Luis de Milán Vidéos
compositeur, vihueliste et poète
1
- vihuela
- Couronne d'Aragon
- compositeur ou compositrice, écrivain ou écrivaine, théoricien ou théoricienne de la musique
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-10
Actualiser
Claudio Abbado Ludwig Van Beethoven Daniel Barenboim Teatro Scala 1770 1804 1827 1933 2014
Faces of Classical Music (http•••) • Ludwig Van Beethoven +••.••(...)) ♪ Symphony No.3 in E flat major, Op.55 "Eroica" (1804) ii. Marcia funebre: Adagio assai in C minor Philharmonic Orchestra of the Teatro alla Scala Daniel Barenboim Tribute to the Master of the Teatro alla Scala, Claudio Abbado (26 June 1933 / 20 January 2014) Teatro alla Scala in Milan, 27-01-2014 (HD 1080p) • Faces of Classical Music (http•••)
Claudio Abbado Montserrat Caballé Caballé Cecilia Gasdia Lucia Valentini Terrani Chris Merritt Samuel Ramey Giuseppe Verdi Teatro Scala 1985 2013
Montserrat Caballé Sopran · Cecilia Gasdia Sopran · Lucia Valentini Terrani Mezzosopran · Peter Dvorsky Tenor · Chris Merritt Tenor · Samuel Ramey Bass· GIULIO BERTOLA Chorus Master CHOIR AND ORCHESTRA OF THE SCALA DI MILANO Claudio Abbado This DVD will be available in May 2013. Verdi first presented his Messa da Requiem in the Church of San Marco. It was his emotional response to the death of the Italian national poet Alessandro Manzoni. He poured his entire dramatic skill, the fruit of thirty years of theatrical work, into this memorial Mass. Three days after the première, Verdi performed the work at a sold-out La Scala. After that he immediately traveled to Paris to present it there. The following year, there was a regular tour that took him and his troupe with the Requiem and Aida through half of Europe all the way to Vienna. This film is about Giuseppe Verdi's Messa da Requiem and about the conductor Claudio Abbado but at the same time it is a study of the theme of transience depicting scenes of musical rehearsals and symbols of life. It shows rehearsals for this grandiose musical creation taking place in three different locations: at the church of San Marco in Milan, on the main stage at Teatro alla Scala and in one of the rehearsal rooms of the opera house. The result is an opportunity to directly compare the performances of two world-known sopranos and tenors.A film by Norbert Beilharz. Recorded at the church of San Marco, 1985 REPERTOIRE: Versi: Messa da Requiem
Johann Sebastian Bach Claudio Abbado Giuliano Carmignola Michala Petri Christian Ludwig Giuseppe Verdi Herbert Karajan Orchestra Mozart Vienna State Opera Berlin Philharmonic Teatro Municipale Valli Milan Scala 1685 1718 1720 1721 1750 1933 1968 1984 1989 2002 2004 2007 2011 2014
Claudio Abbado and the Orchestra Mozart perform Johann Sebastian Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G major, BWV 1049, at the Teatro Municipale Valli in Reggio Emilia, Italy (2007). This Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 has a very special line-up: principal violin (Giuliano Carmignola), two recorders (Michala Petri and Nikolaj Tarasov) and a string orchestra. Bach described the recorders as "Fiauti d'echo", or "echo flutes", although it’s not quite clear what he meant by that. The fourth of the Brandenburg concerts is the only work that uses "echo flutes" as far as we know today. The Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 was probably written in 1720 as one of the last or even the last of the six Brandenburg Concertos. 00:00 I. Allegro 07:11 II. Andante 10:54 III. Presto The Brandenburg Concertos (BWV 1046–1051) by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 – 1750) are a collection of six instrumental works, which Bach dedicated to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg, in 1721. They are regarded as some of the best orchestral compositions of the Baroque era. The concerts were, however, likely composed between 1718 and 1721, for Bach’s Köthener Hofkappelle. Bach’s original title, Six Concerts with Various Instruments, describes exactly what is special about these concerts; the varied use of several instruments – with different strings, wind instruments, or solo harpsichord for the concertini. Watch the other 5 Brandenburg Concertos with Abbado and the Orchestra Mozart: (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) The Orchestra Mozart was founded in 2004 to afford talented, young musicians the opportunity to play in a world-class orchestra, with world-class conductors. Claudio Abbado +••.••(...)) is considered one of the greatest conductors of all time. In 2011, Classic Voice music magazine named Abbado the most important of the top 100 living conductors. He was born into a family of musicians in Milan, Italy, on June 26, 1933. Following his study of conducting, piano, and composition at the Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory in Milan, he furthered his education at the Vienna Music Academy. In 1968, Abbado became head conductor of the Milan Scala. In the subsequent years, he could be seen on the world’s great concert stages; in Milan, London, and Chicago. Following his 1984 debut at the Vienna State Opera, he became the city’s general music director. In October of 1989, the members of the Berlin Philharmonic elected him artistic director, succeeding Herbert von Karajan. He remained in Berlin until 2002. Abbado died in Bologna on January 20, 2014, aged 80, following a long battle with cancer. EuroArts Music International GmbH Watch more concerts in your personal concert hall: (http•••) and in our Bach playlist: (http•••) Subscribe to DW Classical Music: (http•••) #JohannSebastianBach #BrandenburgConcertos #ClaudioAbbado
Johann Sebastian Bach Claudio Abbado Ottavio Dantone Christian Ludwig Giuseppe Verdi Herbert Karajan Giuliano Carmignola Jacques Zoon Orchestra Mozart Vienna State Opera Berlin Philharmonic Teatro Municipale Valli Milan Scala 1050 1403 1685 1718 1721 1750 1933 1968 1984 1989 2002 2004 2007 2011 2014
Claudio Abbado and the Orchestra Mozart perform Johann Sebastian Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D major, BWV 1050, at the Teatro Municipale Valli in Reggio Emilia, Italy (2007). Bach’s fifth Brandenburg Concerto is special in two respects: It includes a ‘concertino’ with harpsichord, transverse flute and violin, in which the three solo instruments confront the string orchestra as if in a kind of dialogue. And the slow middle movement is played by the three soloists without any string orchestra at all. This second movement is a restrained lament in which violin, flute and harpsichord enter into a canonic dialogue with each other. What is also special about the Fifth Brandenburg Concerto is that Bach gave the harpsichord a prominent role. In the first movement, this tradition-steeped keyboard instrument has a three-minute solo passage that is brilliantly handled by Ottavio Dantone (05:56). Because of this harpsichord solo, the Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 is considered perhaps the earliest example of a solo concerto for a keyboard instrument. 00:00 I. Allegro 09:00 II. Affettuoso 14:03 III. Allegro Dantone plays a harpsichord from the workshop of William Horn, which is also a feast for the eyes with its many decorations on a bright red base in the middle of the stage. The Latin quotation in the lid of the ornate keyboard instrument ‘Nulla scientia melior musica animae harmonia’ (There is no science better than the music of the soul) could have been written just for this Brandenburg Concerto, which seems to have drawn its rhythm from the pulse of the human soul. The Brandenburg Concertos (BWV 1046–1051) by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 – 1750) are a collection of six instrumental works that Bach dedicated to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg, in 1721. They are regarded as some of the best orchestral compositions of the Baroque era. The concerts were, however, likely composed between 1718 and 1721, for Bach’s Köthener Hofkappelle. Bach’s original title, Six Concerts with Various Instruments, describes exactly what is special about these concerts; the varied use of several instruments – with different strings, wind instruments, or solo harpsichord for the concertini. Watch the other 5 Brandenburg Concertos with Abbado and the Orchestra Mozart: (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) The Orchestra Mozart was founded in 2004 to afford talented young musicians the opportunity to play in a world-class orchestra, with world-class conductors. Claudio Abbado +••.••(...)) is considered one of the greatest conductors of all time. In 2011, Classic Voice music magazine named Abbado the most important of the top 100 living conductors. He was born into a family of musicians in Milan, Italy, on June 26, 1933. Following his study of conducting, piano, and composition at the Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory in Milan, he continued his education at the Vienna Music Academy. In 1968, Abbado became head conductor of the Milan Scala. In the subsequent years, he could be seen on the world’s great concert stages, in Milan, London, and Chicago. Following his 1984 debut at the Vienna State Opera, he became the city’s general music director. In October of 1989, the members of the Berlin Philharmonic elected him artistic director, succeeding Herbert von Karajan. He remained in Berlin until 2002. Abbado died in Bologna on January 20, 2014, aged 80, following a long battle with cancer. Giuliano Carmignola – Violin Ottavio Dantone – Harpsichord Jacques Zoon – Flute Orchestra Mozart Claudio Abbado – Conductor EuroArts Watch more concerts in your personal concert hall: (http•••) and in our Bach playlist: (http•••) Subscribe to DW Classical Music: (http•••) #JohannSebastianBach #BrandenburgConcertos #ClaudioAbbado
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