Mary Garden Vídeos
soprano escocesa
Conmemoraciones 2024 (Nacimiento: Mary Garden)
- soprano
- ópera
- Reino Unido, Reino Unido de Gran Bretaña e Irlanda
- cantante de ópera, actor de cine
Última actualización
2024-05-11
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Sergei Taneiev Natalia Iretskaya Pauline Viardot Fyodor Chaliapin Scriabin Mariinsky Theatre Covent Garden Scala 1875 1905 1915 1976
Oda Slobdskaya sings "My heart is beating" by Sergei Taneiev. Disclaimer- Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. If for any reason, you deem that a video appearing in this channel violates copyright, please inform us immediately before you submit a claim to YouTube and we will take care to remove it Slobodskaya was born in Vilnius, then part of Russia, and studied with the formidable Natalia Iretskaya, herself a pupil of Pauline Viardot Garcia. She sang major roles in the Mariinsky theatre St Petersburg but after the Revolution and subsequent famine, she left Russia with Fyodor Chaliapin when he brought his own opera company to the west. She went on to sing major roles at Covent Garden, La Scala Milan and other major houses. She eventually married and settled in London where she enjoyed great success as both a concert and opera singer. She continued to give entertaining recitals of Russian songs well into her seventies and was a witty and characterful narrator of Peter and the Wolf. The photograph of the statuette is reproduced by kind permission of stuartliff If you can post a synopsis or translation it would be most welcome. Sergei Taneiev was born in1856 and graduated from the Moscow Conservtory in 1875, the first student in the history of the Conservatory to win the gold medal both for composition and for performing (piano). He was also the first person ever to be awarded the Conservatory's Great Gold Medal. In 1905, the revolution and its consequent effect on the Moscow Conservatory led Taneyev to resign from the staff there. He resumed his career as a concert pianist, both as soloist and chamber musician. He died in 1915 from pneumonia contracted whilst attending the funeral of Scriabin.
Sergei Taneiev Natalia Iretskaya Pauline Viardot Fyodor Chaliapin Scriabin Mariinsky Theatre Covent Garden Scala 1875 1905 1915 1976
Oda Slobdskaya sings "Nocturne?" by Sergei Taneiev. Slobodskaya was born in Vilnius, then part of Russia, and studied with the formidable Natalia Iretskaya, herself a pupil of Pauline Viardot Garcia. She sang major roles in the Mariinsky theatre St Petersburg but after the Revolution and subsequent famine, she left Russia with Fyodor Chaliapin when he brought his own opera company to the west. She went on to sing major roles at Covent Garden, La Scala Milan and other major houses. She eventually married and settled in London where she enjoyed great success as both a concert and opera singer. She continued to give entertaining recitals of Russian songs well into her seventies and was a witty and characterful narrator of Peter and the Wolf. If you can post a synopsis or translation it would be most welcome. Sergei Taneiev was born in1856 and graduated from the Moscow Conservtory in 1875, the first student in the history of the Conservatory to win the gold medal both for composition and for performing (piano). He was also the first person ever to be awarded the Conservatory's Great Gold Medal. In 1905, the revolution and its consequent effect on the Moscow Conservatory led Taneyev to resign from the staff there. He resumed his career as a concert pianist, both as soloist and chamber musician. He died in 1915 from pneumonia contracted whilst attending the funeral of Scriabin. Disclaimer- Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. If for any reason, you deem that a video appearing in this channel violates copyright, please inform us immediately before you submit a claim to YouTube and we will take care to remove it
Rachmaninov Natalia Iretskaya Pauline Viardot Fyodor Chaliapin Scala Covent Garden
Oda Slobodskaya sings "The Lilac" by Rachmaninov, one of many songs in her extensive Russian repertoire. Slobodskaya was born in Vilno and studied in the St Petersburg Conservatoire. Her teacher was the formidable Natalia Iretskaya, a pupil of Pauline Viardot Garcia. She was chosen by Fyodor Chaliapin to be Elisabetta in Don Carlos, opposite his King Philip, when he brought his opera Company to Paris and London in the 1920s. She later settled in England and enjoyed a major international career, singing at La Scala and Covent Garden as well as touring South America. In later years she was famous, and much loved, as a recitalist and definitive interpreter of Russian song. She was a fine teacher, at both the Royal College of Music and the Guildhall School, and continued to give lecture recitals up to the last year of her life.
Frieda Hempel Bellini Stern Humperdinck Hänsel Selma Kurz Gatti Casazza Maschera Caruso Emmy Destinn Margarete Matzenauer Pasquale Amato Geraldine Farrar Antonio Scotti Weber Amelita Galli Curci Galli Schubert Schumann Brahms Jenny Lind Covent Garden Metropolitan Opera House 1885 1905 1907 1912 1913 1914 1916 1917 1919 1921 1955
From Wikipedia: Frieda Hempel (26 June 1885 – 7 October 1955) was a German soprano singer in operatic and concert work who had an international career in Europe and the United States. Hempel was born in Leipzig and studied first at the Leipzig Conservatory and afterwards at the Stern Conservatory, Berlin, where she was a pupil of Selma Nicklass-Kempner. Her earliest appearances were in Breslau, singing Violetta, the Queen of the Night and Rosina. She made a debut in Schwerin in 1905, and was engaged there for the next two years, singing also Gilda, Leonora (Il Trovatore) and Woglinde. She made such a success that the Kaiser Wilhelm II requested the Schwerin authorities to release her to sing also in Berlin. She made a debut there in 1905 as Frau Fluth (in Nicolai's Die Lustigen Weiber von Windsor). She sang at the Royal Court Opera, Berlin, from 1907 to 1912, where she was also admired as Lucia, Marguerite de Valois and Marie. She appeared at the Covent Garden, London in 1907 as Bastienne, as Humperdinck's Hänsel und Gretel, as Eva and Elsa and again as Frau Fluth: Melba and Selma Kurz were taking centre stage in the more popular roles. In 1912 she made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera, in New York City as Marguerite de Valois in Les Huguenots. She sang regularly in New York thereafter into the 1920s. She was the first to sing the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier in New York (for Gatti-Casazza, December 9, 1913) and in Berlin, and she also sang the role in London in 1913. She was in the Met 1913 Un Ballo in Maschera as Oscar, with Caruso, Emmy Destinn, Margarete Matzenauer and Pasquale Amato; also the 1916 Marriage of Figaro with Matzenauer, Geraldine Farrar and Antonio Scotti. Her La Fille du Régiment was presented there in 1917. Hempel had a very wide dramatic range, from Rosina or Queen of the Night to Wagner's Eva and Weber's Euryanthe (Metropolitan, 1914 revival). After 1919 she devoted herself to concert recitals, and left the Metropolitan Opera House somewhat abruptly, making way for the career of Amelita Galli-Curci. However she then made a second career on the concert platform, excelling in the performance of lieder of Mozart, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms and Wolf, in Mozart concert arias, and the like. She became famous for recitals in which she appeared in costume as the famous nineteenth-century soprano Jenny Lind. She died in Berlin in 1955 at the age of 70.
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- cronología: Cantantes líricos (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): G...