Hans Buchner News
German Renaissance composer
- organ
- Germany
- composer, organist, music theorist
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2024-04-25
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2024-03-28 04:00:00
EASTER PASSION MUSIC 2024 [24 CDs]
Again a collection of Easter Passion Music, from The Middle Ages to The 20th Century, brought together by the members Cadfael, Cunctator and DutchPublisher.We wish you all an enjoyable time!Planctus Mariae - Music of Holy Week from the Late Middle Agesensemble für frühe musik augsburgRecorded 1994Label: Christophorus CHR 77147Download 1fichier gofile workuploadLa voce della passionePassion chants between theMiddle Ages & Sicilian folkloreNoemi La Terra, Lamentori di MontedoroEnsemble DonnafugataRecorded March & October 2013Label: Raumklang RK 3301Download 1fichier pixel workuploadHeinrich Isaac (c1450-1517)Missa Paschalis, with organ verses by Hans Buchner (1483-1538)Cantus Modalis, Rebecca Stewart - directionRecorded 2012/13Label: ambitus amb 96 965Download 1fichier gofile workuploadLudovico G. da Viadana (1564-1645), Franc. Soler (c1625-1688),Carlo D. Cossoni (1623-1700), Giovanni P. Cima (c1570-1622),Giovanni F. Sances (1600-1679), Giovanni M. Asola (c1532-1609),Gerolamo Ballione (1575-1608)In Musica VeritasRecorded 2011Label: Ad Vitam Records AV 120315Download 1fichier gofile workuploadHeinrich Schütz (1585-1672)Historia de Auferstehung, SWV 50And other vocal worksLa Chapelle RhénaneBenoit Haller - directionRecorded July 2007Label: K617 K617199Download 1fichier […]
2024-02-12 15:35:19
Alban Berg, part II, 2024
This Week in Classical Music: February 5, 2024. Alban Berg, Part II. In 1911, Arnold Schoenberg moved from Vienna to Berlin but the intense relationship between Berg and his teacher continued through letters. Schoenberg’s notes often contained demands that were about more than just the music: some were domestic, some financial. Though Berg adored his teacher, Schoenberg’s demands were difficult and time-consuming, and the relationship was getting more difficult – so much so that in 1915 their correspondence broke off. WWI was in full swing; Berg was conscripted into the Austrian Army and served for three years (the 42-year-old Schoenberg, who moved back to Vienna in 1915, also served in the army, but only for a year). Things changed in 1918 after Berg was discharged: he returned to Vienna and reestablished his relationship with his teacher. In May of 1914 Berg attended a performance of Woyzeck, a play by the […]
2022-05-24 20:38:28
Anglais - Wozzeck at the Liceu: The Dark Beauty of Horror
[…] an enormous and apparently shapeless pile of civilisation remains, including damaged chairs, old wardrobes, abandoned suitcases, broken pieces of wood. Amongst these run ramps and stairs that effectively create scenic spaces through which characters move. The appearance of the ensemble resembles that of an urban landscape after a bombing and the temporal location chosen is that of devastated Europe after War World I, which coincides with the moment when Berg created his Wozzeck from Buchner’s theatre play. Over the surfaces of this chaotic space, images in motion and terrifying and deeply painful drawings are constantly projected, referencing mainly the journey of the main character towards insanity. Wozzeck (© Salzburger Festspiele / Ruth Walz) Whilst the visual aspect of Kentridge’s proposal is captivating, the dramaturgy isn’t left behind and makes the most of the great provocative and upsetting potential of the piece. Wozzeck, who […]
2020-07-27 12:10:00
Wagner and Young Germany
(Article, ‘Young Germany’, originally published in The Cambridge Wagner Encyclopedia, ed. Nicholas Vazsonyi (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013) A group of German writers during the pre-1848 period. Reacted strongly against perceived apolitical and reactionary tendencies in German Romanticism. Several, including Heinrich Laube, Karl Gutzkow, Heinrich Heine, and Georg Herwegh, were known personally to Wagner; others include Ludwig Börne, Theodor Mundt, Ludolf Wienbarg, and Georg Büchner. In 1835, the German Confederation proscribed many such writings as injurious to the Christian religion and morality; Laube’s subsequent imprisonment made a great impression upon Wagner. According to Heine (Die romantische Schule), Young Germans, unlike Goethe and the Romantics, treated life and literature as one; as for Wagner, this signaled revival of the Hellenic spirit following Christian aberration. Wagner published articles in Laube’s Leipzig-based Zeitung für die elegante Welt, including his Autobiographical Sketch(1842), where Wagner likens Das Liebesverbot to Laube’s Young […]
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