Alexander Campbell Mackenzie Video
compositore britannico
Commemorazioni 2025 (Morte: Alexander Campbell Mackenzie)
- opera
- Regno Unito
- compositore, insegnante di musica, professore universitario, direttore d'orchestra
Ultimo aggiornamento
2024-04-29
Aggiorna
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mackenzie 1789
Find the article, “Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Freemason Magic Flute” here: (http•••) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe stated, "It is enough that the crowd would find pleasure in seeing the spectacle; at the same time, its high significance will not escape the initiates." Kenneth Mackenzie's The Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia on the term "Baphomet", "More cannot be said here without improperly revealing what we are bound to hele, conceal, and never reveal." Find the Cylopaedia here: (http•••) reative=390957&creativeASIN=1564594203&linkCode=as2&tag=athisdea-20&linkId=U LWYKEP5EFKIACSR ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Worldview and Science Examiner: (http•••) True Freethinker: (http•••) Facebook: (http•••) Twitter: (http•••) Flickr: (http•••) Google+ (http•••)
Lionel Tertis Pugnani Alexander Mackenzie Oskar Nedbal Gerald Walenn Arnold Bax Frank Bridge Gustav Holst Benjamin Dale York Bowen Ralph Vaughan Williams William Walton Paul Hindemith Shore Montagnana Albert Sammons Edward Elgar Bohemian Quartet Griller Quartet Proms 1717 1876 1900 1906 1920 1928 1930 1937 1949 1950 1975
Lionel Tertis plays his own arrangement of Pugnani's 'Prelude and Allegro,' recorded on 8 December 1930 with piano by Ethel Hobday. From Wikipedia: Lionel Tertis, CBE (29 December 1876 – 22 February 1975) was an English violist. He was one of the first viola players to achieve international fame and a noted teacher. Tertis was born in West Hartlepool, the son of Polish-Jewish immigrants. He first studied violin in Leipzig, Germany and at the Royal Academy of Music (RAM) in London. There he was encouraged by the principal, Alexander Mackenzie, to take up the viola instead. Under the additional influence of Oskar Nedbal, he did so and rapidly became one of the best known violists of his time, touring Europe and the US as a soloist. As Professor of Viola at the RAM (from 1900), he encouraged his colleagues and students to compose for the instrument, thereby greatly expanding its repertoire. In 1906, Tertis was temporarily in the famous Bohemian Quartet to replace the violist/composer Oskar Nedbal and later he took the viola position in the Gerald Walenn Quartet. Composers such as Arnold Bax, Frank Bridge, Gustav Holst, Benjamin Dale, York Bowen, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and William Walton wrote pieces for him. The Walton piece was his Viola Concerto; however, Tertis did not give the world premiere as he found it difficult to comprehend at the time; that honour went to Paul Hindemith. His pupil Bernard Shore took on the second performance at the Proms in August 1930. Tertis first performed the work a month later at the International Society for Contemporary Music festival in Liège. Over the next three years he gave five more performances of the concerto. He owned a 1717 Montagnana from 1920 to 1937 which he found during one of his concert tours to Paris in 1920, and took a chance in acquiring. According to his memoirs, it was 'shown to me in an unplayable condition, without bridge, strings or fingerboard.... No case was available – it was such a large instrument 17 1/8 inches – so my wife came to the rescue by wrapping it in her waterproof coat, and that is how it was taken across the English Channel.' Tertis preferred a large viola to get an especially rich tone from his instrument. Knowing that some would find a 17-1/8-inch instrument too large he created his own Tertis model, which provides many of the tonal advantages of the larger instrument in a manageable 16-3/4-inch size. Tertis sold the 1717 Montegnana to his pupil Bernard Shore in 1937, who in turn passed it on to his pupil Roger Chase. Along with William Murdoch (piano), Albert Sammons, and Lauri Kennedy, Tertis formed the Chamber Music Players. He also encouraged and coached Sidney Griller as he worked to found the Griller Quartet in 1928, and influenced the Griller's enthusiasm for the first Viennese School. In 1937, while at the height of his powers, he announced his retirement from the concert platform to concentrate on teaching. He appeared as soloist only one more time, at a special concert in 1949 to an invited audience at the RAM to help raise money for his fund to encourage the composition of music for the viola. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1950 New Year's Honours. Tertis composed several original works and also arranged many pieces not originally for the viola, such as Edward Elgar's Cello Concerto. He was the author of a number of publications about string playing, the viola in particular, and his own life. They include Cinderella No More and My Viola and I. Lionel Tertis died on 22 February 1975 in Wimbledon, London. He was 98 years old. I transferred this side from Australian Columbia DOX 267.
Franz Liszt Vardan Mamikonian Mackenzie Heck 2015 2017
JUST TESTING OUT THE SLIDESHOW CAPABILITIES OF WINDOWS MOVIE MAKER, AND ADDING SOUND TO A VIDEO ETC. SINCE ON MOST OF MY VIDEOS I'VE USED THE YOU TUBE AUDIO SWAP LIBRARY. THIS TOOK LIKE LESS THAN 5 MINUTES TO MAKE, I DRAGGED IN SOME EYE CANDY, AND PUT A QUICK TRANSITION BETWEEN THE PIX, AND MADE IT BETWEEN ALL THE PIX AT ONCE, THEN PICKED OUT SOME MUSIC, THE SAME LENGTH AS THE VIDEO (YOU CAN NEVER GO WRONG WITH THE MUSIC OF LISZT) AND THAT WAS ABOUT IT, LESS THAN 5 MINUTES OF MESSIN' AROUND WITH WINDOWS MOVIE MAKER, REAL SIMPLE, NO THOUGHT AS TO THE ARRANGEMENT OF PIX, JUST RANDOM STUFF, AND AS IT TURNED OUT, IT LOOKED GOOD ENOUGH TO SHARE, WITHOUT EVEN TRYING REAL HARD......... I WASN'T INTENDING TO SHARE IT, SINCE I DIDN'T PUT ANY EFFORT INTO IT, JUST MESSIN' AROUND, BUT WHAT THE HECK, HERE IT IS.....CAN'T GO WRONG WITH A BEAUTY LIKE MACKENZIE EITHER !!! QUITE AN ASTONISHING, EPIC, TRUE BEAUTY, AND ONE OF OUR BIGGEST FUTURE LEADING LADIES, GUARANTEED !!! A QUICK LOOK BACK NOW AT HER ALREADY REMARKABLE CAREER !!! (THE ACTING SCENE HERE IS FROM THE TV SHOW HAWAII FIFTY, AND IS FROM THE SEVENTH EPISODE THEY EVER DID, IN THE FIRST SEASON, AND YOU CAN SEE IT IF YOU HAVE NET-FLIX) / THIS IS A SMALL SEGMENT OF THE EPIC, HALF AN HOUR, GREATEST PIANO SOLO MASTERPIECE EVER WRITTEN, BY THE GREATEST COMPOSER / PIANIST TO EVER LIVE, FRANZ LISZT !!! / THINGS TO STUDY TO AVOID TROUBLE !!! (P.S. ADDED 4-2-17) - TWO MORE GOOD HINTS FOR ANYONE THAT MIGHT BE LOOKING FOR THINGS TO STUDY, TO AVOID TROUBLE, AND THE STUPID, IDIOTIC WORLD OF DRUGS AND THE MORONIC WORLD OF THE "DRUGGIE" - OBVIOUSLY, I STUDY LISZT, THE GREATEST GENIUS TO EVER LIVE ON EARTH, IN MY OPINION..........BUT I REALIZE IT IS A LITTLE MUCH TO ASK PEOPLE TO TAKE UP THE PIANO, SO MY OTHER OBSESSION FOR THE LAST 6 MONTHS IS THE GREATEST "BIG PICTURE" GUY I'VE FOUND, THANKS TO "YOU TUBE", DAVE HUNT.......HE IS LITTLE BORING, AND FUMBLES A LITTLE VERBALLY, CAUSE HE IS AN OLD FART IN HIS 80's, BUT IF PEOPLE LISTEN ALL THE WAY TO THE END OF HIS SPEECHES, OR TALKS, OR TEACHINGS HERE ON YOU TUBE, LIKE HIS GREATEST ONE CALLED "COSMOS, CREATOR AND HUMAN DESTINY" PUT THAT IN THE SEARCH, AND YOU WILL FIND THAT HE SEES A BIGGER PICTURE THAN ANYONE, IF YOU CAN FIND ANYONE, MORE COMPREHENSIVE, AND SEEING A BIGGER PICTURE THAN HIM, LET ME KNOW, CAUSE I HAVEN'T FOUND ANYONE CLOSE YET, HE COVERED A LOT OF GROUND IN ALL HIS BOOKS AND TEACHINGS, AND WILL PROVIDE AT LEAST A FEW YEARS OF MIND BLOWING IMPROVEMENT IN A PERSON'S LIFE, AS OPPOSED TO JUST BLOWING ONE'S MIND ON DRUGS..........ANYWAY, THE GUY WAS FREAKIN' AMAAAAAAAZZZZZZZZING, CHECK HIM OUT, (THAT'S FOR ANYONE READING THIS, SINCE I REALIZE, AT 16 IN APRIL 2017 THE "FOY" FACTOR IS A BIT YOUNG TO APPRECIATE, OR NEED A GREAT TEACHER LIKE DAVE HUNT........)
Lionel Tertis Liszt Alexander Mackenzie Oskar Nedbal Gerald Walenn Arnold Bax Frank Bridge Gustav Holst Benjamin Dale York Bowen Ralph Vaughan Williams William Walton Paul Hindemith Shore Montagnana Albert Sammons Edward Elgar Bohemian Quartet Griller Quartet Proms 1717 1876 1900 1906 1920 1928 1930 1937 1949 1950 1975
Lionel Tertis plays his own arrangement of 'Liebestraume,' recorded on 8 December 1930 with piano by Ethel Hobday. From Wikipedia: Lionel Tertis, CBE (29 December 1876 – 22 February 1975) was an English violist. He was one of the first viola players to achieve international fame and a noted teacher. Tertis was born in West Hartlepool, the son of Polish-Jewish immigrants. He first studied violin in Leipzig, Germany and at the Royal Academy of Music (RAM) in London. There he was encouraged by the principal, Alexander Mackenzie, to take up the viola instead. Under the additional influence of Oskar Nedbal, he did so and rapidly became one of the best known violists of his time, touring Europe and the US as a soloist. As Professor of Viola at the RAM (from 1900), he encouraged his colleagues and students to compose for the instrument, thereby greatly expanding its repertoire. In 1906, Tertis was temporarily in the famous Bohemian Quartet to replace the violist/composer Oskar Nedbal and later he took the viola position in the Gerald Walenn Quartet. Composers such as Arnold Bax, Frank Bridge, Gustav Holst, Benjamin Dale, York Bowen, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and William Walton wrote pieces for him. The Walton piece was his Viola Concerto; however, Tertis did not give the world premiere as he found it difficult to comprehend at the time; that honour went to Paul Hindemith. His pupil Bernard Shore took on the second performance at the Proms in August 1930. Tertis first performed the work a month later at the International Society for Contemporary Music festival in Liège. Over the next three years he gave five more performances of the concerto. He owned a 1717 Montagnana from 1920 to 1937 which he found during one of his concert tours to Paris in 1920, and took a chance in acquiring. According to his memoirs, it was 'shown to me in an unplayable condition, without bridge, strings or fingerboard.... No case was available – it was such a large instrument 17 1/8 inches – so my wife came to the rescue by wrapping it in her waterproof coat, and that is how it was taken across the English Channel.' Tertis preferred a large viola to get an especially rich tone from his instrument. Knowing that some would find a 17-1/8-inch instrument too large he created his own Tertis model, which provides many of the tonal advantages of the larger instrument in a manageable 16-3/4-inch size. Tertis sold the 1717 Montegnana to his pupil Bernard Shore in 1937, who in turn passed it on to his pupil Roger Chase. Along with William Murdoch (piano), Albert Sammons, and Lauri Kennedy, Tertis formed the Chamber Music Players. He also encouraged and coached Sidney Griller as he worked to found the Griller Quartet in 1928, and influenced the Griller's enthusiasm for the first Viennese School. In 1937, while at the height of his powers, he announced his retirement from the concert platform to concentrate on teaching. He appeared as soloist only one more time, at a special concert in 1949 to an invited audience at the RAM to help raise money for his fund to encourage the composition of music for the viola. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1950 New Year's Honours. Tertis composed several original works and also arranged many pieces not originally for the viola, such as Edward Elgar's Cello Concerto. He was the author of a number of publications about string playing, the viola in particular, and his own life. They include Cinderella No More and My Viola and I. Lionel Tertis died on 22 February 1975 in Wimbledon, London. He was 98 years old. I transferred this side from Australian Columbia DOX 267.
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