Miwako Matsumoto Video
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Johannes Brahms Matsumoto Clayton Stephenson John Knowles Paine 2021
Enako Matsumoto, violin Daniel Son, viola Noah Lee, cello Clayton Stephenson, piano Music 189R Final Performances December 8, 2021 7:00 PM John Knowles Paine Hall
Beethoven Uru Daniel Barenboim Elisabeth Leonskaja Seiji Ozawa Saito Matsumoto Nikolaj Znaider Riccardo Chailly Claudio Abbado Vladimir Jurowski Christian Thielemann Orquesta Gewandhaus Orquesta Festival Lucerna Gewandhaus Festival Lucerna 1900 2000
CICLO GRANDES MAESTROS E INTÉRPRETES DE BEETHOVEN Todos los viernes de diciembre ARG/CHL/PAR/URU 21:00 BOL 20:00 COL/ECU 19:00 Viernes 4 de diciembre Concierto para piano n.º 1, de Ludwig van Beethoven – Daniel Barenboim & Orquesta Estatal de Berlín Maestros del pianismo – Elisabeth Leonskaja interpreta sonatas para piano n.os 30, 31 & 32, de Ludwig van Beethoven Viernes 11 de diciembre Seiji Ozawa & Orquesta Saito Kinen en el Matsumoto Festival: Sinfonías n.os 2 & 7, de Ludwig van Beethoven Concierto para violín de Ludwig van Beethoven – Nikolaj Znaider, Orquesta de la Gewandhaus & Riccardo Chailly Viernes 18 de diciembre Sinfonía n.º 3, «Eroica», de Ludwig van Beethoven – Orquesta del Festival de Lucerna & Claudio Abbado Vladimir Jurowski dirige Beethoven – Orquesta del Siglo de las Luces Viernes 25 de diciembre Vladimir Jurowski dirige Beethoven – Orquesta del Siglo de las Luces Ludwig van Beethoven: Missa Solemnis – Christian Thielemann & Orquesta Estatal de Dresde Sintonízanos: Cablevisión 503 | Zapping 136 | Tigo-UNE 323 | TVCable 926 | Copaco 352 y Tigo 513 | TCC 462 Nuevo Siglo 818 y PuntaCable 834. ️ Si aún no disfrutas de Allegro HD en tu hogar, conoce cómo pedirlo aquí: (http•••) Facebook: www.facebook.com/AllegroHD Instagram: @allegrohd.tv Twitter: @AllegroHD YouTube: (http•••)
André Watts Seiji Ozawa Rachmaninoff Leonard Bernstein Fleischer Norton Nagano Beethoven Hideo Saito Charles Munch Koussevitzky Herbert Karajan Matsumoto New York Philharmonic Orchestra Philadelphia Orchestra Boston Symphony Orchestra Toronto Symphony Orchestra San Francisco Symphony Orchestra Metropolitan Opera Vienna State Opera Tanglewood Ravinia Festival Saito Kinen Festival Matsumoto 1602 1935 1959 1964 1965 1968 1969 1970 1973 1976 1988 1992 1998 2002 2010 2011 2015
I. Allegro ma non tanto (D minor) 0:06 II. Intermezzo: Adagio (A Major-D♭ Major-C♯ Major) 16:02 III. Finale: Alla breve (D minor-D Major) 25:50 Andre Watts, piano Seiji Ozawa, conductor New York Philharmonic Orchestra ANDRE WATTS: "André Watts is a German-born American pianist who was known for a surpassing technique and understated manner that made him a favoured concert performer. Watts was the son of an African American soldier and a Hungarian mother. At age nine he made his debut at a Philadelphia Orchestra children’s concert. He attracted wide attention when at age 16 he performed on television under conductor Leonard Bernstein. Though already a mature musician, he chose to continue study with Leon Fleischer. In 1976 he gave a concert that was the first live television broadcast of a solo recital in history. His popularity continued into the 21st century. Watts was the recipient of numerous honours, including the Avery Fisher Prize (1988) and the National Medal of Arts (2011)." SEIJI OZAWA: "American orchestra conductor Seiji Ozawa is noted for his energetic style and sweeping performances of 19th-century Western symphonic works. Among the honors he received throughout his career were two Emmy Awards for his performances on public television specials, the French Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, and honorary doctorates in music from Harvard University, the University of Massachusetts, the New England Conservatory of Music, and Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. In February 1998 he joined musicians around the world via satellite link to close the opening ceremonies at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, with Ludwig van Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. Seiji Ozawa was born on September 1, 1935, in Hoten, Manchukuo (now in China), of Japanese parents. He grew up in Japan and showed interest in Western music as a child. He had hoped to become a pianist, but at age 16 he injured his hands. Ozawa then turned to conducting, studying with Hideo Saito at the Toho School in Tokyo. In 1959, after conducting with the NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai) Symphony Orchestra of Japan and the Japanese Philharmonic, Ozawa went to Europe, where he won the Besançon International Conductors’ Competition. The following summer he studied in the United States under Charles Munch at the Berkshire Music Festival in Tanglewood, Massachusetts, where he won the Koussevitzky Prize. At that time he began a long and fruitful association with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. After a further year of study with Herbert von Karajan in Berlin, Ozawa was engaged as an assistant conductor of the New York Philharmonic by Leonard Bernstein. From 1964 to 1968 Ozawa served as music director of the Ravinia Festival in Chicago. He became music director of Canada’s Toronto Symphony Orchestra in 1965 and of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra in 1970. In 1973 Ozawa was appointed conductor and music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, a position that had for years been the exclusive preserve of European conductors. His tenure with the symphony lasted until 2002, the longest of any active music director with a major orchestra. Ozawa became increasingly interested in opera during the 1990s. In 1992 he debuted with the Metropolitan Opera in New York and, as a tribute to Hideo Saito, cofounded the Saito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto, Japan. He was principal conductor of the Vienna State Opera from 2002 to 2010. Early in 2010 Ozawa underwent surgery for esophageal cancer, which forced him to retreat from the public stage for the better part of the year. Ozawa made his return to public performance at the Saito Kinen Festival that September. Ongoing health issues continued to restrict his performance schedule, but he nonetheless made occasional appearances, notably at the Saito Kinen Festival. It was renamed the Seiji Ozawa Matsumoto Festival in his honor in 2015. In 2011 Ozawa received the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize for music. He was named a Kennedy Center honoree in 2015." Remastered By: Wayne Yang, USA-Taiwan
Guerrero Yamamoto Koyama Oguri Kaneko Suzuki Hideo Kojima Shimizu Yamaguchi Odagiri Okamoto Matsumoto Sato Harada 2003
Azumi, joven huérfana, es acogida por un anciano guerrero del Japón feudal, maestro en artes marciales, que la entrenará junto a otros nueve jóvenes en el dominio de las mejores técnicas del combate de sable. Tras muchos años de perfeccionamiento, los diez compañeros, convertidos en guerreros asesinos, tendrán que enfrentarse a la prueba definitiva: derrotar a un ejército de despiadados tiranos feudales. Vertiginosa y sangrienta adaptación cinematográfica del aclamado cómic manga, que hará las delicias de cualquier fan del género. El éxito de la cinta ha dado pie a una secuela protagonizada por la misma actriz, la joven japonesa Aya Ueto. TÍTULO ORIGINAL: Azumi AÑO: 2003 DURACIÓN: 128 min. PAÍS: Japón DIRECCIÓN: Ryûhei Kitamura GUIÓN: Mataichiro Yamamoto, Isao Kiriyama (Manga: Yū Koyama) MÚSICA: Tarô Iwashiro FOTOGRAFÍA: Takumi Furuya REPARTO: Aya Ueto, Shun Oguri, Hiroki Narimiya, Kenji Kohashi, Takatoshi Kaneko, Yûma Ishigaki, Yasutaka Sano, Shinji Suzuki, Hideo Kojima, Kazuya Shimizu, Eita, Shôgo Yamaguchi, Jô Odagiri, Aya Okamoto, Minoru Matsumoto, Hideo Sakaki, Ken'ichi Endô, Tak Sakaguchi, Ryo, Masatô Ibu, Kei Sato, Kazuki Kitamura, Naoto Takenaka, Yoshio Harada PRODUCTORA: Amuse Soft Entertainment, Inc., Dentsu Inc, Nippon Herald, Pony Canyon, Sedic, Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, Toho, Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) GÉNERO: Acción. Aventuras | Gore. Japón feudal. Manga. Live-Action ̶E̶̶L̶̶ ̶̶L̶̶A̶̶S̶̶H̶̶A̶̶C̶̶O̶ DERECHOS RESERVADOS
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- cronologia: Cantanti lirici (Asia).
- Indici (per ordine alfabetico): M...