- published: 20 Mar 2012
- views: 829
23:13
Jean FRANÇAIX Guitar Concerto (1982/83) E.Segre, SDR, H.Richter, 1992
Jean FRANÇAIX (1912-1997): Concerto pour guitare et orchestre à cordes (1982/83) -complete...
published: 20 Mar 2012
Jean FRANÇAIX Guitar Concerto (1982/83) E.Segre, SDR, H.Richter, 1992
Jean FRANÇAIX (1912-1997): Concerto pour guitare et orchestre à cordes (1982/83) -complete-
0:05 / I. Allegro [3'14'']
3:21 / II. Larghetto [5'05'']
8:27 / III. Presto ma non troppo [4'19'']
12:51 / IV. Larghetto [4'07'']
17:02 / V. Allegrissimo [6'09'']
Emanuele SEGRE, guitar - Südwestdeutsches Kammerorchester -
Hans Richter, conductor (rec: 1992 Süddeutschen R., Stuttgart)
http://www.jeanfrancaix.org
_________________________________________________________
full CD: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL182B002DFF8C7A58
_________________________________________________________
(c) COPYRIGHT Disclaimer, Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
- published: 20 Mar 2012
- views: 829
20:42
Hamilton Harty/Hallé - Mozart: Symphony #35 "Haffner" (entire)
Recorded in 1926.
I. Allegro con spirito
5:55 II. Andante
13:04 III. Menuetto
16:42 IV....
published: 28 Jun 2012
Hamilton Harty/Hallé - Mozart: Symphony #35 "Haffner" (entire)
Recorded in 1926.
I. Allegro con spirito
5:55 II. Andante
13:04 III. Menuetto
16:42 IV. Presto
Thanks to Rolf for allowing me to use his excellent transfers. You can find this and many other wonderful selections and information at his website: http://satyr78lp.blogspot.com.
Sir (Herbert) Hamilton Harty (4 December 1879 -- 19 February 1941) was an Irish and British composer, conductor, pianist and organist. In his capacity as a conductor, he was particularly noted as an interpreter of the music of Berlioz and he was much respected as a piano accompanist of exceptional prowess. Harty still stands as one of the most significant musicians that Northern Ireland has ever produced.
Harty was born in Hillsborough, County Down, Ireland, the fourth of ten children of church organist William Michael Harty (1852--1918) and his wife, Annie Elizabeth, the daughter of Joseph Hamilton Richards, a soldier from Bray. Raised an Anglican, Harty played viola, piano, and organ as a child. Initially following in his father's footsteps, he held positions as a church organist from age twelve. He moved to London in 1901 to pursue a musical career as accompanist, and accompanied an impressive list of soloists, among them John McCormack, W.H. Squire, Joseph Szigeti, Fritz Kreisler, and soprano Agnes Nicholls, whom he married on 15 July 1904. His considerable abilities as a performer were further highlighted when he appeared as the soloist in the premiere performance of his virtuosic "Piano Concerto", one of his finest works.
Nicholls' professional relationship with the Hungarian conductor Hans Richter was of great importance to Harty. After performing in Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen under Richter in 1908, she approached him on her husband's behalf. It was through this connection that Harty secured his first important conducting engagement: a performance of his tone poem With the Wild Geese with the London Symphony Orchestra in March 1911. The performance was a success, and he was engaged to conduct the orchestra again during its 1912--13 season. Hoping to reinforce his status as a composer--conductor, Harty gave the first performance of his Variations on a Dublin Air with the same orchestra in February 1913. Unfortunately, neither the critics nor the public shared his enthusiasm for his music: his concerts made a loss and he was not invited back for the following season. Nevertheless, his reputation as a conductor continued to grow, and he was invited to perform Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and Bizet's Carmen at Covent Garden in 1913. But he had little sympathy with opera, preferring symphonic music instead. In January 1914 he conducted the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and in April he made his début with the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester. His career was interrupted briefly by the First World War: in June 1916 he joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and was posted for duties in the North Sea, and he rose to the rank of lieutenant in 1917 before leaving in June 1918. In December he substituted for an indisposed Sir Thomas Beecham at a performance of Handel's Messiah with the Hallé Orchestra, and on 27 March 1919 he again replaced Beecham at a performance of J. S. Bach's Mass in B minor.
Harty did most of his composing between 1901 and 1920, including his Irish Symphony, his tone poem With the Wild Geese, his Violin Concerto, and his setting of Ode to a Nightingale for soprano and orchestra, premiered by Nicholls.
After short stints with the London Symphony Orchestra and elsewhere in England, Harty became permanent conductor of the Hallé Orchestra in 1920, a position that he held until 1933. Under his baton, the Hallé became one of the premier orchestras in England. He was knighted in 1925. In 1926 he commissioned a symphony from Ernest John Moeran. The Symphony in G minor (1937) was the result, but by then Harty was too ill to conduct the premiere. He did, however, eventually accept the dedication of the work, after initially falling out with Moeran.
From 1931 to 1936, Harty toured in America and elsewhere, conducting in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Rochester, and Sydney.
Harty's health began to deteriorate sharply in 1936: a malignant brain tumour was discovered and surgery was required. After both the growth and his right eye were removed, Harty convalesced in Ireland and Jamaica during 1937 and 1938. His illness continued to trouble him, and he conducted for the last time on 1 December 1940. Because of Harty's estrangement from his wife, the conductor was nursed through his final illness by his secretary and intimate friend, Olive Elfreda Baguley. Harty died in Hove; after cremation his ashes were placed in Hillsborough parish church.
- published: 28 Jun 2012
- views: 169
13:28
LEONARD BERNSTEIN & VPhO x 2 MOZART Concerto Nº17 K.V.453 II-III LIVE
The orchestra can trace its origins to 1842, when Otto Nicolai formed the Philharmonische ...
published: 30 Dec 2012
LEONARD BERNSTEIN & VPhO x 2 MOZART Concerto Nº17 K.V.453 II-III LIVE
The orchestra can trace its origins to 1842, when Otto Nicolai formed the Philharmonische Academie; which was a fully independent orchestra and which took all its decisions by a democratic vote of all its members. These are principles the orchestra still holds today.
With Nicolai's departure in 1847, the orchestra nearly folded, and was not very active until 1860, when Karl Anton Eckert joined as conductor. He gave a series of four subscription concerts, and since then, the orchestra has given concerts continuously.
From 1875 to 1898 Hans Richter was subscription conductor, except for the season 1882/1883 when he was in dispute with the orchestral committee. During Richter's tenure, the orchestra gave the premieres of the 2nd and 3rd symphonies of Johannes Brahms, and the 8th symphony of Anton Bruckner.
Gustav Mahler held the post from 1898 to 1901, and under his baton the orchestra played abroad for the first time at the 1900 Paris World Exposition. Subsequent conductors were Felix Weingartner, Wilhelm Furtwängler and Clemens Krauss.
Vienna Philharmonic at the rehearsal, Felix Weingartner is conducting. Engraving by Ferdinand Schmutzer (1926)
Since 1933, the orchestra has had no single subscription conductor, but instead has a number of guest conductors. These have included a great many of the world's best known conductors, including Richard Strauss, Arturo Toscanini, Hans Knappertsbusch, Wilhelm Furtwängler, John Barbirolli, Carlo Maria Giulini, Georg Solti, Erich Kleiber, James Levine, Zubin Mehta, Carlos Kleiber, Claudio Abbado, Riccardo Muti, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Pierre Boulez, Lorin Maazel, Mariss Jansons, Daniel Barenboim and Valery Gergiev. Three conductors, however, were particularly associated with the post-war era: Herbert von Karajan and Karl Böhm, who were made honorary conductors, and Leonard Bernstein, who was made an honorary member of the orchestra. The orchestra made their first US tour in 1956 under the batons of Carl Schuricht and André Cluytens.
Each New Year's Day since 1 January 1941, the VPO has sponsored the Vienna New Year's Concerts, dedicated to the music of the Strauss family composers, and particularly that of Johann Strauss II. (Wikipedia)
- published: 30 Dec 2012
- views: 277
129:11
Bruckner Symphony No. 8 Knappertsbusc Berliner Philharmonie 1951
ブルックナー 交響曲第8番ハ短調 WAB.108
指揮ハンス・クナッパーツブッシュ ベルリン・フィルハーモニー管弦楽団
1951年録音.
1:11より雪
ブラームス ピアノ協奏...
published: 16 Feb 2013
Bruckner Symphony No. 8 Knappertsbusc Berliner Philharmonie 1951
ブルックナー 交響曲第8番ハ短調 WAB.108
指揮ハンス・クナッパーツブッシュ ベルリン・フィルハーモニー管弦楽団
1951年録音.
1:11より雪
ブラームス ピアノ協奏曲第2番変ロ長調 Op.83 P
ハンス・リヒター=ハーザー 指揮ヘルベルト・フォン・カラヤン ベルリン・フィルハーモニー管弦楽団 1958年11月録音
Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in C minor is the last Symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor Hans Richter in 1892 in Vienna. It is dedicated to the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria.
This symphony is sometimes nicknamed The Apocalyptic, but -- as with the nicknames The Tragic (for the Fifth Symphony), The Philosophic (for the Sixth), and The Lyric (for the Seventh) -- this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself.
Hans Knappertsbusch (12 March 1888 -- 25 October 1965) was a German conductor, best known for his performances of the music of Richard Wagner, Anton Bruckner and Richard Strauss.
Knappertsbusch was born in Elberfeld, today's Wuppertal. He studied philosophy at Bonn University and conducting at the Cologne Conservatory with Fritz Steinbach. For a few summers, he assisted Siegfried Wagner and Hans Richter at Bayreuth. He began his career with conducting jobs in Elberfeld (1913-1918), Leipzig (1918-1919) and Dessau (1919-1922). When Bruno Walter left Munich for New York, Knappertsbusch succeeded him as General Music Director of the Bavarian State Orchestra and the Bavarian State Opera, with a lifelong contract. Knappertsbusch later refused to join the Nazi party.
He incurred the wrath of Goebbels by asking a German diplomat in the Netherlands whether he was a "Muss-Nazi" (someone who was forced to join the Nazi Party for career reasons): as a result his Munich contract was revoked.[1] Hitler himself was involved in the decision to dismiss him.[2] In 1936 Sir Thomas Beecham invited him to Covent Garden to conduct but his permit to leave Germany was withheld.[3] In the late 1930s he went to Vienna to conduct at the Wiener Staatsoper, thus ignoring the Nazis' policy of not allowing German artists to work in Austria. At the same time he became one of the emerging artists of the Salzburg Festival. Knappertsbusch continued to appear in Vienna and Salzburg during the German occupation of Austria.
ラインラント地方の都市エルバーフェルト(現在はヴッパータール市の一部)にあるアルコール蒸留会社を経営していたグスタフの次男として生まれる。ギュンター・ヴァント、ホルスト・シュタインと同郷である。子供の頃から音楽家に憧れていたが、家族、特に母と兄(後に会社を継ぐ)の反対もあり、ボン大学に進み哲学を学んだ。後にミュンヘンでも哲学を学び、卒業論文は『パルジファルにおけるクンドリー」であったと言われる。音楽の勉強もケルン音楽大学で行っており、ブラームス演奏で有名なフリッツ・シュタインバッハに指揮法を学ぶ。
1909年から1912年にはバイロイト音楽祭に、ハンス・リヒターの助手として潜り込むことに成功。それ以後、故郷のエルバーフェルトやライプツィヒ、デッサウ、ミュールハイム(1910年に、ここでデビューしたと伝えられる)など各地の歌劇場やオーケストラで修行に入り、34歳の時の1922年には、ブルーノ・ワルターの後任としてミュンヘンのバイエルン州立歌劇場の音楽監督に就任する。翌1923年にはウィーンに初めて進出し、ウィーン・フィルハーモニー管弦楽団とも1929年のザルツブルク音楽祭で初顔合わせを果たしている。しかし、客演先のオランダのハーグで、ヒトラーをからかうような発言をしたことがナチス高官の耳に入りヒトラーを激怒させ[要出典]、1935年にバイエルン州での演奏活動を禁止され、同時にバイエルン州立歌劇場からも追い出された(後任は当時ナチ寄りとされたクレメンス・クラウス)。追放後はウィーンとベルリン、ザルツブルク音楽祭などに定期的に来演した。1936年からはウィーン国立歌劇場を根城に、1944年6月30日の『神々の黄昏』上演(爆撃で破壊される前の最後の上演)まで同劇場で精力的な演奏活動を繰り広げた。『黄昏』上演後は、終戦まで息を潜めていた。
- published: 16 Feb 2013
- views: 143
9:38
Mozart Piano Concerto No.17 K453 reduced to 10 minutes
This is complied from a recording by Hans Richter-Haaser (piano), Philharmonia Orchestra
...
published: 07 Dec 2012
Mozart Piano Concerto No.17 K453 reduced to 10 minutes
This is complied from a recording by Hans Richter-Haaser (piano), Philharmonia Orchestra
conductor István Kertész which can be downloaded at http://mozart.eavb.co.uk/
- published: 07 Dec 2012
- views: 94
39:31
Johannes Brahms - Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73
The Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73, was composed by Johannes Brahms in the summer of 18...
published: 21 Sep 2012
Johannes Brahms - Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73
The Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73, was composed by Johannes Brahms in the summer of 1877 during a visit to Pörtschach am Wörthersee, a town in the Austrian province of Carinthia. The cheery and almost pastoral mood of the symphony often invite comparisons with Beethoven's Sixth Symphony. The premiere was given on December 30, 1877 in Vienna under the direction of Hans Richter.
Conductor: Mariss Jansons
Orchestra: Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
- published: 21 Sep 2012
- views: 1592
7:23
Erminie Blondel Mauro Pagano Manon - St Sulpice
Opera classica
Conductor Hans Richter
Director Michael Vaccaro
June 2012...
published: 19 Mar 2013
Erminie Blondel Mauro Pagano Manon - St Sulpice
Opera classica
Conductor Hans Richter
Director Michael Vaccaro
June 2012
- published: 19 Mar 2013
- views: 9
17:08
Bruno Walter, 1935 - Wagner, Siegfried Idyll
Richard Wagner
Siegfried Idyll
Wiener Philharmoniker
Bruno Walter, conductor
Recorde...
published: 02 Apr 2012
Bruno Walter, 1935 - Wagner, Siegfried Idyll
Richard Wagner
Siegfried Idyll
Wiener Philharmoniker
Bruno Walter, conductor
Recorded, 1935.
Wagner composed the Siegfried Idyll as a birthday present to his second wife, Cosima, after the birth of their son Siegfried in 1869. It was first performed on Christmas morning, 25 December 1870, by a small ensemble on the stairs of their villa at Tribschen (today part of Lucerne) in the Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland. Cosima awoke to its opening melody. Conductor Hans Richter played the brief trumpet part in that private performance
- published: 02 Apr 2012
- views: 1156
2:41
INFLATION - 1928 - Hans Richter - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
...
published: 21 Dec 2012
INFLATION - 1928 - Hans Richter - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
Ph.D. - History of Visual and Performing Arts
Film and music reviewer
Chigiana Academy - Film Music Master Class - Teacher : Luis Bacalov
ludwig22@hotmail.it
orchestra@unipi.it
- published: 21 Dec 2012
- views: 33
3:50
Hans Richter - FILMSTUDIE(1926) - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
...
published: 21 Dec 2012
Hans Richter - FILMSTUDIE(1926) - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
Ph.D. - History of Visual and Performing Arts
Film and music reviewer
Chigiana Academy - Film Music Master Class - Teacher : Luis Bacalov
ludwig22@hotmail.it
orchestra@unipi.it
- published: 21 Dec 2012
- views: 37
50:04
Hans Richter-Haaser - Brahms Concerto No. 2 in B flat Op. 83
01 - Allegro non troppo
02 - Allegro appassionato (18:01)
03 - Andante -- Più Adagio -- Te...
published: 08 Dec 2011
Hans Richter-Haaser - Brahms Concerto No. 2 in B flat Op. 83
01 - Allegro non troppo
02 - Allegro appassionato (18:01)
03 - Andante -- Più Adagio -- Tempo I (27:02)
04 - Allegro grazioso -- Un poco più presto (39:57)
Eberhard Finke, cello
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (Berliner Philharmoniker)
Herbert von Karajan, conductor
Recorded in 1959
- published: 08 Dec 2011
- views: 1264
6:31
Hamilton Harty - Mozart Divertimento #17, K334, 2. Theme and 6 Variations
Recorded in 1934, London Philharmonic Orchestra
Thanks to Damian Rogan for use of this ...
published: 02 Aug 2011
Hamilton Harty - Mozart Divertimento #17, K334, 2. Theme and 6 Variations
Recorded in 1934, London Philharmonic Orchestra
Thanks to Damian Rogan for use of this transfer.
Find this and many other very fine selections at damians78s.co.uk
Sir (Herbert) Hamilton Harty (4 December 1879 -- 19 February 1941) was an Irish and British composer, conductor, pianist and organist. In his capacity as a conductor, he was particularly noted as an interpreter of the music of Berlioz and he was much respected as a piano accompanist of exceptional prowess. Harty still stands as one of the most significant musicians that Northern Ireland has ever produced.
Harty was born in Hillsborough, County Down, Ireland, the fourth of ten children of church organist William Michael Harty (1852--1918) and his wife, Annie Elizabeth, the daughter of Joseph Hamilton Richards, a soldier from Bray. Raised an Anglican, Harty played viola, piano, and organ as a child. Initially following in his father's footsteps, he held positions as a church organist from age twelve. He moved to London in 1901 to pursue a musical career as accompanist, and accompanied an impressive list of soloists, among them John McCormack, W.H. Squire, Joseph Szigeti, Fritz Kreisler, and soprano Agnes Nicholls, whom he married on 15 July 1904. His considerable abilities as a performer were further highlighted when he appeared as the soloist in the premiere performance of his virtuosic "Piano Concerto", one of his finest works.
Nicholls' professional relationship with the Hungarian conductor Hans Richter was of great importance to Harty. After performing in Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen under Richter in 1908, she approached him on her husband's behalf. It was through this connection that Harty secured his first important conducting engagement: a performance of his tone poem With the Wild Geese with the London Symphony Orchestra in March 1911. The performance was a success, and he was engaged to conduct the orchestra again during its 1912--13 season. Hoping to reinforce his status as a composer--conductor, Harty gave the first performance of his Variations on a Dublin Air with the same orchestra in February 1913. Unfortunately, neither the critics nor the public shared his enthusiasm for his music: his concerts made a loss and he was not invited back for the following season. Nevertheless, his reputation as a conductor continued to grow, and he was invited to perform Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and Bizet's Carmen at Covent Garden in 1913. But he had little sympathy with opera, preferring symphonic music instead. In January 1914 he conducted the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and in April he made his début with the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester. His career was interrupted briefly by the First World War: in June 1916 he joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and was posted for duties in the North Sea, and he rose to the rank of lieutenant in 1917 before leaving in June 1918. In December he substituted for an indisposed Sir Thomas Beecham at a performance of Handel's Messiah with the Hallé Orchestra, and on 27 March 1919 he again replaced Beecham at a performance of J. S. Bach's Mass in B minor.
Harty did most of his composing between 1901 and 1920, including his Irish Symphony, his tone poem With the Wild Geese, his Violin Concerto, and his setting of Ode to a Nightingale for soprano and orchestra, premiered by Nicholls.
After short stints with the London Symphony Orchestra and elsewhere in England, Harty became permanent conductor of the Hallé Orchestra in 1920, a position that he held until 1933. Under his baton, the Hallé became one of the premier orchestras in England. He was knighted in 1925. In 1926 he commissioned a symphony from Ernest John Moeran. The Symphony in G minor (1937) was the result, but by then Harty was too ill to conduct the premiere. He did, however, eventually accept the dedication of the work, after initially falling out with Moeran.
From 1931 to 1936, Harty toured in America and elsewhere, conducting in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Rochester, and Sydney.
Harty's health began to deteriorate sharply in 1936: a malignant brain tumour was discovered and surgery was required. After both the growth and his right eye were removed, Harty convalesced in Ireland and Jamaica during 1937 and 1938. His illness continued to trouble him, and he conducted for the last time on 1 December 1940. Because of Harty's estrangement from his wife, the conductor was nursed through his final illness by his secretary and intimate friend, Olive Elfreda Baguley. Harty died in Hove; after cremation his ashes were placed in Hillsborough parish church.
- published: 02 Aug 2011
- views: 197
4:07
Vienna Boys Choir goes Pop _ song Nothing Compares To You-.flv
Vienna Boys Choir sing songs compose by famous Musicians.
Musicians like Heinrich Isaac, P...
published: 27 Dec 2012
Vienna Boys Choir goes Pop _ song Nothing Compares To You-.flv
Vienna Boys Choir sing songs compose by famous Musicians.
Musicians like Heinrich Isaac, Paul Hofhaimer, Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber, Johann Joseph Fux, Christoph Willibald Gluck, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Antonio Caldara, Antonio Salieri and Anton Bruckner worked with the choir. Composers Jacobus Gallus, Franz Schubert, and conductors Hans Richter, Felix Mottl and Clemens Krauss were themselves choristers. Brothers Joseph and Michael Haydn were members of the choir of St. Stephen's Cathedral, and sang frequently with the imperial boys' choir.
- published: 27 Dec 2012
- views: 60
41:35
Antonin Dvorak - Symphony No. 6 in D Major Op. 60 B. 112 (1880)
Symphony No. 6 by Antonin Dvorak. Conducted by Otmar Suitner with the Berliner Staatskapel...
published: 23 Aug 2011
Antonin Dvorak - Symphony No. 6 in D Major Op. 60 B. 112 (1880)
Symphony No. 6 by Antonin Dvorak. Conducted by Otmar Suitner with the Berliner Staatskapelle.
I. Allegro Non Tanto - 00:00
II. Adagio - 12:49
III. Scherzo - Presto - 23:03
IV. Finale - Allegro Con Spirito - 31:30
Dvořák wrote his Sixth Symphony for the conductor Hans Richter and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in 1880, but the prejudices of certain members of the orchestra towards the Czechs and their unwillingness to allow the inclusion of a new work by a new Czech composer so soon after the successful performance in 1879 of the third Slavonic Rhapsody allowed Adolf Cech, once the composer's colleague in the St. Cecilia Orchestra during student days, to give the first performance in Prague early in 1881. The following year August Manns conducted the symphony at a Crystal Palace concert in London, and Richter added a further London performance of the work he had commissioned three weeks later. The first Vienna performance was given in 1883 by Wilhelm Gericke for the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. The symphony is scored for the usual pairs of woodwind instruments, four horns, a pair of trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani and strings.
Attention has been drawn to similarities between the D major Symphony and the symphony by Brahms in the same key, although Dvorak's work bears the indelible stamp of his own genius at its height and may be heard as a tribute to the man who had earlier given him timely help in his career. The symphony opens with repeated accompanying chords played by horns and divided violas, above which the principal theme gradually appears. There is a superb slow movement in the key of B flat, followed by a scherzo bearing the subtitle furiant, a Czech peasant dance, with a contrasting trio, pierced by the piccolo in pastoral mood. The strings open the finale with a long drawn Brahmsian theme, joined by the wind and swelling soon to triumphant dimensions in a thoroughly satisfying conclusion.
- published: 23 Aug 2011
- views: 82766
Youtube results:
26:47
Elgar: Enigma Variations - Harty/Hallé Orchestra
Recorded in 1932.
Thanks to Frank Martin for allowing me to use his excellent transfers...
published: 28 Nov 2011
Elgar: Enigma Variations - Harty/Hallé Orchestra
Recorded in 1932.
Thanks to Frank Martin for allowing me to use his excellent transfers. Thanks also to Bryan Crimp who made a very substantial number of 'edits'. You can find this and many other wonderful selections and information at his website: http://musicparlourhistorical.blogspot.com
Sir (Herbert) Hamilton Harty (1879 - 1941) was an Irish and British composer, conductor, pianist and organist. In his capacity as a conductor, he was particularly noted as an interpreter of the music of Berlioz and he was much respected as a piano accompanist of exceptional prowess. Harty still stands as one of the most significant musicians that Northern Ireland has ever produced.
Harty was born in Hillsborough, Ireland. Harty played viola, piano, and organ as a child. Initially following in his father's footsteps, he held positions as a church organist from age twelve. He moved to London in 1901 to pursue a musical career as accompanist, and accompanied an impressive list of soloists, among them John McCormack, W.H. Squire, Joseph Szigeti, Fritz Kreisler, and soprano Agnes Nicholls, whom he married on 15 July 1904.
Nicholls' professional relationship with the Hungarian conductor Hans Richter was of great importance to Harty. After performing in Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen under Richter in 1908, she approached him on her husband's behalf. It was through this connection that Harty secured his first important conducting engagement. His reputation as a conductor grew, and he was invited to perform Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and Bizet's Carmen at Covent Garden in 1913. But he had little sympathy with opera, preferring symphonic music instead. In January 1914 he conducted the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and in April he made his début with the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester. His career was interrupted briefly by the First World War.
After short stints with the London Symphony Orchestra and elsewhere in England, Harty became permanent conductor of the Hallé Orchestra in 1920, a position that he held until 1933. Under his baton, the Hallé became one of the premier orchestras in England. He was knighted in 1925.
From 1931 to 1936, Harty toured in America and elsewhere, conducting in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Rochester, and Sydney.
Harty's health began to deteriorate sharply in 1936: a malignant brain tumour was discovered and surgery was required. After both the growth and his right eye were removed, He conducted for the last time on 1 December 1940. Because of Harty's estrangement from his wife, the conductor was nursed through his final illness by his secretary and intimate friend, Olive Elfreda Baguley. Harty died in Hove; after cremation his ashes were placed in Hillsborough parish church.
Notes on the Enigma Vaiations by David Nelson
The Enigma Variations started as a way for Elgar to entertain his wife. One night in 1898, the composer was improvising melodies at the piano. Alice liked one of these and asked her husband to play it again. Not only did Elgar repeat the music, but he then spontaneously created variations on that theme in different styles that reminded them of different friends. Sometimes profound works of art have simple beginnings.
Elgar obviously liked what he had started and expanded the little "portraits" into the piece performed tonight. He dedicated the work "to my friends pictured within" and even included the initials of his "subjects" in the name of each variation. Just some of the musical caricatures include the excited voice inflections of an actor (Variation III), an amateur violinist who had trouble crossing strings (Variation VI), the house of a music lover (Variation VIII), and the bulldog of one of his friends as it jumps into a river (Variation XI).
The most intriguing aspect of the Enigma Variations is that Elgar wrote that there was a hidden theme in the work that is "not played". Just what was meant by this has been fodder for scholars to debate for more than a century. Some think that the mysterious music is "Auld Lang Syne", but the composer ruled this out. "Rule Brittania" is another possibility, and many have supported this idea over the years. It may be Mozart's "Prague" Symphony, which shared the concert when the Enigma Variations were first performed in 1899. And others feel that the "Enigma melody" is really an accompaniment to some other tune. Personally, I support those who say that the "solution" to this enigma is better left unknown.
- published: 28 Nov 2011
- views: 846
8:58
ブラームス ピアノ協奏曲第2番 Op.83 第2楽章
Shooting : 2012/12/14 16:04 (http://goo.gl/maps/gl2HC)
Camera : DSC-HX200V
FHD (1920×108...
published: 14 Dec 2012
ブラームス ピアノ協奏曲第2番 Op.83 第2楽章
Shooting : 2012/12/14 16:04 (http://goo.gl/maps/gl2HC)
Camera : DSC-HX200V
FHD (1920×1080) Relaxing landscape Video
撮影編集 植木屋やっちゃん
BGM
ブラームス ピアノ協奏曲第2番変ロ長調 Op.83 第2楽章
Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major Op. 83 MOV2
Piano : ハンス リヒター ハーザー
Piano : Hans Richter Haaser
指揮 : ヘルベルト・フォン・カラヤン
Conductor : Herbert von Karajan
オーケストラ : ベルリン・フィルハーモニー管弦楽団
Orchestra : Berliner Philharmonisches Orchester
Recording : year1958
第1楽章(MOV1) : http://youtu.be/PiidLL34wA0
- published: 14 Dec 2012
- views: 144
3:09
Hans Richter - RHYTMUS 21 - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
...
published: 19 Sep 2012
Hans Richter - RHYTMUS 21 - Soundtrack
Re-scoring example by
Manfred Giampietro
Composer
University of Pisa Orchestra Conductor
Ph.D. - History of Visual and Performing Arts
Film and music reviewer
Chigiana Academy - Film Music Master Class - Teacher : Luis Bacalov
ludwig22@hotmail.it
orchestra@unipi.it
- published: 19 Sep 2012
- views: 74
4:07
Hamilton Harty - Mozart Divertimento #17, K334, 3. Menuetto & Trio
Recorded in 1934, London Philharmonic Orchestra
Thanks to Damian Rogan for use of this tr...
published: 02 Aug 2011
Hamilton Harty - Mozart Divertimento #17, K334, 3. Menuetto & Trio
Recorded in 1934, London Philharmonic Orchestra
Thanks to Damian Rogan for use of this transfer.
Find this and many other very fine selections at damians78s.co.uk
Sir (Herbert) Hamilton Harty (4 December 1879 -- 19 February 1941) was an Irish and British composer, conductor, pianist and organist. In his capacity as a conductor, he was particularly noted as an interpreter of the music of Berlioz and he was much respected as a piano accompanist of exceptional prowess. Harty still stands as one of the most significant musicians that Northern Ireland has ever produced.
Harty was born in Hillsborough, County Down, Ireland, the fourth of ten children of church organist William Michael Harty (1852--1918) and his wife, Annie Elizabeth, the daughter of Joseph Hamilton Richards, a soldier from Bray. Raised an Anglican, Harty played viola, piano, and organ as a child. Initially following in his father's footsteps, he held positions as a church organist from age twelve. He moved to London in 1901 to pursue a musical career as accompanist, and accompanied an impressive list of soloists, among them John McCormack, W.H. Squire, Joseph Szigeti, Fritz Kreisler, and soprano Agnes Nicholls, whom he married on 15 July 1904. His considerable abilities as a performer were further highlighted when he appeared as the soloist in the premiere performance of his virtuosic "Piano Concerto", one of his finest works.
Nicholls' professional relationship with the Hungarian conductor Hans Richter was of great importance to Harty. After performing in Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen under Richter in 1908, she approached him on her husband's behalf. It was through this connection that Harty secured his first important conducting engagement: a performance of his tone poem With the Wild Geese with the London Symphony Orchestra in March 1911. The performance was a success, and he was engaged to conduct the orchestra again during its 1912--13 season. Hoping to reinforce his status as a composer--conductor, Harty gave the first performance of his Variations on a Dublin Air with the same orchestra in February 1913. Unfortunately, neither the critics nor the public shared his enthusiasm for his music: his concerts made a loss and he was not invited back for the following season. Nevertheless, his reputation as a conductor continued to grow, and he was invited to perform Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and Bizet's Carmen at Covent Garden in 1913. But he had little sympathy with opera, preferring symphonic music instead. In January 1914 he conducted the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and in April he made his début with the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester. His career was interrupted briefly by the First World War: in June 1916 he joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and was posted for duties in the North Sea, and he rose to the rank of lieutenant in 1917 before leaving in June 1918. In December he substituted for an indisposed Sir Thomas Beecham at a performance of Handel's Messiah with the Hallé Orchestra, and on 27 March 1919 he again replaced Beecham at a performance of J. S. Bach's Mass in B minor.
Harty did most of his composing between 1901 and 1920, including his Irish Symphony, his tone poem With the Wild Geese, his Violin Concerto, and his setting of Ode to a Nightingale for soprano and orchestra, premiered by Nicholls.
After short stints with the London Symphony Orchestra and elsewhere in England, Harty became permanent conductor of the Hallé Orchestra in 1920, a position that he held until 1933. Under his baton, the Hallé became one of the premier orchestras in England. He was knighted in 1925. In 1926 he commissioned a symphony from Ernest John Moeran. The Symphony in G minor (1937) was the result, but by then Harty was too ill to conduct the premiere. He did, however, eventually accept the dedication of the work, after initially falling out with Moeran.
From 1931 to 1936, Harty toured in America and elsewhere, conducting in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Rochester, and Sydney.
Harty's health began to deteriorate sharply in 1936: a malignant brain tumour was discovered and surgery was required. After both the growth and his right eye were removed, Harty convalesced in Ireland and Jamaica during 1937 and 1938. His illness continued to trouble him, and he conducted for the last time on 1 December 1940. Because of Harty's estrangement from his wife, the conductor was nursed through his final illness by his secretary and intimate friend, Olive Elfreda Baguley. Harty died in Hove; after cremation his ashes were placed in Hillsborough parish church.
- published: 02 Aug 2011
- views: 379