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2024-06-09
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Daniel Barenboim Schubert Iglesia Saint Sulpice
"Adieu et merci, monsieur Chirac": el director argentino-israelí Daniel Barenboim emocionó a todos con el "Impromptus" de Schubert en la despedida al expresidente francés Jacques Chirac en la iglesia de Saint Sulpice. Un símbolo, un gesto que atraviesa fronteras geográficas, culturales y políticas.
Charles Marie Widor Nicolas Séjan Marcel Dupré Cavaillé Cavaillé Coll Minster Haines Rigby Starr Mendelssohn Bron Saint Sulpice Paris 1870 1933 1934 1960 1961 1971 1973 1999 2011
Featuring the Toccata in F by Charles Edward Widor 16 years after the mob witnessed by Charles and future statesman William Steinway. Used at royal occasions in Britain but more abroad... The church Church of Saint-Sulpice, Paris on the east side of the Place Saint-Sulpice within the rue Bonaparte, in the Luxembourg Quarter of the 6th arrondissement - Its organists have also been renowned, starting with Nicolas Séjan in the 18th century, and continuing with Charles-Marie Widor (organist 1870-1933) and Marcel Dupré (organist 1934-1971), both great organists and composers of organ music. Thus for over a century (1870–1971), Saint-Sulpice employed only two organists, and much credit is due to these two individuals for preserving the instrument and protecting it from the ravages of changes in taste and fashion which resulted in the destruction of many of Cavaillé-Coll's other masterpieces. "PATHOS whose Patronage to the illogicism of seldom ever being understood as much as that stance by which its entity pf prose emphasises or proves a point, never is simply explained by 'sympathy' for its definition - which one dictionary has.. Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon and Antony Armstrong-Jones on 6 May 1960 at Westminster Abbey Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Katharine Worsley on 8 June 1961 at York Minster Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips on 14 November 1973 at Westminster Abbey Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex and Sophie Rhys-Jones on 19 June 1999 at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine Middleton on 29 April 2011 at Westminster Abbey Film dedicated to Mister Haines her harmony teacher, the film about the real Eleanor Rigby by Fernando Ray; esp. 10.31+••.••(...)) Love Story; Risen Liverpudlian, 12.29 Rise again +••.••(...) end). Rose: IS Life Limited - Rose LiverpudLIAN ~ tributo Mistre Paul McCartney, und sein und Ringo Starr, and to mein teachre harmony Musical Dirtector Liverpool Everyman Theatre. History DAS rubbish any more than Life Limited(?) Liverpudlian' . . .explains how and why that is why she hated skool less perhaps than Mendelssohn was acclaimed ass excellense. Vielen Dank. Das ist begrenzt, Liverdudlian - ihr. Aber dein? Das könnte mehr als oder zu Corporate sein. trans: Thank. That' 'limited' Liverdudlian - her. But yor? Theat might be more as to or too corporate for even Summers lease. Played by Dass Lian Fernando Ray. "Eleanor Rigby" MENU0:00 Problems playing this file? See media help. McCartney said he came up with the name "Eleanor" from actress Eleanor Bron, who had starred with the Beatles in the film Help!. "Rigby" came from the name of a store in Bristol, "Rigby & Evens Ltd, Wine & Spirit Shippers", But, I came up widt her from liek Stock Port. My love is to the ACTUAL 'Eleanor Rigby' with whom I went to college: The Girl I Love, the girl who by whose belief I strove to become something - that, where else she might have been deemed to never 'not', always, the more: SURELY has. SHE LIVES! " ~ 'LiverpudLIAN'? Is THE fill, Laertes, Why & Anyway the burocrat any burowkat nor education government Limited or other official made King Henry The Seventh ANY more than utter foolishness - or not the way you do eit" - Fernando R {LiverpudLIAN WM}
Sir Edward Elgar Lacey Farnham Belcher Merbecke Karlheinz Stockhausen Diego Masson Allegra Southwark Cathedral Saint Sulpice Paris 1897 1988 2007 2008 2011
Sir Edward Elgar: Organ Sonata, op. 28 (1st mvmt. - Allegro maestoso). Played by Jonathan Hope at Southwark Cathedral, London. Jonathan Hope is Organ Scholar of Southwark Cathedral, London. Born in 1988 and brought up in Guildford, Surrey, Jonathan initially studied with Stephen Lacey at Farnham Parish Church, and John Belcher at Godalming Parish Church. From 2007-2011, he studied the Royal College of Music, London (RCM) with Margaret Phillips and Sophie-Véronique Cauchefer-Choplin, graduating with honours. As Organ Scholar of Southwark Cathedral, Jonathan accompanies and conducts the cathedral's four choirs, and plays the cathedral's 4-manual 1897 T. C. Lewis organ, arguably one of the finest instruments in the world. His work at Southwark has recently involved playing in a live broadcast of Choral Evensong on BBC Radio 3, playing for the Dean of Southwark's funeral and for the enthronement of the Bishop of Southwark. He also features as accompanist on a CD of the cathedral boys' choir, due to be released around Christmas 2011 on the Regent label. In March 2011 he accompanied the cathedral's Merbecke Choir on a tour of Paris and Normandy, involving a performance on the organ of Notre-Dame Cathedral, Rouen. In October 2011, Jonathan will be accompanying the cathedral girls' choir on a tour of Belfast, Northern Ireland. As a solo recitalist, Jonathan has performed throughout the UK, and in France, Germany, the United States and Australia. Recent performances have included recitals in Magdalen College Chapel, Oxford, Westminster Cathedral, Westminster Abbey and Canterbury Cathedral, and an upcoming performance is scheduled in the great church of Saint-Sulpice, Paris in August 2011. As an ensemble player and accompanist, Jonathan has appeared with many groups including the RCM Baroque Orchestra, the RCM Symphony Orchestra, the Uxbridge Choral Society and the Colchester Chamber Choir. In 2008, he appeared in London's Southbank Centre in 'KLANG', a festival to mark the 80th anniversary of the birth of the composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, when he performed Stockhausen's 'Trans' with the RCM Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Diego Masson. As a teacher, Jonathan teaches the organ privately in and around London, and is also accompanist and organ tutor at Sevenoaks School, Kent. Jonathan lives in south-east London with his fiancée, the Italian-Australian soprano Allegra Giagu. For more information, please visit Jonathan's website at (http•••) .
Louis Victor Jules Vierne Schubert Charles Marie Widor Severe Marcel Dupré Augustin Barié Edward Shippen Barnes Barnes Lili Boulanger Nadia Boulanger André Fleury Fleury Isadore Freed Gaston Litaize Édouard Mignan Schreiner Georges Émile Tanguay Maurice Duruflé Cavaillé Cavaillé Coll Santa María Bönig Saint Sulpice Paris Cathedral Notre Dame Paris 1870 1892 1900 1937
Louis Victor Jules Vierne (8 October 1870 / 2 June 1937) was a French organist and composer.Louis Vierne was born in Poitiers, Vienne, nearly blind due to congenital cataracts, but at an early age was discovered to have an unusual gift for music. (At age two he heard the piano for the first time. The pianist played him a Schubert lullaby and he promptly began to pick out the notes of the lullaby on the piano.) After completing school in the provinces, Louis Vierne entered the Paris Conservatory. From 1892, Vierne served as an assistant to the organist Charles-Marie Widor at the church of Saint-Sulpice in Paris. Vierne subsequently became principal organist at the cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris, a post he held from 1900 until his death in 1937. Vierne had a life that was physically and emotionally very difficult, with severe spiritual trials that are occasionally reflected in his music. His congenital cataracts did not make him completely blind, but he was what would be called today "legally blind." Early in his career, he composed on outsized manuscript paper, using "a large pencil" as his friend Marcel Dupré described. Later in life, as his limited sight continued to diminish, he resorted to Braille to do most of his work. He was deeply affected by a separation and subsequent divorce from his wife, and he lost both his brother René and his son Jacques to the battlefields of World War I. Though he held one of the most prestigious organ posts in France, the Notre-Dame organ was in a state of disrepair throughout much of his tenure at the instrument. He eventually undertook a concert tour of North America to raise money for its restoration. The tour, which included major recitals on the famous Wanamaker Organ in Philadelphia and its smaller sister instrument, the Wanamaker Auditorium Organ in New York City,[1] was very successful, although the trip physically drained him. A street accident in Paris caused him to badly fracture his leg, and it was briefly thought his leg would need to be amputated. The leg was saved, but his recovery, and the task of completely re-learning his pedal technique, took a full year during one of the busiest times of his life. Despite his difficulties, however, his students uniformly described him as a kind, patient and encouraging teacher. Among his pupils were Augustin Barié, Edward Shippen Barnes, Lili Boulanger, Nadia Boulanger, Marcel Dupré, André Fleury, Isadore Freed, Henri Gagnebin, Gaston Litaize, Édouard Mignan, Alexander Schreiner, and Georges-Émile Tanguay. Vierne suffered either a stroke or a heart attack (eyewitness reports differ) while giving his 1750th organ recital at Notre-Dame de Paris on the evening of 2 June 1937. He had completed the main concert, which members of the audience said showed him at his full powers - "as well as he has ever played." Directly after he had finished playing his "Stele pour un enfant defunt" from his 'Triptyque' Op 58, the closing section was to be two improvisations on submitted themes. He read the first theme in Braille, then selected the stops he would use for the improvisation. He suddenly pitched forward, and fell off the bench as his foot hit the low "E" pedal of the organ. He lost consciousness as the single note echoed throughout the church. He had thus fulfilled his oft-stated lifelong dream - to die at the console of the great organ of Notre-Dame. Maurice Duruflé, another noted French organist of the time was at his side at the time of his death. Organe de Cavaillé-Coll, église de paroisse de la La de Santa María vraie Joueur : Winfried Bönig Azkoitia.
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