Martin Rennert Videos
US-amerikanischer Musiker und Präsident der Universität der Künste Berlin
Jahrestage 1954 Jahrestage (Geburt: Martin Rennert)
- klassische Gitarre
- klassische Musik
- Vereinigte Staaten
- Musiker, Hochschullehrer, Gitarrist, Musikpädagoge
Letzte Aktualisierung
2024-05-14
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Salzburger Festspiele Tareq Nazmi Mauro Peter Brenda Rae Delfs Regula Mühlemann Ilse Eerens Sophie Rennert Rennert Peter Tantsits Schulman Simon Bode Bode Wiener Sängerknaben 2022
Erzählen als Schlüssel des Weltverstehens. Die Fantasie der „Zauberflöte“ wird noch bis zum 27. August im Haus für Mozart in der Regie von Lydia Steier und unter der Musikalischen Leitung von Joana Mallwitz zu sehen sein Mehr zu der Oper: bit.ly/353E9D8/ Storytelling as the key to understanding the world. The fantasy of "Die Zauberflöte" will be shown at the Haus für Mozart through 27 August, directed by Lydia Steier and conducted by Joana Mallwitz. More on the opera: (http•••) Mit/With Joana Mallwitz (Musikalische Leitung) Lydia Steier (Regie) Tareq Nazmi (Sarastro), Mauro Peter (Tamino), Brenda Rae (Königin der Nacht), Jasmin Delfs (Königin der Nacht (10. 8.)), Regula Mühlemann (Pamina), Ilse Eerens (Erste Dame), Sophie Rennert (Zweite Dame), Noa Beinart (Dritte Dame), Michael Nagl (Papageno), Maria Nazarova (Papagena), Peter Tantsits (Monostatos), Henning von Schulman (Sprecher / Erster Priester / Zweiter geharnischter Mann), Simon Bode (Zweiter Priester / Erster geharnischter Mann), Roland Koch (Großvater) und den Wiener Sängerknaben (Drei Knaben)
Das Musikkorps der Bundeswehr unter Leitung von Oberstleutnant Christoph Scheibling, Manuela Bibert Gesang. Musik und Text: Laura Wright / John Roy Haywood Arrangement: Guido Rennert Die Invictus Games sind ein internationales Sportereignis für verwundete, verletzte und kranke Soldaten und Soldatinnen. Die Spiele nutzen die Kraft des Sports, um zur Genesung zu inspirieren, die Rehabilitation zu unterstützen und ein breiteres Verständnis und mehr Respekt für all jene zu schaffen, die ihrem Land dienen. Das Wort "Invictus" bedeutet "unbesiegt" und soll den Kampfgeist der verwundeten, verletzten und kranken Militärangehörigen verkörpern und zeigen, was sie nach einer Verletzung erreichen können. Die Invictus Games wurden von Prinz Harry ins Leben gerufen. Die Inspiration dazu kam von seinem Besuch bei den Warrior Games in den USA, wo er erlebte, wie Sport sowohl psychisch als auch physisch helfen kann. Hinweis: Dieses Video ist nicht durch uns monetarisiert, es kann aber durch Copyright-Ansprüchen von Dritten zu gelegentlichen Werbeeinblendungen kommen. When all is lost and hope is gone When life is frail and hearts are weary The echoed words unbeaten still Will show our strength and dignity To dream the dream of victory To feel the fight that drives us all To take a place in history And bring home our hearts for thee And when we hear those distant drums And when we feel our hearts grow stronger When we see the crowds draw near Our fears dissolve, our heads hold high To dream the dream of winners past To feel the fight that drives us all United strong, forever faithful We hear the cries of victory I am proud, I am strong I have might and I have spirit Sacrifice and stars are born Unconquered still, we stand as one To dream the dream of winners past To feel the fight that drives us all United strong, forever faithful We hear the cries of victory When we look back from where we came We've found a place, we'll rise or die To dream a dream of victory (victory) We feel the fight that drives us all To victory
Anneliese Rothenberger Nico Dostal Michalski Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Richard Strauss Rennert Alban Berg Dohnányi Rolf Liebermann Lotte Lehmann Herbert Karajan Elisabeth Schwarzkopf Sena Jurinac Fritz Wunderlich Damiani Marie Berg Poulenc Henze Britten Hindemith Carl Orff Pfitzner Menotti Munich Opera Festival Salzburg Festival Vienna State Opera 1919 1942 1946 1954 1960 1964 1965 1973 1983 1999 2003 2010
THIS IS THE SUCCESSOR CHANNEL TO "liederoperagreats" WHICH WAS RECENTLY TERMINATED. Anneliese Rothenberger--soprano Carl Michalski-conductor Bayerisches Symphonie-Orchester 1964 / "Anneliese Rothenberger (19 June 1919 – 24 May 2010) was a German operatic soprano who had an active international performance career which spanned from 1942 to 1983. She specialized in the lyric coloratura soprano repertoire, and was particularly admired for her interpretations of the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Richard Strauss.[1] Rothenberger was born in Mannheim, Germany. She studied with Erika Müller, and took up her first engagement in Koblenz in 1942. In 1946, Günther Rennert offered her a job at the Hamburg Opera House, where she sang in Rennert's now famous production of Alban Berg's Lulu twenty years later, a role she would also perform at the Munich Opera Festival, under the direction of Christoph von Dohnányi.[citation needed] 1954 saw her make her debut at the Salzburg Festival, and she appeared in Rolf Liebermann's Schule der Frauen, three years later. From 1954, she became a guest singer at the Vienna State Opera. New York City audiences had their first chance to hear the soprano's fine voice in 1960, when she sang there in Der Rosenkavalier. Her performance prompted Lotte Lehmann to call her 'the best Sophie in the world'. Herbert von Karajan chose her to appear alongside Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Sena Jurinac for the filmed performance of Der Rosenkavalier at the Salzburg Festival. Having favoured light and high-register lyric parts in the beginning of her career, by the mid-1960s she changed to roles with a stronger dramatic emphasis, including Konstanze in Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail (for example 1965 with Fritz Wunderlich in the now legendary Salzburg Festival production staged by Giorgio Strehler and designed by Luciano Damiani), Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte, Zdenka in Richard Strauss's Arabella, Marie in Berg's Wozzeck, Soeur Constance in Poulenc's Dialogues of the Carmelites, and Violetta in La traviata on stage. She also appeared in many contemporary operas by Henze, Britten, Hindemith, Carl Orff, Pfitzner, and Menotti.[citation needed] In the 1970s, she became a popular television personality. She retired in 1983. When her husband died after 45 years of marriage in 1999, she settled in Switzerland, on Lake Constance. In 2003, she received the Echo Klassik Award for lifetime achievement.[2] She wrote an autobiography in 1973: Melodie meines Lebens. She died in May 2010 in Münsterlingen, Switzerland, aged 90.[3] The Anneliese Rothenberger rose (aka Oregold rose) is named after her."; wikipedia
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- Zeitleiste: Interpreten (Nordamerika).
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