Emerson Quartet Vidéos
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2024-04-30
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Shai Wosner Domenico Scarlatti Frederic Rzewski Beethoven Schubert Ligeti Gershwin Ives Brahms Schumann Weiss David Lang Isserlis Jennifer Koh Haydn Nicholas Collon Schoenberg Missy Mazzoli Bartók Segal Barenboim Emanuel Ax Lera Auerbach Mussorgsky Konzerthaus Berlin Lincoln Center David Geffen Hall Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra Emerson Quartet New York Philharmonic Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Seattle Symphony West Eastern Divan Orchestra Frankfurt Radio Symphony Gothenburg Symphony Lso National Arts Centre Orchestra Orchestre National Belgique Staatskapelle Berlin Vienna Philharmonic 2020
Shai Wosner plays Domenico Scarlatti and Frederic Rzewski January 21, 2020 Grand Piano Series is a solo piano recital series held in Naples, Florida at Vanderbilt Presbyterian Church (http•••) Piano: Fazioli F308 Subscribe for more: (http•••) Support: (http•••) Let’s connect: Facebook – (http•••) Instagram – (http•••) Website - (http•••) Podcast - (http•••) Google Play - (http•••) Spotify - (http•••) Stitcher - (http•••) Apple Podcasts - (http•••) Soundcloud - (http•••) ARTIST BIO: Pianist Shai Wosner has attracted international recognition for his exceptional artistry, musical integrity, and creative insight. His performances of a broad range of repertoire—from Beethoven and Schubert to Ligeti and the music of today—reflect a degree of virtuosity and intellectual curiosity that has made him a favorite among audiences and critics Mr. Wosner continues his career-long, critically acclaimed engagement with Schubert’s music in his latest recital series Schubert: The Great Sonatas comprising the composer’s six final sonatas, which he describes as “thick novels, rich with insight about the human condition.” Recitals take place at the Konzerthaus in Berlin, and include a residency at Cal Performances in Berkeley as well as appearances in Buffalo, Fresno, and Cambridge (MA). He also performs works from his latest solo recording, Impromptu(Onyx Classics) featuring an eclectic mix of improvisationally inspired works by composers from Beethoven and Schubert to Gershwin and Ives in St. Paul and elsewhere. His concerto performances include appearances with the Detroit and Toronto Symphony Orchestras (Mozart’s Concerto No. 21); the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra (Brahms’ Concerto No. 2), and the Alabama and Wichita Falls Symphony Orchestrad, Musikalische Akademie of the National Theater Orchestra Mannheim,and Syracuse’s Symphoria (Schumann’s Piano Concerto). His chamber music collaborations include a six-city U.S. tour with Orion Weiss playing works for 4-hands and two pianos by Schubert and Brahms with David Lang’s companion pieces gravity and after gravity; performances with the Emerson Quartet for CMS of Lincoln Center; New York Philharmonic musicians at David Geffen Hall; cellist Stephen Isserlis and violinist Laura Frautschi as part of Orpheus Chamber Orchestra’s Twilight at Tarisio series; and a Bridge to Beethoven concert with violinist Jennifer Koh on Baltimore’s Shriver Hall Concert Series. In addition to Impromptu, Mr. Wosner’s recordings for Onyx include concertos and capriccios by Haydn and Ligeti with the Danish National Symphony conducted by Nicholas Collon; solo works by Brahms and Schoenberg; works by Schubert, both on a solo recording and paired with new commissions from Missy Mazzoli; and Beethoven’s complete works for cello and piano with Ralph Kirshbaum. He also performs Bartók, Janáček, and Kurtág on a recording with Jennifer Koh for Cedille. Mr. Wosner is a recipient of Lincoln Center’s Martin E. Segal Award, an Avery Fisher Career Grant, and a Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award—a prize he used to commission Michael Hersch’s concerto Along the Ravines, which he performed with the Seattle Symphony and Deutsche Radio Philharmonie. He was in residence with the BBC as a New Generation Artist and is a former member of Lincoln Center'sBowers Program (formerly CMS Two). For several summers, he was involved in the West-Eastern Divan Workshop led by Mr. Barenboim and toured as soloist with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra. In the U.S., he has appeared with the orchestras of Atlanta, Baltimore, Berkeley, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco, and St. Paul and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestras. He has also performed with the Barcelona Symphony, Bournemouth Symphony, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Gothenburg Symphony, LSO St. Luke’s, National Arts Centre Orchestra, Nieuw Sinfonietta Amsterdam, Orchestre National de Belgique, Staatskapelle Berlin, and the Vienna Philharmonic, among others. Born in Israel, Mr. Wosner studied piano with Opher Brayer and Emanuel Krasovsky, as well as composition, theory, and improvisation with André Hajdu, and at The Juilliard School with Emanuel Ax. Share this video with a friend: (http•••) Watch next: Lera Auerbach plays Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition (http•••) Recommended Playlist: Podcasts (http•••) #shaiwosner #scarlatti #rzewski
Shai Wosner Domenico Scarlatti Frederic Rzewski Beethoven Schubert Ligeti Gershwin Ives Brahms Schumann Weiss David Lang Isserlis Jennifer Koh Haydn Nicholas Collon Schoenberg Missy Mazzoli Bartók Segal Barenboim Emanuel Ax Lera Auerbach Mussorgsky Konzerthaus Berlin Lincoln Center David Geffen Hall Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra Emerson Quartet New York Philharmonic Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Seattle Symphony West Eastern Divan Orchestra Frankfurt Radio Symphony Gothenburg Symphony Lso National Arts Centre Orchestra Orchestre National Belgique Staatskapelle Berlin Vienna Philharmonic 2020
Shai Wosner plays Domenico Scarlatti and Frederic Rzewski January 21, 2020 Grand Piano Series is a solo piano recital series held in Naples, Florida at Vanderbilt Presbyterian Church (http•••) Piano: Fazioli F308 Subscribe for more: (http•••) Support: (http•••) Let’s connect: Facebook – (http•••) Instagram – (http•••) Website - (http•••) Podcast - (http•••) Google Play - (http•••) Spotify - (http•••) Stitcher - (http•••) Apple Podcasts - (http•••) Soundcloud - (http•••) ARTIST BIO: Pianist Shai Wosner has attracted international recognition for his exceptional artistry, musical integrity, and creative insight. His performances of a broad range of repertoire—from Beethoven and Schubert to Ligeti and the music of today—reflect a degree of virtuosity and intellectual curiosity that has made him a favorite among audiences and critics. Mr. Wosner continues his career-long, critically acclaimed engagement with Schubert’s music in his latest recital series Schubert: The Great Sonatas comprising the composer’s six final sonatas, which he describes as “thick novels, rich with insight about the human condition.” Recitals take place at the Konzerthaus in Berlin, and include a residency at Cal Performances in Berkeley as well as appearances in Buffalo, Fresno, and Cambridge (MA). He also performs works from his latest solo recording, Impromptu(Onyx Classics) featuring an eclectic mix of improvisationally inspired works by composers from Beethoven and Schubert to Gershwin and Ives in St. Paul and elsewhere. His concerto performances include appearances with the Detroit and Toronto Symphony Orchestras (Mozart’s Concerto No. 21); the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra (Brahms’ Concerto No. 2), and the Alabama and Wichita Falls Symphony Orchestrad,Musikalische Akademie of the National Theater Orchestra Mannheim,and Syracuse’s Symphoria (Schumann’s Piano Concerto). His chamber music collaborations include a six-city U.S. tour with Orion Weiss playing works for 4-hands and two pianos by Schubert and Brahms with David Lang’s companion pieces gravity and after gravity; performances with the Emerson Quartet for CMS of Lincoln Center; New York Philharmonic musicians at David Geffen Hall; cellist Stephen Isserlis and violinist Laura Frautschi as part of Orpheus Chamber Orchestra’s Twilight at Tarisio series; and a Bridge to Beethovenconcert with violinist Jennifer Koh on Baltimore’s Shriver Hall Concert Series. In addition to Impromptu, Mr. Wosner’s recordings for Onyx include concertos and capriccios by Haydn and Ligeti with the Danish National Symphony conducted by Nicholas Collon; solo works by Brahms and Schoenberg; works by Schubert, both on a solo recording and paired with new commissions from Missy Mazzoli; and Beethoven’s complete works for cello and piano with Ralph Kirshbaum. He also performs Bartók, Janáček, and Kurtág on a recording with Jennifer Koh for Cedille. Mr. Wosner is a recipient of Lincoln Center’s Martin E. Segal Award, an Avery Fisher Career Grant, and a Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award—a prize he used to commission Michael Hersch’s concerto Along the Ravines, which he performed with the Seattle Symphony and Deutsche Radio Philharmonie. He was in residence with the BBC as a New Generation Artist and is a former member of Lincoln Center'sBowers Program (formerly CMS Two). For several summers, he was involved in the West-Eastern Divan Workshop led by Mr. Barenboim and toured as soloist with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra. In the U.S., he has appeared with the orchestras of Atlanta, Baltimore, Berkeley, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco, and St. Paul and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestras. He has also performed with the Barcelona Symphony, Bournemouth Symphony, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Gothenburg Symphony, LSO St. Luke’s, National Arts Centre Orchestra, Nieuw Sinfonietta Amsterdam, Orchestre National de Belgique, Staatskapelle Berlin, and the Vienna Philharmonic, among others. Born in Israel, Mr. Wosner studied piano with Opher Brayer and Emanuel Krasovsky, as well as composition, theory, and improvisation with André Hajdu, and at The Juilliard School with Emanuel Ax. Share this video with a friend: (http•••) Watch next: Lera Auerbach plays Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition (http•••) Recommended Playlist: Podcasts (http•••) #shaiwosner #scarlatti #rzewski
Beethoven Franz Schubert Alice Tully Kogan Svetlova Alban Berg Isaac Stern Mayer Leon Fleisher Wu Han Ivry Gitlis Katz Franz Anton Hoffmeister Erwin Schulhoff Erno Dohnanyi Beethoven Quartet Alban Berg Quartet Amadeus Quartet Emerson Quartet Carnegie Hall Alice Tully Hall Sydney Opera House Wigmore Hall Royal Festival Hall 1770 1827 1926 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Ludwig van Beethoven +••.••(...)) String Quartet no. 13 in B-flat major, Op. 130 with the Grosse Fuge (Op. 133) I. Adagio, ma non troppo - Allegro (00:00) II. Presto (09:55) III. Andante con moto, ma non troppo. Poco scherzoso (11:58) IV. Alla danza tedesca (19:26) V. Cavatina (23:05) VI. Grosse Fuge (31:25) Last concert of the complete cycle of the Beethoven Quartet given by the Aviv Quartet in Geneva broadcasted by radio Espace 2. All this made possible by the tremendous Agence Crescendo. Many thanks! Sergey Ostrovsky, Philippe Villafranca - violin Noémie Bialobroda - viola Daniel Mitnitsky - cello Aviv Quartet Winner of the Grand Prix and 4 special prizes at the 3rd Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition (1999, Australia), 1st Prize "Amadeus Prize" at Charles Hennen Competition (Holland 1999), Schubert Prize at Schubert Competition (2003, Graz, Austria), 2nd Prize (no 1st Prize awarded) and the International Critics Prize at Bordeaux String Quartet Competition (2003, France) , 2nd Prize at Prague Spring Competition (1998 Czech Republic). The Aviv Quartet has performed at leading venues throughout the world, including Carnegie Hall and Alice Tully Hall (New York), Kennedy Center and The Library of Congress (Washington), Sydney Opera House, Cologne Philharmonie, Vienna Konzerthaus, Wigmore Hall and Royal Festival Hall (London), Louvre Auditorium,Theatre du Chatelet and Theatre de la Ville (Paris), Beethovenhaus (Bohn). As well, The Aviv Quartet performed in Brazil, China, Australia, Ireland, Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, Croatia, Portugal, Spain, South Africa, Canada, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Belgium and Switzerland. In 1999-2003 The Aviv Quartet was awarded several government prizes, such as Israeli Ministry of Culture Prize (2001), German Ministry of Education Award (1999), Prize of Israeli Lottery Foundation - Mif'al ha Pais (2003) The Aviv Quartet studied with Gad Kogan, Irina Svetlova and Chaim Taub, than continued its studies with the members of the Alban Berg Quartet at Cologne Hochschule +••.••(...)), and Daniel Quartet at Rotterdam Conservatory. During 2002-2003 they collaborated with the Ysaye Quartet at CNR de Paris. In addition, the Aviv Quartet participated in courses and master-classes with members of Amadeus Quartet, Emerson Quartet, Julliard Quartet, Isaac Stern, Walter Levin, Henry Mayer, Leon Fleisher, Joseph Kalichshtein, Wu Han, Ivry Gitlis, Arnold Steinhard and Paul Katz. Aviv, meaning 'spring' in Hebrew, a signifier of new beginnings and the season of birth and fresh thinking encompasses the Aviv Quartet's artistic philosophy of stripping away artificial coverings "to reveal true nature, sharper definition and heightened awareness". Its recordings for Naxos, including works by Franz Anton Hoffmeister, Erwin Schulhoff, Erno Dohnanyi and Franz Schubert have been highly acclaimed for their freshness of spirit vivacity, and top class quality of string quartet performing. SERGEY OSTROVSKY, violin PHILIPPE VILLAFRANCA, violin NOEMIE BIALOBRODA, viola DANIEL MITNITSKY, cello www.avivquartet.com
Emerson String Quartet Emerson Quartet Dmitri Shostakovich Drucker Lawrence Dutton Paul Watkins Watkins Alice Tully Schubert Mendelssohn Britten Tchaikovsky Schoenberg Lincoln Center Tanglewood Alice Tully Hall 2013 2014 2018
00:00 Largo 05:07 Allegro molto 08:12 Allegretto 12:36 Largo 17:43 Largo 1st violin: Eugene Drucker 2nd violin: Philip Setzer Viola: Lawrence Dutton Cello: Paul Watson This performance of Dmitri Shostakovich’s 8th String Quartet in C minor, Op. 110, by the Emerson String Quartet took place on December 16, 2018 on Parlance Chamber Concerts at West Side Presbyterian Church in Ridgewood, NJ. *Artistic Director Michael Parloff’s pre-performance introduction to Dmitri Shostakovich’s 8th String Quartet can be viewed at (http•••) Michael Parloff’s full lecture at Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society about Shostakovich’s 8th String quartet can be viewed at (http•••) Parlance Chamber Concerts (Michael Parloff, Artistic Director) presents 8 concerts per season featuring world-class performers. Tickets and information at (http•••) Video produced by Darryl Kubian A/V Production by Indigo Fox Media 2018Parlance Chamber Concerts (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) The Emerson String Quartet stands apart in the history of string quartets with an unparalleled list of achievements over three decades: more than thirty acclaimed recordings, nine Grammys (including two for Best Classical Album), three Gramophone Awards, the Avery Fisher Prize, Musical America's "Ensemble of the Year", and collaborations with many of the greatest artists of our time. With the arrival of cellist Paul Watkins in May of 2013, the Emerson Quartet has embarked on a remarkable new journey / one filled with freshness, warmth and impressive accolades / all within its first ten performances. Mr. Watkins, a distinguished soloist, award-winning conductor, and dedicated chamber musician, has joined the ensemble for its 37th season, and his dedication and enthusiasm have already infused the Emerson Quartet with a rich tone and vibrant sense of humor. "One of the characteristics of the Emerson Quartet is that its players (the violinists Eugene Drucker and Philip Setzer and the violist Lawrence Dutton in addition, now, to Mr. Watkins) all have the ability and the instruments to produce a sweet and glossy sound — but do so sparingly. Instead, they establish a chromatic scale of timbres that range from dry and tart over clean and zesty all the way to lustrous and singing. Listening to them pass tiny rhythmic motifs around the group, I was struck by how evenly calibrated these timbres were." The New York Times The Quartet's season began in Montreal followed by performances in Tianjin and Taiwan. Summer festival performances included Caramoor, Aspen, Ravinia, Tanglewood, Mostly Mozart and a residency at the Norfolk Music Festival. Late summer dates at European festivals brought them to Berlin, Augsburg, Ascona, Città di Castello and [Humlebaek,] Denmark, for two appearances at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. In a season of over 80 quartet performances, mingled with the Quartet members' individual commitments, Emerson highlights feature numerous concerts on both coasts and throughout North America. Multiple tours of Europe include dates in Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, France, Poland and the UK. The Emerson continues its series at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC for its 34th season and gives a three-concert series in Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall, which is focused on the last five quartets of Shostakovich juxtaposed with Schubert's "Death and the Maiden" and the last quartets of Mendelssohn and Britten. The unifying theme in these programs is the preoccupation with death. In May and June 2014, the Quartet will tour South America, Asia and Australia. As an exclusive artist for SONY Classical, the Emerson recently released Journeys, its second CD on that label, featuring Tchaikovsky's Souvenir de Florence and Schoenberg's Verklaerte Nacht. Future recordings are planned with Mr. Watkins.