Václav Smetáček Vidéos
chef d'orchestre
- hautbois
- musique classique
- Tchécoslovaquie
- compositeur ou compositrice, chef ou cheffe d'orchestre, hautboïste, pédagogue, musicologue, professeur ou professeure d'université, philosophe, enseignant ou enseignante
Dernière mise à jour
2024-04-24
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Rudolf Karel Václav Smetáček Nejedlý Česká Filharmonie 1973 2019
Provided to YouTube by Supraphon Revolution overtura, Op. 39 · Rudolf Karel · Česká filharmonie/Václav Smetáček Předehry (Karel, Burian,Pauer, Nejedlý) ℗ 1973 SUPRAPHON a.s. Released on: 2019-02-22 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Hector Berlioz Václav Smetáček 1964 1989
Provided to YouTube by Supraphon King Lear. Overture (Le Roi Lear) , Op. 4 · Hector Berlioz · Symfonický orchestr hl. m. Prahy FOK/Václav Smetáček Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique, Le Roi Lear ℗ 1964 SUPRAPHON a.s. Released on: 1989-01-01 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Jakub Jan Ryba Václav Smetáček Helena Tattermuschová Vodrážka 1966 2002
Provided to YouTube by Supraphon My Lovely Nightingale. Pastorella for soprano, flute, organ and orchestra · Jakub Jan Ryba · Symfonický orchestr hl.m. Prahy (FOK)/Václav Smetáček · Helena Tattermuschová · Jaroslav Josífko · Jaroslav Vodrážka Ryba: Czech Christmas Mass - export ℗ 1966 SUPRAPHON a.s. Released on: 2002-09-16 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Czerny Frédéric Chopin Halina Czerny Stefańska Stefańska Łukowicz Alfred Cortot Józef Turczyński Zbigniew Drzewiecki Bella Davidovich Dinu Lipatti Václav Smetáček Tchaikovsky Marguerite Long Jacques Thibaud 1917 1922 1943 1949 1951 1966 1971 1981 1982 2001
Halina Czerny-Stefanska plays Chopin's 'Fantaisie Impromptu,' recorded at Abbey Road on 10 December 1949. From Wikipedia: Halina Czerny-Stefańska (31 December 1922 – 1 July 2001) was a Polish pianist. She studied piano under her father, Stanisław Szwarcenberg-Czerny, as well as with Alfred Cortot at the École Normale de Musique in Paris, and later with Józef Turczyński and Zbigniew Drzewiecki in Warsaw. She was a joint First Prize winner at the IV International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw in 1949, sharing this prize with Bella Davidovich. Her repertoire was restricted to few composers other than Frédéric Chopin and even her Chopin repertoire was not large. For example, she did not play the Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor live until 1951, and she never played the F minor concerto at all, as she did not like it. She was proven to be the real pianist in a recording of the E minor concerto that was misattributed to Dinu Lipatti. The recording was released in 1966 by EMI, and on the 1971 British release was a note to the effect that, although the name of the conductor and orchestra were not known, there was no doubt the soloist was Lipatti. The BBC broadcast the recording in 1981, and a listener wrote in, noting the similarities between it and a Supraphon recording from the early 1950s with Czerny-Stefańska under Václav Smetáček. Tests revealed these were one and the same recording. The so-called Lipatti recording was withdrawn. Halina Czerny-Stefańska was a juror in many piano competitions including the Leeds International Pianoforte Competition, the International Tchaikovsky Competition, and the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud Competition. She was also a juror at the International Chopin Piano Competition for many years. Her daughter, with husband Ludwik Stefański (1917–1982) is Elżbieta Stefańska-Łukowicz (b. 1943), a harpsichordist and professor at the Academy of Music in Kraków, Poland. Halina Czerny-Stefańska died in Kraków on 1 July 2001. I transferred this side from HMV C 3968.
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