Magda Tagliaferro Vidéos
pianiste brésilienne
- piano
- musique classique
- Brésil
- pianiste, professeur ou professeure de musique
Dernière mise à jour
2024-04-28
Actualiser
Reynaldo Hahn Hahn Bernhardt Magda Tagliaferro Graham Johnson Jules Massenet Orchestre National Lorraine 1212 1502 1874 1930 1947 1961 2002 2006 2020
Reynaldo Hahn (August 9, 1874 – January 28, 1947) was a Venezuelan, naturalized French, composer, conductor, music critic, diarist, theater director, and salon singer. Best known as a composer of more than 100 songs, he wrote in the French classical tradition of the mélodie. He was close friends with Marcel Proust and Sarah Bernhardt amongst many others. Please support my channel: (http•••) Piano Concerto in E major (1930) Dedication: à Magda Tagliaferro 1. Improvisation: Modéré très liberement (0:00) 2. Danse: Vif (12:12) 3. Rêverie (15:02), Toccata (23:00) et Finale Angelyne Pondepeyre, piano and Orchestre National de Lorraine conducted by Fernand Quatrocchi Graham Johnson writes that Hahn "was never truly of the twentieth century"; he was for many years regarded chiefly as evoking the spirit of fin de siècle Paris. He was not in sympathy with the more obviously modern music of the early decades of the 20th century, but he moved with the times. According to a 2020 analysis: Trained in the canons of Late Romanticism by his mentor and patron Jules Massenet, he succeeded in adjusting his style to the modernity of the Années folles, composing musical comedies with echoes of jazz, foxtrot and Argentinian tango, making masterly use of the saxophone and the piano in his orchestra … a catalogue of compositions ranging from chamber music – the sublime Piano Quartet and Piano Quintet – to ballet and the orchestral repertory. Hahn's biographer Jacques Depaulis writing in 2006, comments that many composers suffer a period of neglect after their deaths and are then rediscovered, a process known in France as "la traversée du désert" – crossing the desert. In 1947 a British newspaper remarked that Hahn "is hardly remembered today outside the boundaries of France". In 1961, 14 years after the composer's death, the musicologist Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt dismissed Hahn as "a talented gossip who had a gift for grinding out operettas and little, tastefully performed ballads in limitless quantities". In the last decades of the 20th century there was a revival in interest in Hahn's music: Johnson (2002) refers to "an ever-widening range of his mélodies to be heard regularly on the concert platform".
Chopin Władysław Kędra Haydn Camille Saint Saëns Magda Tagliaferro 1918 1933 1937 1946 1957 1968
Grave. Doppio movimento (0:00) Scherzo (5:08) Marche funebre. Lento (11:38) Finale - Presto (19:50) LP images (21:18) Władysław Kędra (16 September 1918 – 26 September 1968) was a Polish pianist. Kędra was born in Łódź. He made his debut in 1933, performing Haydn's 11th Concerto and Camille Saint-Saëns's Rapsodie d'Auvergne. He graduated from the Łódź Conservatory in 1937. He took part in the 3rd International Chopin Piano Competition, attracting juror Magda Tagliaferro's attention. He finished his studies in Paris. During World War II he secretly performed banned Polish music in Warsaw. The precarious circumstances affected Kędra's hands, but he overcame this. Settling back in Łódź after the German capitulation, he took part in the 1946 Concours de Geneve and the IV International Chopin Piano Competition, where he was awarded a 5th prize, which launched his concert career. In 1957 he settled in Vienna. He made many recordings, and died in Warsaw from cancer. He was 50 years old.
Magda Tagliaferro Beethoven Kreutzer
Beethoven: Sonata No. 9 in A major "Kreutzer" Op.47 I. Adagio sostenuto - Presto (00:00) II. Andante con variazoni (11:06) II. Finale (Presto) (27:25) Manoug Parikian, violin Magda Tagliaferro, piano
- chronologie: Interprètes (Amérique du Sud).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): T...