Sebastian Bensen Schlesinger Vídeos
compositor
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2024-05-09
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Jean Luc Chaignaud Régine Crespin Gabriel Bacquier Christa Ludwig Hans Hotter Herbert Karajan Maschera Verdi Plácido Domingo Josephine Barstow Sumi Jo Schlesinger Sir Georg Solti Eberhard Wächter Donizetti Luciano Pavarotti Puccini Mirella Freni Massenet Renée Fleming Roberto Alagna Bizet Zeffirelli Mahler Arditti Michel Béroff Cilea Rolando Villazón Riccardo Muti Giuseppe Sinopoli Richard Bonynge Seiji Osawa Pierre Boulez Valeri Guerguiev Jeffrey Tate Christian Thielemann Charles Dutoit Christoph Eschenbach Festival Salzbourg Scala Théâtre Liceu Barcelone Carnegie Hall Royal Albert Hall Opéra Monte Carlo Opéra Vienne Metropolitan Opera Quatuor Arditti Opmc 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 2009 2010 2014
Kassis - Concerts à la maison : Jean-Luc Chaignaud -Leçon de chant Jean-Luc Chaignaud : un baryton soliste français, chanteur d'opéras, de lieders et d'oratorios. Étudie le chant avec Régine Crespin et Gabriel Bacquier au Conservatoire de Paris, puis entre à l’École d’Art Lyrique de l’Opéra de Paris où il participe aux master class de Christa Ludwig et Hans Hotter. Après avoir fait ses débuts en 1988 au mai musical de Bordeaux et au Festival Ossiachersee en Autriche, il est engagé par Herbert von Karajan pour le rôle de Silvano dans Un ballo in maschera de Verdi, aux côtés de Plácido Domingo, Josephine Barstow et Sumi Jo, enregistré pour la Deutsche Grammophon (1989). Une mise en scène par John Schlesinger de cette production, cette fois-ci sous la baguette de Sir Georg Solti, est réalisée pour le Festival de Salzbourg en 1989 et 1990 et également filmée (Arthaus/TDK, 1990). Sa formation avec la mezzo-soprano allemande Christa Ludwig est déterminante pour sa carrière, comme elle le relate dans ses mémoires Ma voix et moi au cours d’un passage dithyrambique sur le talent de ce baryton d’une « très belle voix » et qui « chante bien avec musicalité ». Au cours d’une première et seule audition pour le rôle de Figaro à l'Opéra de Vienne, le directeur Eberhard Wächter donne immédiatement à Jean-Luc Chaignaud un contrat de plusieurs années, le propulsant ainsi dans une carrière sur les grandes scènes intérnationales1. Durant la saison 1991-1992 à l'Opéra de Vienne, il incarne le personnage de Belcore dans L'elisir d'amore de Donizetti aux côtés du ténor italien Luciano Pavarotti et de Marcello dans La Bohème de Puccini avec la soprano italienne Mirella Freni. Son travail avec ces deux grands interprètes, « couple mythique de l’opéra », avec lesquels il partagera la scène plusieurs fois à Vienne et à Paris, a une grande influence sur son approche du chant ainsi que sur l’évolution de sa carrière. En 1993, la critique française chante ses louanges2. Le premier quotidien national français Le Figaro qualifie Jean-Luc Chaignaud de « prodige de scène » « éblouissant d’humanité et de tendresse » et fait l’éloge de sa voix « admirablement conduite, irisée de très belles couleurs. »3. Les grandes qualités d’interprétation et de musicalité de Jean-Luc Chaignaud vont de pair avec sa voix puissante et « son solide métier »4. Connu principalement pour les rôles de Lescaut dans l’opéra Manon de Massenet aux côtés de Renée Fleming, de Marcello dans l’opéra La Bohème de Puccini aux côtés de Roberto Alagna, et d’Escamillo dans l’opéra Carmen de Bizet mis en scène par Franco Zeffirelli, il chante dans un répertoire qui comprend notamment des opéras de Mozart, Verdi, Donizetti, Puccini et Bizet, dans des grandes salles comme le Metropolitan Opera de New York, l'Opéra de Paris, l'Opéra de Vienne, La Scala de Milan, le Grand théâtre du Liceu de Barcelone, Carnegie Hall de New York, Royal Albert Hall London, l’Opéra de Munich ou l’Opéra de Pékin. Au cours de plus de trente années de carrière internationale, Jean-Luc Chaignaud interprète à travers le monde entier un grand nombre de répertoires et styles variés : le répertoire italien du Bel canto mais aussi le Baroque, les lieder, les oratorio et les musiques contemporaines comme Ça Ira de Roger Waters. Parmi ses enregistrements figurent un récital exceptionnel au Musée du Louvre des Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen de Mahler avec le Quatuor Arditti sous la direction de Michel Béroff à l’occasion de la réouverture du musée en 1989, l’opéra Adriana Lecouvreur de Cilea avec Mirella Freni (La sept Arte/Opéra national de Paris, France musique, 1994), Manon de Massenet avec Renée Fleming (Arthaus, 2009), L'elisir d'amore de Donizetti avec Rolando Villazón (Virgin Classics, 2010) et un hommage au poète-compositeur-interprète franco-monégasque Léo Ferré à l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo (OPMC Classics, 2014).Il a collaboré avec des chefs d’orchestre comme Herbert von Karajan, Sir Georg Solti, Riccardo Muti, Giuseppe Sinopoli, Richard Bonynge, Seiji Osawa, Pierre Boulez, Valeri Guerguiev, Jeffrey Tate, Christian Thielemann, Daniel Oren, Charles Dutoit ou Christoph Eschenbach.
Seattle Pro Musica Handel Stephens Hauck Schlesinger Handel Festival 2011
Handel's Dixit Dominus and Chandos Anthem No. 8 marks Seattle Pro Musica's first appearance at the celebrated American Handel Festival, which attracts scholars and performers from around the world. The concert features three important works by Georg Friedrich Handel for choir, orchestra, and soloists: Dixit Dominus from his Italian period-- a brilliant work filled with vocal virtuosity and resplendent color-- as well as his Chandos Anthem No. 8 and Utrecht Jubilate Deo. Seattle Pro Musica is joined by four outstanding soloists: Charles Robert Stephens, baritone; Ross Hauck, tenor; Joseph Schlesinger, countertenor; and Madeline Bersamina, soprano. The orchestra for these performances features some of the finest Baroque players in the area. concert page for more details. Saturday, March 19, and Sunday, March 20, 2011 • 8:00 pm St. James Cathedral • 9th & Marion, Seattle
Gustav Mahler Bruno Schlesinger Schlesinger Reich Linden Amalie Materna Hermann Winkelmann Theodor Reichmann Bayreuth Richard Wagner Bach Columbia Symphony Orchestra Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra New York Philharmonic Vienna State Opera Bavarian State Opera Deutsche Oper Berlin Vienna Philharmonic Gewandhaus Concertgebouw Orchestra Salzburg Festival Bayreuth Festival 1835 1842 1845 1847 1849 1860 1870 1876 1882 1887 1888 1889 1893 1896 1898 1899 1908 1911 1913 1914 1933 1939 1945 1961 1962
Composer Gustav Mahler +••.••(...)) / Symphony No. 1 ("Titan"), 1st Movement (fragment) / Columbia Symphony Orchestra conducted by Bruno Walter +••.••(...)) / Recorded: 1961 / Illustrations of Mahler conducting by Otto Böhler +••.••(...)) The Symphony No. 1 in D major by Gustav Mahler was mainly composed between late 1887 and March 1888, though it incorporates music Mahler had composed for previous works. It was composed while Mahler was second conductor at the Leipzig Opera, Germany. Although in his letters Mahler almost always referred to the work as a symphony, the first two performances described it as a symphonic poem or tone poem. The work was premièred at the Vigadó Concert Hall, Budapest in 1889, but was not well received. Mahler made some major revisions for the second performance, given at Hamburg in October 1893; further alterations were made in the years prior to the first publication, in late 1898. Some modern performances and recordings give the work the title Titan, despite the fact that Mahler only used this label for two early performances, and never after the work had reached its definitive four-movement form in 1896. (http•••) Gustav Mahler (German: [ˈɡʊstaf ˈmaːlɐ]; 7 July 1860 – 18 May 1911) was a late-Romantic composer and one of the leading conductors of his generation. A Jew, he was born in the village of Kalischt, Bohemia, in what was then the Austrian Empire, now Kaliště in the Czech Republic. His family later moved to nearby Iglau (now Jihlava), where Mahler grew up. As a composer, Mahler acted as a bridge between the 19th-century Austro-German tradition and the modernism of the early 20th century. While in his lifetime his status as a conductor was established beyond question, his own music gained wide popularity only after periods of relative neglect which included a ban on its performance in much of Europe during the Nazi era. After 1945 the music was discovered and championed by a new generation of listeners; Mahler then became a frequently performed and recorded composer, a position he has sustained into the 21st century. (http•••) Bruno Walter (born Bruno Schlesinger, September 15, 1876 – February 17, 1962) was a German-born conductor, pianist, and composer. Born in Berlin, he left Germany in 1933 to escape the Third Reich, settling finally in the United States in 1939. He worked closely with Gustav Mahler, whose music he helped establish in the repertory, held major positions with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Concertgebouw Orchestra, Salzburg Festival, Vienna State Opera, Bavarian State Opera, Staatsoper Unter den Linden and Deutsche Oper Berlin, among others, made recordings of historical and artistic significance, and is widely considered one of the great conductors of the 20th century. (http•••) Otto Böhler (1847–1913) was an Austrian silhouette artist who specialized in portraits of many great conductors, composers, and pianists of his time. Otto Boehler was the fifth son of the merchant Georg Friedrich Böhler and spent his childhood and youth in Frankfurt am Main. At the University of Tübingen, he studied to PhD philosophy. In 1870 he moved with his brothers Albert (1845–1899) and Friedrich (1849–1914) to Vienna and participated after the death of his brother, Emil (1842–1882) at the family business. Albert and Emil founded a steel industry, which is now part of Böhler-Uddeholm. Following his artistic talent, he became a pupil of the painter and writer Wenzel Ottokar Noltsch (1835–1908). Soon, however, he turned to the art of the silhouette, and found in his musical environment a rich field. Böhler's friends were to include the singer Amalie Materna, Hermann Winkelmann, Theodor Reichmann, and musicians of the Vienna Philharmonic. In 1876 he attended as a member of the Bayreuth Patrons Association, the first Bayreuth Festival, and paid homage to his "musical god" Richard Wagner. Böhler was married and had four children. He died in 1913; two years earlier he had been diagnosed with a heart condition. He was buried in the family vault in the Hietzinger Cemetery. Böhler has held in silhouette almost all the German composers from Bach to Mahler, but also conductors and pianists of his time. The original works remained only sporadically, mainly in museums. His motifs were often reprinted, e.g. on postcards and in newspapers. (http•••)/
Beethoven Schlesinger Ferdinand Ries Muzio Clementi 1770 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1827 1835
Ludwig van Beethoven (baptised 17 December 1770 – 26 March 1827) was a German composer and pianist. A crucial figure in the transition between the classical and romantic eras in classical music, he remains one of the most recognized and influential musicians of this period, and is considered to be one of the greatest composers of all time. Please support my channel: (http•••) Uploaded with special permission by Producer/Editor Peter Watchorn (http•••) Sonata No. 31 in A-flat major, Op. 110 (1821) 1. Moderato cantabile molto espressivo (0:00) 2. Allegro molto (6:39) 3. Adagio ma non troppo (8:59) 4. Arioso dolente Fuga. Allegro ma non troppo (12:32) Penelope Crawford, fortepiano Conrad Graf, Wien, 1835 In the summer of 1819, Adolf Martin Schlesinger, from the Schlesinger firm of music publishers based in Berlin, sent his son Maurice to meet Beethoven to form business relations with the composer. The two met in Mödling, where Maurice left a favorable impression on the composer. After some negotiation by letter, the elder Schlesinger offered to purchase three piano sonatas at 90 ducats in April 1820, though Beethoven had originally asked for 120 ducats. In May 1820, Beethoven agreed, and he undertook to deliver the sonatas within three months. These three sonatas are the ones now known as Opp. 109, 110, and 111, the last of Beethoven's piano sonatas. The composer was prevented from completing the promised sonatas on schedule by several factors, including his work on the Missa solemnis (Op. 123), rheumatic attacks in the winter of 1820, and a bout of jaundice in the summer of 1821. Barry Cooper notes that Op. 110 "did not begin to take shape" until the latter half of 1821. Op. 109 was published by Schlesinger in November 1821, but correspondence shows that Op. 110 was still not ready by the middle of December 1821. The sonata's completed autograph score bears the date 25 December 1821 (it is this score which was used for this video); Beethoven continued to revise the last movement and did not finish until early 1822. The copyist's score was presumably delivered to Schlesinger around this time, since Beethoven received a payment of 30 ducats for the sonata in January 1822. Adolf Schlesinger's letters to Beethoven in July 1822 confirm that the sonata, along with Op. 111, was being engraved in Paris. The sonata was published simultaneously in Paris and Berlin that year, and it was announced in the Bibliographie de la France on 14 September. Some copies of the first edition reached Vienna as early as August, and the sonata was announced in the Wiener Zeitung that month. The sonata was published without a dedication, though there is evidence that Beethoven intended to dedicate Opp. 110 and 111 to Antonie Brentano. In February 1823, Beethoven sent a letter to the composer Ferdinand Ries in London, informing him that he had sent manuscripts of Opp. 110 and 111 so that Ries could arrange their publication in Britain. Beethoven noted that though Op. 110 was already available in London, the edition had mistakes that would be corrected in Ries's edition. Ries persuaded Muzio Clementi to acquire the British rights to the two sonatas, and Clementi published them in London that year.
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- cronología: Compositores (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): S...