Peter Dvorský Vidéos
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-08
Actualiser
Claudio Abbado Montserrat Caballé Caballé Cecilia Gasdia Lucia Valentini Terrani Chris Merritt Samuel Ramey Giuseppe Verdi Teatro Scala 1985 2013
Montserrat Caballé Sopran · Cecilia Gasdia Sopran · Lucia Valentini Terrani Mezzosopran · Peter Dvorsky Tenor · Chris Merritt Tenor · Samuel Ramey Bass· GIULIO BERTOLA Chorus Master CHOIR AND ORCHESTRA OF THE SCALA DI MILANO Claudio Abbado This DVD will be available in May 2013. Verdi first presented his Messa da Requiem in the Church of San Marco. It was his emotional response to the death of the Italian national poet Alessandro Manzoni. He poured his entire dramatic skill, the fruit of thirty years of theatrical work, into this memorial Mass. Three days after the première, Verdi performed the work at a sold-out La Scala. After that he immediately traveled to Paris to present it there. The following year, there was a regular tour that took him and his troupe with the Requiem and Aida through half of Europe all the way to Vienna. This film is about Giuseppe Verdi's Messa da Requiem and about the conductor Claudio Abbado but at the same time it is a study of the theme of transience depicting scenes of musical rehearsals and symbols of life. It shows rehearsals for this grandiose musical creation taking place in three different locations: at the church of San Marco in Milan, on the main stage at Teatro alla Scala and in one of the rehearsal rooms of the opera house. The result is an opportunity to directly compare the performances of two world-known sopranos and tenors.A film by Norbert Beilharz. Recorded at the church of San Marco, 1985 REPERTOIRE: Versi: Messa da Requiem
Katia Ricciarelli Giuseppe Verdi 1987
Giuseppe Verdi, Otello Willow Song, Ave Maria & Final Desdemona: Katia Ricciarelli Otello: Peter Dvorsky Giuseppe Patané, conductor Munich, Germany, 1987
Verdi Sergiu Celibidache Kurt Rydl Reinhild Runkel 1993
Verdi: Messa da Requiem Münchner Philharmonie Dirigent: Sergiu Celibidache Kurt Rydl Peter Dvorsky Elena Filipova Reinhild Runkel 1993, München
Josef Hofmann Kazimierz Hofmann Honorata Majeranowska Camille Saint Saëns Burden Moszkowski Heinrich Urban Rubinstein Metropolitan Opera House Carnegie Hall 1876 1887 1888 1894 1913 1915 1926 1937 1938 1946 1957
LIKE and SUBSCRIBE for more score videos ! (http•••) SUBSCRIBE to my PATREON ! → (http•••) Josef Hofmann plays his composition Penguine [Audio + Score] in 1938 at the Casimir Hall recital. ("Penguins" is from "Trois Impressions"), Allegretto in B flat minor, published in 1915 under the pseudonym Michel Dvorsky. Josef Hofmann, the pianist, teacher, composer and inventor, born on 20th January 1876 in Krakow. He came from the family of musicians. His father, Kazimierz Hofmann, was a famous composer, pianist and conductor, his mother, Matylda Pindelska and the father’s two sisters, Honorata Majeranowska and Josefa Hofmann-Rapacka were singers. When Josef was three years old he began to learn to play the piano. The boy’s outstanding gift, his father’s pedagogical care and also the artistic atmosphere in his family contributed to his continuous progress. When he was eight he appeared in Warsaw, where he played the Mozart’s Concert D-Minor conducted by his father. Two years later, he had his first European tournée. He was performing in Prague, Germany, Denmark (where his performance was admired by the King of Denmark), Sweden, Holland, France (in the presence of Camille Saint-Saëns) and in England. In 1887 he went to the United States, where he made a great success performing in the Metropolitan Opera House. He was engaged for a few dozen concerts. Despite his great success, he achieved and the admiration for his mature performances, after 10 weeks during which he gave 52 concerts, the tournée was cancelled at the request of New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. They decided that the tournée was too an excessive burden for the 11 years old boy and might be dangerous to his health. However, thanks to the publicity young Hofmann gained by playing, Alfred Coming Clark funded him a scholarship, under the condition, however, that the boy would not perform in public before his 18th birthday. The scholarship helped him to complete music studies in Berlin in 1888-1894. He was taught by such teachers as Maurycy Moszkowski (piano), Heinrich Urban (composition), and by Antoni Rubinstein. In 1894 he received the first prize at the Antoni Rubinstein competition in Hamburg during which he performed his D-Minor Concert Op. 70. After this success, he began the real career as a pianist performing in many European countries (England, Scandinavian countries, Russia, Poland), where he enjoyed great popularity, especially in Petersburg (1913). Apart from performances in Europe he gave annual concerts in the United States, which became his second homeland. In 1926, he received American citizenship. In 1926-1938 he was the Principal of the music school Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. On 28th November 1937, on the 50th anniversary of his American debut the jubilee concert was held in Metropolitan Opera House. He finished his career as the pianist on 19th January 1946 when he gave his last recital in Carnegie Hall. He died in Los Angeles on 16th February 1957. He was married twice. Maria Eustis was his first wife and he had one daughter with her, the second wife was Betty Short and they had 3 sons. (http•••)o/
ou
- chronologie: Artistes lyriques (Europe).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): D...