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Antonín Dvořák Pavel Šporcl 2005
Provided to YouTube by Supraphon Romance for Violin and Piano in F minor, Op. 11, B 38 · Antonín Dvořák · Pavel Šporcl · Petr Jiříkovský Dvořák: Works for Violin and Piano ℗ 2005 SUPRAPHON a.s. Released on: 2005-11-14 Auto-generated by YouTube.
František Ondříček Antonín Dvořák Pavel Šporcl Royal Philharmonic 1857 1891 1922
František Ondříček (29 April 1857 – 12 April 1922) was a Czech violinist and composer. He gave the first performance of the Violin Concerto by Antonín Dvořák, and his achievements were recognised by the rare award of honorary membership of the Philharmonic Society of London (now the Royal Philharmonic Society) in 1891. Performers: Violin: Pavel Šporcl Piano: Petr Jiríkovsky. Painting: Ippolito Caffi - Venice at Night.
Saint Saens Generali Smetana Smetana Hall 2010
www.facebook.com/pavelsporcl Pavel SPORCL - Generali Tour 2010 "Homage to Masters" (Pocta mistrům) Pavel Sporcl - violin, Prague Radio Symp. Orchestra, cond. T.Koutnik, Smetana Hall Prague, 30.11.2010
Richard Strauss Lior Shambadal Beethoven Karl Klindworth Bruch Franz Strauss Franz Wüllner Liszt Henry Wood Rudolf Kempe Ulf Hoelscher Busoni Bamberg Korngold Pavel Šporcl Kout Gram Jane Glover Boris Belkin Vladimir Ashkenazy Alexander Lazarev Wolfgang Sawallisch Bamberg Symphony Orchestra Munich Philharmonic Prague Symphony Orchestra Israel Chamber Orchestra London Philharmonic Orchestra Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra Moscow State Symphony Orchestra Bösendorfersaal Proms 1872 1880 1882 1883 1890 1896 1897 1902 1903 1904 1907 1908 1910 1912 1976 1991 1993 1999 2009 2013 2014
00:00 1. Allegro 14:45 2. Lento, ma non troppo 20:33 3. Rondo: Prestissimo Violin: Ingolf Turban Bamberger Symphoniker Conductor: Lior Shambadal ℗ 1993 Claves Records This violin concerto was written during the composer's teenage years while he was still attending his last two years of school, and is less distinctive than many of his later orchestral works. Despite this it contains some bold and inventive solo writing as well as occasional passages that hint at the composer's mature harmonic style. Though written in the romantic tradition of its time, it hints at the young composer's reverence of masters of the preceding classical period, especially Mozart and Beethoven. In 1880 he had first begun to turn to large scale compositions during a tempestuous compositional interval after having decided to devote his life to composition, including a symphony in D minor (TrV 94), which was well received. The following year he began to sketch the Violin Concerto in D minor, among several other compositions. Although it is today rarely performed, it received encouraging reviews, including the following by Karl Klindworth from May 1882, before its premiere: So far as the form of the pieces is concerned there is little to find fault with, but I could wish for content of greater significance before the young composer embarks on a public career. Even so, I like the violin concerto best, and I should be delighted if it turned out to be effective and viable enough to banish Bruch's G minor from our concert halls. The work was dedicated to Benno Walter, the concertmaster of the Munich Court Orchestra, and also Strauss's violin teacher and relative. (Benno Walter was the son of (Johann) Georg Walter, and the first cousin of Richard Strauss's father Franz Strauss, and hence Richard's cousin once removed; Richard called him "cousin", but he is sometimes referred to as his "uncle".) Premieres and performance history: The Violin Concerto was first performed publicly on 5 December 1882, in the Bösendorfersaal of the Herrengasse in Vienna. The soloist was the dedicatee Benno Walter. Strauss himself played his own piano reduction of the orchestral parts. Walter and Strauss played this violin-piano version again in Munich on 8 February 1883. The concerto's debut with violin and orchestra had to wait another seven years. On 4 March 1890, in Cologne, Benno Walter played with an orchestra conducted by Franz Wüllner. The first time Strauss himself conducted the concerto was on 17 February 1896, in the Liszt-Verein in Leipzig. The soloist was the 23-year-old (Gustav) Alfred Krasselt (3 June 1872 - 27 September 1908), concert master of Munich's Kaim Orchestra (later the Munich Philharmonic). Strauss went on to perform the concerto either as piano accompanist (Dresden 27 November 1902, Birmingham (UK) 10 December 1903 (Max Mossel on violin), Munich 24 June 1910 (Alfred Rose on violin)), or conducting with orchestra (Munich 13 January 1897 (Alfred Krasselt), Birmingham UK 2 December 1904 (Max Mossel), Bonn 7 November 1907). The concerto has been performed only once at the London Proms: on 18 September 1912 at the Queens Hall, with Sir Henry Wood conducting The New Queen's Hall Orchestra with violinist Arthur Catterall. The first recording was the 1976 HMV release by Rudolf Kempe and the Staatskapelle Dresden with Ulf Hoelscher on violin, which was remastered and reissued in the Warner Classics 2013 CD. R. Strauss: Complete Orchestral Works (2013) Ulf Hoelscher Rudolf Kempe, Staatskapelle Dresden Warner Classics 4317802 Bruch, Busoni & Strauss: Violin Concertos (1999) Ingolf Turban Lior Shambadal, Bamberg Symphony Orchestra Claves - 509318 Korngold & Strauss - Violin Concertos (2009) Pavel Šporcl Jirí Kout, Prague Symphony Orchestra Supraphon SU39622 R. Strauss: Violin Concerto & Violin Sonata (2013) Thomas Albertus Irnberger Martin Sieghart, Israel Chamber Orchestra. Gramola - GRAM98992 Strauss & Headington: Violin Concertos (1991) Xue-Wei Jane Glover, London Philharmonic Orchestra ASV: CDDCA780 Strauss - The Concertos (1999). Boris Belkin Vladimir Ashkenazy, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra Decca - Double Decca - E4602962 Strauss & Bartok: Violin Concertos (2014) Valentin Zhuk Alexander Lazarev, Moscow State Symphony Orchestra Audiophile - APL101519 R. Strauss: Complete Chamber Music (2014) Ernö Sebestyen Wolfgang Sawallisch (piano) Brilliant Classics - 9231 (http•••)
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