Marie-Françoise Bucquet Vidéos
pianiste française
- piano
- musique contemporaine
- France
- pianiste classique, professeur ou professeure de musique
Dernière mise à jour
2024-04-27
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Marie Françoise Bucquet César Franck Orchestre National Opéra Monte Carlo Opéra Monte Carlo 1971 1994
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group Franck: Variations symphoniques · Marie-Françoise Bucquet · Orchestre National de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo · Paul Capolongo The Best of César Franck ℗ 1971 Universal International Music B.V. Released on: 1994-01-01 Composer: César Franck Auto-generated by YouTube.
Ensemble Música Ficta Ficta Navas Nieve Greef Vega Bucquet 1680 1745 2018
Provided to YouTube by The-Source Deuxième suite: Gigue, l'Italienne (The Italian) · Música Ficta Navas: Alado Cisne de Nieve - Art Songs ℗ 2018 Quintessence BVBA Released on: 2018-07-04 Producer: Dirk De Greef Soloist: Johanna Calderón Soloist: Leonardo Cabo Contributor: Mauricio Ardila Ensemble: Música Ficta Soloist: Regina Albanez Soloist: Sebastián Vega Composer: Pierre Bucquet 1680 - 1745 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Robert Schumann Holmström Sibelius Marie Françoise Bucquet Tapiola Sinfonietta Chamber Orchestra Europe Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra Lahti Symphony Orchestra 1810 1851 1853 1856 1862
Eriikka Maalismaa, violin Emil Holmström, piano (erard, 1862) Excerpt from the first movement of the 2nd sonata. Alba ABCD 438 (http•••) Violinist Eriikka Maalismaa and pianist Emil Holmström bring life to Robert Schumann´s three violin sonatas with period instruments on this new album. The unvarnished gut strings of the violin bring warm nuance, and together with the 1862 Erard grand piano they form a smooth sound of their era. Robert Schumann composed his three sonatas for violin and piano between 1851 and 1853. The second sonata was born almost immediately after the first, but the genesis and survival of the third one was much more complicated. Only a part of the score has survived along very tentative manuscripts. Maalismaa and Holmström have made deliberate solutions considering the ambiguous and incomplete material. Eriikka Maalismaa performs regularly at festivals in Finland and abroad, arranges concerts, and designs programs for her multiple ensembles. She has worked as the assistant concert master of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestr, and continues her career as a soloist and chamber musician. She plays frequently as the orchestral leader and concertmaster with the Tapiola Sinfonietta, the Avanti! Chamber Orchestra, the Jousia Ensemble, and performs as a guest player with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. Maalismaa is also a member of the Avanti String Quartet. She studied at the Sibelius Academy and the Edsberg Chamber Music Institute. Emil Holmström has performed as a soloist and chamber musician throughout he world. He appears frequently at Finnish music festivals and concert series and has been a featured soloist with notable Finnish orchestras, such as the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Lapland Chamber Orchestra, the Lahti Symphony Orchestra, and Tapiola Sinfonietta. Holmström is a member of Finnish groups defunensemble and Uusinta Ensemble, and plays as a regular guest with the Avanti! Chamber Orchestra. He graduated from the Sibelius Academy, and he was also a student of Marie-Françoise Bucquet in Paris. / Robert Schumann +••.••(...)) Sonata for Violin and Piano no. 2 in D Minor, Op. 121 (1851) Sonata for Piano and Violin no. 1 in A Minor, Op. 105 (1851) Sonata for Violin and Piano no. 3 in A Minor, WoO 2 (1853)
Debussy Kotaro Fukuma Chopin Marie Françoise Bucquet Hellwig Leon Fleisher Mitsuko Uchida Richard Goode Alicia Larrocha Pires Leslie Howard Aldo Ciccolini 2001 2003 2005 2006 2008 2009 2010
Born in Tokyo, Kotaro Fukuma started learning piano at the age of 5 and has obtained many high awards in international competitions in such cities as Santander, Helsinki, Tel Aviv, Rio De Janeiro and Salt Lake City. In 2003, at the age of 20, Kotaro won both First Prize and the Chopin Prize at the 15th Cleveland International Piano Competition. Since then his concert career has developed on five continents (North and South America, Europe, Africa and Asia). He studied music at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris +••.••(...)) with Bruno Rigutto and Marie-Françoise Bucquet, then at the Univeristät der Künste Berlin +••.••(...)) with Klaus Hellwig and at the International Piano Academy Lake Como in Italy +••.••(...)). He also has studied with several great masters of the piano, including Leon Fleisher, Mitsuko Uchida, Richard Goode, Alicia de Larrocha, Maria Joao Pires, Leslie Howard and Aldo Ciccolini.
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- chronologie: Interprètes (Europe).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): B...