from Pavlovsk. Zimmermann's records for this, and several other performances, entitle the work: "lied [Song] Süsse Thränen" - the German translation of the title "Dolci pianti" - while further entries refer to it as a "Romanze". Regrettably it has proved impossible to determine which, if any, of these aforementioned performances were sung by Jetty, rather than being purely instrumental renditions. Viennese audiences heard the new composition for the first time on 10 January 1864 at a concert in the Volksgarten given by Josef and Eduard Strauss, "with the participation of Hofball-Musikdirektor Johann Strauss". The press announcements for the event (for example, in the Fremden-Blatt of 6 January) drew particular attention to the performance of the novelty, arranged as an instrumental romance: "Note: 'Dolci pianti', song in the Italian style for cello and physharmonica [a large harmonium] by Johann Strauss, accompanied by him on the physharmonica". The version for cello, harp and small orchestra used in this present recording was prepared by a long-standing member of the Strauss Orchestra. paintings by William Bouguerau
Johann Strauss Plachy Jetty Treffz 1825 1844 1849 1862 1863 1870 1872 1878 1895 1899
Johann Strauss (syn) (ur. 25 października 1825 w Wiedniu, zm. 3 czerwca 1899 tamże) – austriacki kompozytor, dyrygent i skrzypek. Rozsławiony przez walce taneczne swojego autorstwa, m.in. Nad pięknym modrym Dunajem (An der schönen blauen Donau). Przedstawiciel tzw. dynastii Straussów. Był synem znanego kompozytora – również Johanna. W tajemnicy przed ojcem uczył się gry na fortepianie u Plachy'ego, na skrzypcach u Franza Amona, a następnie u Johanna Antona Kolmanna. Lekcje kompozycji pobierał u Josepha Drechslera. W 1844 debiutował podczas koncertu w Cassino Dommayera w Hietzingu, dyrygując własną orkiestrą taneczną. Cztery lata później został muzykiem Gwardii Narodowej, komponując marsze i polki. W Wiedniu zaczęła królować muzyka obydwu Straussów. Po śmierci ojca w 1849 Johann Strauss skomponował walc Aeols-Töne op.88, zadedykowany ojcu, po czym połączył obydwie orkiestry w jeden wielki zespół. Tournées po Niemczech, Rosji, Polsce i Stanach Zjednoczonych przyniosły mu międzynarodową sławę. W 1862 poślubił śpiewaczkę Jetty Treffz. W latach 1863-1870 był dyrektorem balów na wiedeńskim dworze, a w 1872 dostał zaproszenie do Stanów Zjednoczonych na serię koncertów z okazji setnej rocznicy uzyskania przez Amerykanów niepodległości. Z tej okazji skomponował walc jubileuszowy z wmontowanym hymnem USA. Od 1863 orkiestrę prowadzili jako stali dyrygenci jego bracia – Josef i Eduard. Po śmierci Jetty Treffz w 1878, ożenił się jeszcze dwukrotnie. Prawdziwe uznanie zdobył wystawieniem Zemsty nietoperza w Operze Dworskiej w Wiedniu (1895) z okazji swoich siedemdziesiątych urodzin. Cztery lata później zmarł na zapalenie płuc. Pochowany na Cmentarzu Centralnym w Wiedniu. / Informacje ze strony: (http•••) Oglądaj film: (http•••) Subskrybuj mój kanał: (http•••) Kliknij proszę i - z góry bardzo dziękuję. Rewanż tym samym na Twoim kanale Korzystaj z muzyki: Biblioteka audio - YouTube Studio: (http•••) - Strauss - Blue Danube Waltz #MariaKalinowskaPoland#Strauss#BlueDanubeWaltz#ClassicalMusic#MuzykaYouTubeStudio
Tales Johann Baptist Strauss André Rieu Dittrich Henrietta Treffz 1825 1862 1878 1882 1887 1899
Tales From The Vienna Woods, Op. 325 Johannes Strauss II • André Rieu • The André Rieu Strauss Orchestra • Sobre o Compositor: Johann Strauss II, também conhecido como Johann Strauss, Jr. o mais novo, o Filho, Johann Baptist Strauss, foi um compositor austríaco de música ligeira, particularmente a música de dança e operetas. Compôs mais de 500 valsas, polcas, quadrilhas e outros tipos de música de dança, bem como várias operetas e um ballet. Nascimento: 25 de outubro de 1825, Neubau Falecimento: 3 de junho de 1899, Viena, Áustria Nacionalidade: Austro-húngaro Cônjuge: Adele Deutsch (de 1887 a 1899), Angelika Dittrich (de 1878 a 1882), Henrietta Treffz (de 1862 a 1878)
Johann Strauss II Joseph Drechsler Johannes Brahms Richard Wagner Giuseppe Verdi Jetty Treffz Offenbach Dittrich Herbert Karajan Wiener Philharmoniker 1825 1844 1845 1847 1849 1853 1862 1870 1871 1872 1874 1878 1883 1885 1887 1899 2001
With music by Johann Strauss II, Die Fledermaus is the most popular of the Viennese operettas. Opening in April 1874 at the Theater an der Wein (The Theatre on the Wien River), the show quickly became a runaway hit. Since its debut, it has been performed countless times in theaters all over the world, and there have been at least 17 film adaptations, most recently (2001) in a French production. In contrast to the Grand Operas of the period, the operettas were light musical entertainments, the nineteenth-century equivalent of our contemporary Broadway musicals. The Composer: Johann Strauss II, +••.••(...)), was an Austrian composer known especially for his waltzes. He showed remarkable skills early in his childhood, despite his father's opposition to any career in music. He wanted him to become a banker, but the younger Strauss had his own ideas, taking violin lessons in secret from a player in his father's orchestra. When Strauss was 17 his father left the family, thus allowing him to begin serious study without encumbrance. His mother, a good amateur violinist who had always encouraged him, remained supportive. He then started to study theory with Joseph Drechsler and took violin lessons from Anton Kohlmann. In 1844 he led his first concert and a year later formed his own ensemble, thereby competing with his father's orchestra. He was also writing his own quadrilles, mazurkas, polkas, and waltzes for performance by his ensemble, even conducting works by his father, and receiving praise from the press. He was given the honorary position of Bandmaster of the 2nd Vienna Citizens' Regiment (his father was bandmaster of the 1st regiment) in 1845, and in 1847 began composing for the Vienna Men's Choral Association. His real success began in 1849 after the death of his father Johann Strauss. He then merged his father's orchestra with his own and took up his father's contracts. His career moved along smoothly for the next several years, but in 1853 he became seriously ill and turned over conducting duties to his younger brother, Josef, for six months. After his recovery he resumed fully both his conducting and his composing activities, eventually gaining the respect of such composers as Johannes Brahms, Richard Wagner, and Giuseppe Verdi for his seemingly unlimited imagination for using melodies. Strauss married singer Henriette "Jetty" Treffz in August 1862, and they settled in Hietzing, a suburb of Vienna. Thereafter, she became his business manager and apparently a great inspiration, drawing him toward operetta, just as Viennese theater operators were becoming tired of the works of Offenbach. His first, Indigo und die vierzig Räuber, came in 1871, and his most famous, Die Fledermaus, was staged three years later with great success. Eine Nacht in Venedig (1883) and Der Zigeunerbaron (1885) were his only other international operetta well-known works. In 1872, he traveled to the United States and led highly successful concerts in Boston and New York. For all the success that came in the 1870, there was also much grief: his mother and brother Josef died in 1870, and his wife died suddenly of a heart attack in 1878. Her death devastated him, and the suddenly helpless composer unwisely married the much-younger actress Angelika Dittrich, six weeks later. The marriage lasted only four years, though it may have saved the composer from personal disaster in the months following his wife's death. Strauss, a Roman Catholic, left the church and had to give up his Austrian citizenship to marry Adele Deutsch in 1887, owing to the Church's unwillingness to recognize his divorce. His new wife, with whom he had lived for a long period before their marriage, seemed to inspire him much like his first wife. In his last years, Johann Strauss remained quite productive and active. He was working on a ballet, Cinderella, when he developed a respiratory ailment which grew into pneumonia. He died on June 3, 1899. Die Fledermaus Overture Performed by the Wiener Philharmoniker Orchestra Herbert von Karajan, Conductor
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- cronología: Cantantes líricos (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): T...