Louis Lancien Videos
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2024-05-02
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Louis Lancien Edvard Grieg Grieg Hall
Un extrait de Peer Gynt de Edvard Grieg « dans l'antre du roi de la montagne » interprété par Louis Lancien pianiste à l’Opera de Paris. Cela peut servir pour des jetés, frappés, relevés as you want. Enjoy ! Отрывок из «Пер Гюнт» Эдварда Грига «в пещере горного короля», интерпретированный пианистом Парижской оперы - Луи Лансьен. Это может быть использовано для жете, фрапэ, релевэ по желанию. Наслаждайтесь! An extract from Peer Gynt of Edvard Grieg « in the hall of the mountain king » played by Louis Lancien, pianist at the Paris Opera. This can be used for jetés, frappés, relevés as you want. Enjoy Nous mettons les vidéos tous les jours sur nos pages Facebook et Instagram. Suivez-nous! We post ballet / music for ballet videos every day on our Facebook and Instagram pages. Follow us! (http•••) (http•••)
Piero Coppola Coppola Gagliano Jean Hubeau Paul Tortelier Jules Pasdeloup Weber Beethoven Mendelssohn Jean Alard Joseph Haydn Berlioz Wagner César Franck Pasdeloup Orchestra 1861 1884 1886 1912 1919 1932 1969 2004
Allegro non troppo Recorded in 1932. Piero Coppola, conductor Found at The AHRC Research Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music (CHARM) was established on 1 April 2004, supported by a 5-year grant of just under £1m from the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Henri Merckel was born in Paris in 1897.He debuted at six. Merckel studied with Guillaume Remy at the Paris Conservatory winning a First Prize in 1912. For almost 30 years he was concertmaster of the Paris Opera Orchestra. He played a Gagliano violin. He led a trio with Jean Hubeau and Paul Tortelier. Merckel became a professor at the Paris Conservatory. He died in 1969. Pasdeloup Orchestra Founded in 1861 by Jules Pasdeloup with the name Concerts Populaires, it is the oldest orchestra still in existence in Paris. Aimed at an audience hitherto absent from evening concerts, the orchestra presented cheap Sunday concerts in the vast rotonda of the Cirque d'hiver in Paris. The opening concert (27 October 1861), with an orchestra of 80 musicians, consisted of the following programme: • Overture to Oberon by Carl Maria von Weber • Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony • Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto with Jean Alard • the Emperor's Hymn by Joseph Haydn. Rehearsals took place on Tuesday and Thursday at the Conservatoire and on Saturday at the Cirque d'hiver (musicians were paid 15 francs per concert with rehearsals). The first leader was Lancien, of the orchestra of the Paris Opéra. Early concerts included music by Berlioz and Wagner. The enterprise was a great success and the Concerts Populaires became a genuine institution, playing a lead role in forming a new audience through making known the Austro-German repertoire and also by influencing the creation of French symphonic works. Pasdeloup continued his activity until 1884 and tried in vain to restart in 1886 by mounting a festival devoted to César Franck (which was a success). The orchestra started up again in 1919, under the guidance of Serge Sandberg, with the title 'Orchestre Pasdeloup.
Piero Coppola Coppola Gagliano Jean Hubeau Paul Tortelier Jules Pasdeloup Weber Beethoven Mendelssohn Jean Alard Joseph Haydn Berlioz Wagner César Franck Pasdeloup Orchestra 1861 1884 1886 1912 1919 1932 1969 2004
Rondo: Allegro Recorded in 1932. Piero Coppola, conductor Found at The AHRC Research Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music (CHARM) was established on 1 April 2004, supported by a 5-year grant of just under £1m from the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Henri Merckel was born in Paris in 1897.He debuted at six. Merckel studied with Guillaume Remy at the Paris Conservatory winning a First Prize in 1912. For almost 30 years he was concertmaster of the Paris Opera Orchestra. He played a Gagliano violin. He led a trio with Jean Hubeau and Paul Tortelier. Merckel became a professor at the Paris Conservatory. He died in 1969. Pasdeloup Orchestra Founded in 1861 by Jules Pasdeloup with the name Concerts Populaires, it is the oldest orchestra still in existence in Paris. Aimed at an audience hitherto absent from evening concerts, the orchestra presented cheap Sunday concerts in the vast rotonda of the Cirque d'hiver in Paris. The opening concert (27 October 1861), with an orchestra of 80 musicians, consisted of the following programme: • Overture to Oberon by Carl Maria von Weber • Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony • Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto with Jean Alard • the Emperor's Hymn by Joseph Haydn. Rehearsals took place on Tuesday and Thursday at the Conservatoire and on Saturday at the Cirque d'hiver (musicians were paid 15 francs per concert with rehearsals). The first leader was Lancien, of the orchestra of the Paris Opéra. Early concerts included music by Berlioz and Wagner. The enterprise was a great success and the Concerts Populaires became a genuine institution, playing a lead role in forming a new audience through making known the Austro-German repertoire and also by influencing the creation of French symphonic works. Pasdeloup continued his activity until 1884 and tried in vain to restart in 1886 by mounting a festival devoted to César Franck (which was a success). The orchestra started up again in 1919, under the guidance of Serge Sandberg, with the title 'Orchestre Pasdeloup.
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