Lucia Cervoni Vidéos
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-02
Actualiser
Giuseppe Verdi Borisov Burge Schröder Kolar Lucia Cervoni Heller Jonathan Winell Noa Danon Danon Raffaela Lintl Theater Magdeburg 2017 2018
Oper von Giuseppe Verdi Theater Magdeburg Spielzeit 2017/2018 Premiere am Sa. 21. 10. 2017 Musikalische Leitung Svetoslav Borisov Regie Oliver Mears Bühne / Kostüme Simon Holdsworth Choreografie Lucy Burge Dramaturgie Ulrike Schröder Choreinstudierung Martin Wagner Aida Kristina Kolar Amneris Lucia Cervoni Radamès Marc Heller Amonasro Lucian Petrean Ramfis Johannes Stermann König Paul Sketris Ein Bote Jonathan Winell/Manfred Wulfert Tempelsängerin Noa Danon/Raffaela Lintl Magdeburgische Philharmonie Opernchor des Theater Magdeburg Magdeburger Singakademie Staatliche Ballettschule Berlin
Philip Glass Nicholson Archer Jonathan Morton McLaughlin Rutherford Daniel Pioro Donald Grant Atkins Mannion Cervoni Scottish Ensemble Royal Philharmonic 2020
Philip Glass Symphony No.3 Movements III and IV Featuring Scottish Ensemble and senior members of the National Youth Orchestras of Scotland While free to view, this film required significant investment to create. If you enjoy the film, please consider making a donation to Scottish Ensemble, or the National Youth Orchestras of Scotland. (http•••) (http•••) / A train emerges from the darkness. Passengers rest, quietly look out the windows, and dream their own worlds into existence. The landscape outside twists, turns and renews. Slowly, the hum of the urban world starts to appear. In this 15-minute music video, the pulsing throb of the final two movements of Philip Glass’s Symphony No. 3 subsumes the rhythm of the train-tracks and takes you on a train ride fuelled by musical steam. This film was created in Covid-19 secure, socially-distanced conditions in Autumn 2020 at 16 Nicholson Street Gallery in Glasgow. As part of our year-round work with young people, we support the next generation of pre-professional string players to explore new ways to perform and share the classical repertoire. This collaboration with NYOS gave seven young players the opportunity to experience the process of creating a short film and to be part of our cutting-edge digital work – which looks to find a new filmic language for classical music. CREDITS Director/Animation: Sven Werner Executive Producer: John Archer for Hopscotch Films Producer: David Brown for Hopscotch Films Music Director: Jonathan Morton Director of Photography: Alan C. McLaughlin Sound Design/Engineer: Jonathan Green Audio Production Assistant: Sam McErlean Editor: Lucy Armitage Production Assistant: Kenni Campbell Gaffer: Graham Colvan Digital Imaging Technician: Derek Gereg Set Construction: Allan McQuade, Neil Rutherford, Ursule Kerbedyte Scottish Ensemble Performers Violin: Jonathan Morton, Kate Suthers, Daniel Pioro, Liza Johnson, Donald Grant, Joanne Green, Laura Ghiro Viola: Jane Atkins, Andrew Berridge Cello: Alison Lawrance, Robert Anderson Bass: Diane Clark (http•••) NYOS Performers Violin: Briona Mannion, Daniel Stroud, Sagnick Mukherjee Viola: Gordon Cervoni, Eilidh Randall Cello: Freya Ruuskanen Bass: Manuel D’Amico (http•••) Supported by Creative Scotland | Glasgow City Council | Royal Philharmonic Society Audience Fund in association with the Rachel Baker Memorial Charity
Alessandro Stradella Emőke Baráth Xavier Sabata Sabata Cervoni Novaro Il Pomo Oro
Alessandro Stradella’s place in the annals of the history of music is not only due to the adventurous circumstances that marked his brief existence, but also to the reputation as a opera composer he has acquired since the 18th century. Inaccessible for many decades to specialists and scholars, La Doriclea is definitely the least known of all Stradella’s operas. However, it constitutes a particularly significant chapter in his overall output: composed in Rome during the early 1670s, to our knowledge La Doriclea represents the first opera entirely composed by Stradella. From the dramatic point of view, La Doriclea belongs to the comedy of intrigue genre typical of the 17th century Spanish theatre tradition. Refined and amusing, it alternates touching lamentos with irresistibly comic scenes, in which the character of Giraldo, a veritable precursor of the basso buffo, allows us to glimpse Rossinian atmospheres. Emőke Baráth (Doriclea) and Xavier Sabata (Fidalbo) alongside Giuseppina Bridelli (Lucinda) and Luca Cervoni (Celindo) and the comic couple of Delfina (Gabriella Martellacci) and Giraldo (Riccardo Novaro) bring a complex and fascinating role-playing game to life. This world premiere release of La Doriclea is a major achievement for The Stradella Project, which here reaches its fifth volume. Release date → November 9th Stream//Download//Buy → (http•••) FACEBOOK→ www.facebook.com/OuthereMusic TWITTER → www.twitter.com/Outheremusic INSTAGRAM → www.instagram.com/outheremusic YOUTUBE → www.youtube.com/user/outheremusic WEBSITE → www.outhere-music.com
Philip Glass Nicholson Archer Jonathan Morton McLaughlin Rutherford Daniel Pioro Donald Grant Atkins Mannion Cervoni Scottish Ensemble Royal Philharmonic 2020
View the full 15 minute film: (http•••) A train emerges from the darkness. Passengers rest, quietly look out the windows, and dream their own worlds into existence. The landscape outside twists, turns and renews. Slowly, the hum of the urban world starts to appear. In the full music video, the pulsing throb of the final two movements of Philip Glass’s Symphony No. 3 subsumes the rhythm of the train-tracks and takes you on a train ride fuelled by musical steam. This film was created in Covid-19 secure, socially-distanced conditions in Autumn 2020 at 16 Nicholson Street Gallery in Glasgow. As part of our year-round work with young people, we support the next generation of pre-professional string players to explore new ways to perform and share the classical repertoire. This collaboration with NYOS gave seven young players the opportunity to experience the process of creating a short film and to be part of our cutting-edge digital work – which looks to find a new filmic language for classical music. CREDITS Director/Animation: Sven Werner Executive Producer: John Archer for Hopscotch Films Producer: David Brown for Hopscotch Films Music Director: Jonathan Morton Director of Photography: Alan C. McLaughlin Sound Design/Engineer: Jonathan Green Audio Production Assistant: Sam McErlean Editor: Lucy Armitage Production Assistant: Kenni Campbell Gaffer: Graham Colvan Digital Imaging Technician: Derek Gereg Set Construction: Allan McQuade, Neil Rutherford, Ursule Kerbedyte Scottish Ensemble Performers Violin: Jonathan Morton, Kate Suthers, Daniel Pioro, Liza Johnson, Donald Grant, Joanne Green, Laura Ghiro Viola: Jane Atkins, Andrew Berridge Cello: Alison Lawrance, Robert Anderson Bass: Diane Clark (http•••) NYOS Performers Violin: Briona Mannion, Daniel Stroud, Sagnick Mukherjee Viola: Gordon Cervoni, Eilidh Randall Cello: Freya Ruuskanen Bass: Manuel D’Amico (http•••) Supported by Creative Scotland | Glasgow City Council | Royal Philharmonic Society Audience Fund in association with the Rachel Baker Memorial Charity
ou
- chronologie: Artistes lyriques.
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): C...