Liam Bonner Vidéos
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2024-05-15
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Bache Mero Sepe Catherine Bott Bonner Lyons Henderson New London Consort 1803
Carmina Burana, meaning "Songs from Beuern" in Latin, is a manuscript of religious and profane songs based on poems, plays and dramatic texts describing the catholic church in satyrical and critical means. They were mainly composed by students and clergymen between the 11th and 13th centuries, in Latin, and German and French venacular. Fragments which have been recovered indidate a large amount of works were composed during the 12th century. The manuscript was discovered in 1803 in the Bavarian Benedictine monastery of Benediktbeuern. Source: "Carmina Burana" - New London Consort, Philip Pickett, dir. Info: (http•••) Burana playlist: (http•••) Bache, bene venies gratus et optatus per quem noster animus fit letificatus. refrain: Istud vinum, bonum vinum, vinumnum generosum, reddit virum curialem, probum, animosum. Iste cyphus concavus de bono mero profluus siquis bibit sepius satur fit et ebrius. Hec sunt vasa regia quibus spoliatur ierusalem et regalis babilon ditatur. Ex hoc cypho conscii bibent sui domini bibent sui socii bibent et amici. Bachus forte superans pectora virorum in amorem concitat anImos eorum. Bachus sepe visitans mulierum genus facit eas subditas tibi, o tu Venus. Bachus venas penetrans calido liquore facit eas igneas Veneris ardore. Bachus lenis leniens curas et dolores confert iocum, gaudia, risus et amores. Bachus mentem femine solet hic lenire cogit eam citius viro consentire. A qua prorsus coitum nequit impetrare Bachus illam facile solet expugnare. Bachus numen faciens hominem iocundum reddit eum pariter doctum et facundum. Bache, deus inclite, omnes hic astantes leti sumus munera tua prelibantes. Omnes tibi canimus maxima preconIa te laudantes merito tempora per omnia. / Welcome Bacchus, esteemed and long-desired, making our hearts full of joy. refrain: Wine, good wine in liberal amounts ennobles, purifies and revitalises a man. This hollowed-out goblet is flowing with goodness for the toper: he who drinks wisely will be well-filled and merry. Here are the regal glasses by which Jerusalem was despoiled and Babylon's throne enriched. Let all the company drink from the cup, toast their masters, their workmates, their friends. Bacchus dominates men's hearts, stirs them to thoughts of love. Bacchus often visits the female sex, making them susceptible to you, 0 Venus. Bacchus' hot liquor penetrates their veins, setting them on fire with love. Gentle Bacchus soothes away cares and sorrow, substituting joy, laughter and love. Bacchus has winning ways with women, making them consent to the wishes of men. Bacchus makes conquest easy / though she might have said "No" before. Under Bacchus' influence men are happy and correspondingly witty and scholarly. illustrious Bacchus, all of us here can enjoy ourselves after just one sip. All sing the praises of your gifts: and you deserve them for eternity. Performers: Catherine Bott (soprano), Michael George (baritone), Chorus: Tessa Bonner (soprano), Sally Dunkley (soprano), Andrew King (tenor), Allan Parkes (baritone), Simon Grant (bass), Frances Kelly (harp, rote), Andrew Lawrence-King (harp), Pavlo Beznosiuk (vielle, rebec), William Lyons (recorder), Catherine Latham (recorder), gittern), Paula Chateauneuf (gittern), Stephen Henderson (bells, nakers, tabor, tambourine), Clifton Prior (tabor), Stephen Jones (vielle, rebec), Philip Pickett (recorder, symphony), David Tosh (dulcimer)
Geoffrey Turton Shaw Bach Martin Shaw George Martin Charles Stanford Charles Wood Greatorex Primrose Alan Gray Ralph Vaughan Williams Henry Purcell John Ireland Bonner 1875 1879 1881 1901 1902 1905 1910 1911 1919 1920 1921 1928 1930 1932 1937 1940 1942 1943 1947 1954 1958 1994
Two excerpts from the 'French Suite No. 3' played by Dr Geoffrey Shaw and recorded at Decca's Thames Street Studios on 13 December 1937. From Wikipedia: Geoffrey Turton Shaw (14 November 1879 – 14 April 1943) was an English composer and musician specialising in Anglican church music. After Cambridge, where he was an organ scholar, he became a schoolmaster, then a schools inspector, while producing a stream of compositions, arrangements, and published collections of music. He was awarded the Lambeth degree of Doctor of Music. Shaw worked with his brother Martin Shaw, also a composer, while his son Sebastian was a Shakespearean actor who is remembered for the Star Wars role of Anakin Skywalker. Born at Clapham, South London, in 1879, Shaw was the son of James Fallas Shaw, a composer of church music and organist of Hampstead, and the younger brother of the composer Martin Shaw (1875–1958). Geoffrey Shaw became a chorister at St Paul's Cathedral under Sir George Martin and was then educated at Derby School and Caius College, Cambridge. At Caius, he was an organ scholar, studied with Sir Charles Stanford and Charles Wood, and graduated BA in 1901 and MusB in 1902. From 1902 to 1910, Shaw was a music master and Director of Music at Gresham's School, Holt, a role in which he was succeeded by his fellow Old Derbeian, Walter Greatorex. Benson's History of Gresham's School notes that 'Shaw was too fine a musician to be held for long, despite his love of Norfolk, and he went on to become an outstanding School Inspector.' Shaw was an inspector of music in London schools from 1911 to 1940, simultaneously holding several posts as an organist, and in 1920 was his brother Martin's successor as organist of St Mary's, Primrose Hill, remaining there until 1930. He was also Inspector of Music to the Board of Education from 1928 until his retirement in 1942. For some years he chaired the BBC's schools music sub-committee. In his Board of Education work, Shaw worked to raise standards of musical education in schools and also supported popular organisations and training colleges. His unofficial activities included promoting summer schools for teachers, and he was in demand as an adjudicator at music festivals. He was the first adjudicator of the Thanet Competitive Musical Festival, founded in 1921. As a composer, Shaw's work included choral works, anthems, hymn tunes and arrangements, a ballet called 'All at Sea,' chamber pieces, orchestral works, and other songs, including part-songs and unison songs. Several descants by Shaw, Alan Gray and Ralph Vaughan Williams appear in Songs of Praise, one of the earliest hymnals to include such work. Shaw was an enthusiast for folk music and the work of Henry Purcell, and one of his aims was to restore the dignity of Christian music. With his brother, Shaw edited song books. He was one of the editors of The Public School Hymn Book of 1919 and also published the Descant Hymn-Tune Book, in two volumes. With Percy Dearmer, Martin and Geoffrey Shaw had a significant influence on 20th-century church music. Shaw's friend John Ireland composed the melody for My Song Is Love Unknown over lunch one day with Shaw, and at his suggestion. In 1932, Cosmo Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury, awarded Shaw the honorary Lambeth degree of Doctor of Music. When Shaw died in 1943, he was cremated and his ashes buried at Golders Green Crematorium. In 1947, a Geoffrey Shaw Memorial Fund was established for the benefit of talented instrumentalists under the age of eighteen, and there is now a Martin and Geoffrey Shaw Organ Scholarship at St Mary's, Primrose Hill. Shaw was married to Mary Grace Shaw, born in 1881, who survived him until 1954. He was the father of six children, including the actor Sebastian Shaw (1905–1994), best known for the role of Anakin Skywalker in Return of the Jedi. His other children were James, Peter, Susan, Margaret and Penelope. James, like his father a chorister of St Paul's Cathedral, read History at Caius, his father's Cambridge college, and was killed during the Second World War. Penelope Shaw became an actress. One of Shaw's great-grandchildren, Emma Bonner-Morgan, is a singer-songwriter and pianist.
Beethovenfest Bonn Bonner Franz Liszt Weise Vox Luminis 1845
Beethovenfest Intendant Steven Walter erklärt die Idee hinter der besinnlichen Voreröffnung »Prolog: Heiliger Dankgesang« am 25. August im Bonner Münster (http•••) #Beethovenfest #Bonn #PostKlassikVertikal / // Über den Prolog In spätestens drei Jahren wird man sagen: Was für eine schöne Tradition! Denn das, was Intendant Steven Walter in diesem Jahr zum ersten Mal auf‘s Programm gesetzt hat – den geistlichen Prolog im Bonner Münster – soll von nun an stets das Beethovenfest eröffnen. In diesem Jahr wird er vom fantastischen belgischen Vokalensemble Vox Luminis gestaltet. / (http•••) / ÜBER DAS FESTIVAL Das Beethovenfest Bonn gehört zu den ältesten und bedeutendsten Musikfestivals in Deutschland. 1845 von Franz Liszt in der Geburtsstadt Beethovens ins Leben gerufen, stellt es heute alljährlich im August und September mit rund 80 Veranstaltungen in Bonn und der Region einen international wahrgenommenen kulturellen Leuchtturm dar. Unter seinem Intendanten Steven Walter positioniert sich das Beethovenfest gegenwärtig neu: als ein allen Bevölkerungsgruppen zugewandtes, eine lebendige Tradition radikal zeitgenössisch denkendes und zukunftsorientiertes Festival, das auf vielfältige Weise die Zukunft des Konzertlebens erprobt und maßgeblich mitgestaltet. »Alle Menschen werden Brüder« heißt es in der berühmten Ode »An die Freude« aus Ludwig van Beethovens neunter Sinfonie. Das erste Festival unter der Intendanz von Steven Walter richtet sich an »alle Menschen« und möchte den humanistischen Gestus Beethovens in konkrete Programmatik übersetzen: ein Festival der musikalischen Diversität; ein Zusammenkommen verschiedenster Herkünfte und Identitäten in der gemeinsamen »Heimat Musik«; ein Fest, in dem Beethovens Werk auf die vielfältige Welt des 21. Jahrhunderts trifft.
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- chronologie: Artistes lyriques (Amérique du Nord).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): B...