Carl Friedrich Zelter Vidéos
musicien allemand
- musique classique
- royaume de Prusse
- compositeur ou compositrice, professeur ou professeure de musique, chef ou cheffe d'orchestre
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-06
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Telemann Rolla Vanhal Rosetti Stamitz Zelter Hoffmeister Hummel Schubert Weber Paganini Sitt Forsyth Bowen Bax Hindemith Casadesus Martinu Bunin Fricker Piston Bacewicz Saygun Rozsa Schnittke Takemitsu Holmboe Gubaidulina Higdon Widmann 1230 1522 1616 1658 1716 1751 1774 1779 1786 1809 1833 1834 1892 1903 1908 1919 1920 1925 1929 1935 1940 1945 1947 1948 1950 1952 1953 1957 1959 1968 1971 1977 1979 1983 1985 1989 1992 1996 2005 2011 2014 2015 2017
The evolution of viola concertos. The year provided is either the year of composition or the year of first publication 0:00 Telemann (1716) 0:34 Rolla 0:59 Vanhal 1:25 Rosetti 1:59 Stamitz (1774) 2:47 Zelter (1779) 3:30 Hoffmeister (1786) 3:51 Hummel 4:20 J. Schubert 5:01 Weber (1809) 5:18 Paganini (1834) 5:51 Sitt (1892) 6:33 Forsyth (1903) 7:01 Bowen (1908) 7:57 Bax (1920) 8:24 Jacob (1925) 9:19 Walton (1929) 9:56 Hindemith (1935) 10:28 Hill (1940) 11:09 Bartok (1945) 11:53 Casadesus (1947) 12:30 Porter (1948) 13:34 David (1950) 14:32 Martinu (1952) 15:22 Bunin (1953) 16:16 Fricker (1953) 16:58 Piston (1957) 17:51 Bacewicz (1968) 18:33 Arnold (1971) 19:19 Saygun (1977) 19:59 Rozsa (1979) 21:07 Chen (1983) 22:01 Schnittke (1985) 22:34 Takemitsu (1989) 23:37 Holmboe (1992) 24:21 Gubaidulina (1996) 25:03 Tower (2005) 26:03 Harberg (2011) 27:04 Higdon (2014) 27:58 Widmann (2015) 28:51 Peng-Peng Gong (2017)
Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Carl Friedrich Zelter Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Marie Bigot Ludwig Berger Berger Muzio Clementi Bach 1819 1823
Piano Quartet no. 2 in F minor, Op. 2 Felix Mendelssohn wrote his Piano Quartet no. 2 in F minor, Op. 2 in 1823, and dedicated it to his teacher, Carl Friedrich Zelter. It was published two years later. The work, scored for piano, violin, viola, and cello, was part of the set of piano quartets that were amongst his first works to be published, hence the low op. number. A standard rendition lasts 30 minutes. Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy was a German composer, pianist, organist and conductor of the early Romantic period. The grandson of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, Felix Mendelssohn was born into a notable ethnically Jewish family, although he himself was brought up initially without religion, and later as a Lutheran Christian. He was recognised early as a musical prodigy, but his parents were cautious and did not seek to capitalise on his abilities. Like Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart before him, Mendelssohn was regarded as a child prodigy. He began taking piano lessons from his mother when he was six, and at seven was tutored by Marie Bigot in Paris. After the family moved to Berlin, all four Mendelssohn children studied piano with Ludwig Berger, who was himself a former student of Muzio Clementi. From at least May 1819 Felix (and his sister Fanny) studied counterpoint and composition with Carl Friedrich Zelter in Berlin. This was an important influence on his future career. Zelter had almost certainly been recommended as a teacher by his aunt Sarah Levy, who had been a pupil of W. F. Bach and a patron of C. P. E. Bach.
Felix Mendelssohn Fauré Heidrich Carl Friedrich Zelter Fauré Quartett 1711 1823
Performed by the fantastic Fauré Quartett Piano: Dirk Mommertz Violin: Erika Geldsetzer Viola: Sascha Frömbling Cello: Konstantin Heidrich 00:00 - Allegro molto 08:25 - Adagio 14:21 - Intermezzo (Allegro moderato) 17:11 - Finale (Allegro molto vivace) Felix Mendelssohn's Piano Quartet No. 2 in F minor, Op. 2, for piano, violin, viola and cello was completed on 3 December 1823 and published two years later. The work was dedicated to Mendelssohn's teacher, Carl Friedrich Zelter. Mendelssohn's three numbered piano quartets were the first works of his to be published, hence their opus numbers. I do NOT own the original recording and sheet music. Sheet music: (http•••)
Thomanerchor Leipzig Freiburger Barockorchester Leipziger Bach Carl Friedrich Zelter Franz Liszt 1724 1749 1811 2013
Thomanerchor Leipzig | "Gloria in excelsis" & "Et in terra pax" aus "h-Moll-Messe" J. S. Bach (2013) Der damalige Thomaskantor Georg Christoph Biller stand am Dirigentenpult, als das renommierte Freiburger Barockorchester und der Leipziger Thomanerchor "das größte Musikwerk, das die Welt je gesehen hat", wie der Komponist und Dirigent Carl Friedrich Zelter 1811 euphorisch schrieb, anlässlich des Leipziger Bachfestes 2013 aufführte. Die h-Moll-Messe ist das letzte große Chorwerk Johann Sebastian Bachs und fraglos auch der Höhepunkt in seinem Gesamtwerk. Der Schaffensprozess erstreckte sich über ein Vierteljahrhundert, von 1724 bis 1749 und umfasste somit beinahe Bachs gesamte Zeit als Thomaskantor. Zunächst entstanden einzelne Sätze. Erst in den späten 1740er Jahren baute Bach diese Einzelsätze weiter zu einer vollständigen, dem Messordinarium entsprechenden "Missa tota" aus. Warum sich der alternde Komponist diese Arbeit aufbürdete, ist bislang ungeklärt. Sicherlich ist der eigene Antrieb, ein exemplarisches Werk zu schaffen – wie auch bei den Goldberg-Variationen – nicht unerheblich, doch wird vermutet, dass diesem Vorhaben ein konkreter Auftrag vorausging, denn in den lutherischen Gotteshäusern der Stadt Leipzig konnte die Messe nicht aufgeführt werden. Die Komplexität der einzelnen Sätze, ihre Vielgestaltigkeit, die sorgfältige Ausarbeitung – dies alles zeugt von dem scheinbar unerschöpflichen Ideenreichtum Johann Sebastian Bachs. J. S. Bach - Mass in B Minor, St. Thomas Boys Choir, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra The Mass in B Minor, Bach’s last completed vocal work as well as the climax of his creativity, reveals the overwhelming wealth of his compositional skills. In the history of music it ranks highly, as the “Montblanc of church music” (Franz Liszt) – composed during Bach’s time as cantor at the St. Thomas Church in Leipzig. Performed in this important composer’s domain, the Mass in B Minor casted a spell over its listeners as the crowning glory of the Leipzig Bach Festival in 2013. Under the direction of Bach’s successor Georg Christoph Biller, the St. Thomas Boys Choir and an outstanding soloist quintet performed with the prestigious Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, playing on authentic period instruments. +++ Credits & Informationen +++ MDR Fernsehen (http•••) Trailer auf YouTube (http•••) Produziert von (http•••) Die DVD kaufen (http•••) Thomanerchor Leipzig (http•••) Freiburger Barockorchester (http•••) +++ CHOR GESANG - Knabenchöre +++ (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) #ThomanerchorLeipzig #FreiburgerBarockorchester #Knabenchormagazin #GeorgChristophBiller #ChorGesang #Knabenchor #BoysChoir #Thomaner #Leipzig #ThomaskircheLeipzig #MDRKultur #AccentusMusik #MitteldeutscherRundfunk
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