Lyrik für Alle Folge 47 Eduard Mörike 1. Teil
Lyrik für Alle Folge 48 Eduard Mörike 2. Teil
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Septembermorgen
Septembermorgen, Eduard Mörike
EDUARD MÖRIKE - An die Geliebte
Eduard Mörike „Er ist's"
Gedicht Elfenlied
Circus HalliGalli: Eduard Mörike - Er ist's
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Trost
Eduard Mörike „Verborgenheit"
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Verborgenheit
Literatur / Dichtung: EDUARD MÖRIKE - ZWISCHEN ABGRUND UND IDYLLE (DVD / Vorschau)
Hugo Wolf / Evelyn Lear, 1965: Elfenlied - Lieder Nach Gedichten von Eduard Mörike
Eduard Mörike „Um Mitternacht"
Lyrik für Alle Folge 47 Eduard Mörike 1. Teil
Lyrik für Alle Folge 48 Eduard Mörike 2. Teil
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Septembermorgen
Septembermorgen, Eduard Mörike
EDUARD MÖRIKE - An die Geliebte
Eduard Mörike „Er ist's"
Gedicht Elfenlied
Circus HalliGalli: Eduard Mörike - Er ist's
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Trost
Eduard Mörike „Verborgenheit"
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Verborgenheit
Literatur / Dichtung: EDUARD MÖRIKE - ZWISCHEN ABGRUND UND IDYLLE (DVD / Vorschau)
Hugo Wolf / Evelyn Lear, 1965: Elfenlied - Lieder Nach Gedichten von Eduard Mörike
Eduard Mörike „Um Mitternacht"
Eduard Mörike „Gebet"
EDUARD MÖRIKE - Der Genesene an die Hoffnung
"Im Nebel ruhet noch die Welt..." Septembermorgen Gedicht: Eduard Mörike
Hugo Wolf/Eduard Mörike - "Auf eine Christblume"
"An die Geliebte" von Eduard Mörike / Sprecher und Komponist: Julian Eilenberger
Mozart in viaggio verso Praga, Eduard Mörike
Eduard Mörike
EDUARD MÖRIKE- Nimmersatte Liebe
Eduard-Mörike GWRS, Ulm: Freunde
Evelyn Lear: Gebet - Lieder Nach Gedichten von Eduard Mörike (Wolf) - DG, 1965 - Lyrics
nils häge and magnus maurer at eduard-mörike school
Inklusion im Deutschunterricht - Interview mit Sule Ekemen und Benjamin Schmidt
Mörike gerappt - Ach nur einmal noch im Leben
Hugo Wolf Mörike Lieder - Dietrich Henschel - Philippe Herreweghe - Royal Flemish Philharmonic
Die Geister am Mummelsee - Eine literarische Wanderung
Die Schwestern - Brahms (Sara Gouzy, Amanda Martikainen)
Shetland Ponys halten Senioren auf Trab
Hugo Wolf Mörike Lieder Fussreise
Duo02 - Runde1 / 1st round
Lucia Popp: "Nimmersatte Liebe" (Mörike Lieder) by Hugo Wolf
Hans Werner Henze: An Eine Äolsharfe (1985/1986) 1/2
Eugene Chan / Iryna Krasnovska - Duo Nr. 5
Peter Anders " Gesang Weylas" Wolf
Benjamin Luxon sings Hugo Wolf's Mörike lieder - part II
Peter Anders "Peregrina I" Wolf
www.dada-dada.tv Trailer Anfang
Hugo Wolf / Kathleen Ferrier, 1949: Norwegian Recital - Der Gärtner (The Gardner)
Eduard Friedrich Mörike (8 September 1804 – 4 June 1875) was a German Romantic poet.
Mörike was born in Ludwigsburg. His father was Karl Friedrich Mörike (d. 1817), a district medical councilor; his mother was Charlotte Bayer. He attended the Latin school at Ludwigsburg, and the seminary at Urach (1818) where he made the acquaintance of Wilhelm Hartlaub and Wilhelm Waiblinger. He then studied theology at the Seminary of Tübingen where he met Ludwig Bauer, David Friedrich Strauss and F. T. Vischer.
He followed an ecclesiastical career, becoming a Lutheran pastor. In 1834 he was appointed pastor of Cleversulzbach near Weinsberg, and, after his early retirement for reasons of health, in 1851 became professor of German literature at the Katharinenstift in Stuttgart. This office he held until his retirement in 1866; but he continued to live at Stuttgart until his death. In what political and social views he espoused, he was monarchist and conservative.
Mörike is a member of the so-called Swabian school which gathered around Ludwig Uhland. His poems, Gedichte (1838; 22nd ed., 1905), are mostly lyrics, often humorous, but expressed in simple and natural language. His Lieder (songs) are traditional in form and have been compared to those of Goethe. His ballad “Schön Rotraut” — opening with the line “Wie heisst König Ringangs Töchterlein?” — became a popular favorite.
Hugo Wolf (13 March 1860 – 22 February 1903) was an Austrian composer of Slovene origin, particularly noted for his art songs, or lieder. He brought to this form a concentrated expressive intensity which was unique in late Romantic music, somewhat related to that of the Second Viennese School in concision but utterly unrelated in technique.
Though he had several bursts of extraordinary productivity, particularly in 1888 and 1889, depression frequently interrupted his creative periods, and his last composition was written in 1898, before he suffered a mental collapse caused by syphilis.
Hugo Wolf was born in Windischgrätz (now Slovenj Gradec, Slovenia), then a part of the Austrian Empire. From his maternal side, he was related to Herbert von Karajan. He spent most of his life in Vienna, becoming a representative of "New German" trend in lieder, a trend which followed from the expressive, chromatic, and dramatic musical innovations of Richard Wagner.
A child prodigy, Wolf was taught piano and violin by his father beginning at the age of four, and once in primary school studied piano and music theory with Sebastian Weixler. However, subjects other than music failed to hold his interest; he was dismissed from the first secondary school he attended as being "wholly inadequate", left another over his difficulties in the compulsory Latin studies, and after a falling-out with a professor who commented on his "damned music", quit the last. From there, he went to the Vienna Conservatory to the disappointment of his father, who had hoped Wolf would not try to make his living from music; again, however, he was dismissed for "breach of discipline", though the often-rebellious Wolf would claim he quit in frustration over the school's conservatism.
Evelyn Lear (born January 8, 1926) is an American operatic soprano. Between 1959 and 1992, she appeared in more than forty operatic roles, appeared with every major opera company in the US and won a Grammy Award in 1966. She was well known for her musical versatility, having sung all three main female roles in Der Rosenkavalier. Lear was also known for her work on 20th century pieces by Robert Ward, Alban Berg, Marvin David Levy, Rudolf Kelterborn and Giselher Klebe. She was married to the American bass-baritone Thomas Stewart until his death in 2006.
Lear was born as Evelyn Shulman in Brooklyn, New York, and completed her musical education at Hunter College, New York University and the Juilliard School of Music studying voice, piano, French horn and composition. She married Walter Lear, a physician and later political activist, divorcing in the mid-1950s. While at Juilliard she studied under Sergius Kagen and met her future husband, baritone Thomas Stewart. Both Lear and Stewart won Fulbright scholarships to study at Hochschule für Musik in Berlin where she studied with Maria Ivogün.