Jyri Nissilä Video
Ultimo aggiornamento
2024-05-12
Aggiorna
Leeuw Sibelius Sheridan Henk Badings Olivier Messiaen Hartmann Sweelinck Shakespeare Concertgebouw Orchestra 1926 1949 1950 1954 1956 1957 1958 1959 1961 1963 1964 1968 1970 1975 1976 1977 1981 1982 1983 1985 1986 1987 1988 1990 1991 1994 1996 1997 2000 2005
Ton de Leeuw: Concerto pour deux guitares et douze instruments à cordes : 1987-88. Rody van Gemert & Mikko Ikäheimo - guitars, Jyri Nissila - conductor, La Tempesta Orchestra Live recording from the Sibelius Academy Concert Hall 10.11.2005 Guitars: Sumio Kurosawa 2005 & Paul Sheridan 2000 (http•••) Ton de Leeuw was born on November 16, 1926 in Rotterdam. He died on May 31, 1996 in Paris (France). In 1949, after some years of composition lessons with Henk Badings, he went to Paris to study with Olivier Messiaen (analysis) and Thomas de Hartmann (orchestration). His early interest for non-Western music brought him to Jaap Kunst and the ethnomusicology department at the Amsterdam University +••.••(...)). From 1954 to 1959 he was music director at the Dutch Radio Union. From 1959 to 1986 he was engaged with the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam, first as composition teacher and head of the electronic studio, later serving as managing director. Additionally he was a scholar on 20th century music at the University of Amsterdam. From 1958 to 1976 he gave hundreds of radio readings relating to contemporary and non-western music. In 1961 Ton de Leeuw was commissioned by the government to travel to India to study art music. Since then he gave many readings, concerts and workshops on the East-West relationship in music, contemporary music and his own compositions all over the world. From 1988 he lived in France. Altogether Ton de Leeuw wrote about 150 compositions. Important works are the radiophonic oratorio Job (1956), Mouvements rétrogrades (1957) for orchestra, Strijkkwartet nr. 1 (1958), Symphonies of winds (1963), the opera De droom (1963), Haiku II (1968) for mezzo-soprano and large ensemble, Music for strings (1970), Gending for gamelan ensemble (1975), Mountains (1977) for bass clarinet and tape, the electronic composition Clair obscur (1982), and a trilogy with: Car nos vignes sont en fleur for choir, And they shall reign for ever for mezzo-soprano and ensemble, and Invocations for mezzo-soprano, choir and ensemble +••.••(...)). At the occasion of the centenary of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra De Leeuw wrote Résonances (1985) for orchestra. Among his later works are: Les adieux (1988) for piano, Danses sacrées (1990) for piano and orchestra, the opera Antigone (1991) and at last Three Shakespeare Songs (1994) for mezzo-soprano and ensemble. Many of his papers on contemporary music and the relationship of East and West in music were published in international magazines and journals. The standard work Muziek van de twintigste eeuw (Music of the 20th Century) was published in 1964 and translated in English, Swedish and German. In 1956 Ton de Leeuw was awarded the Prix Italia for Job, in 1958 the Prix des Jeunesses Musicales for Strijkkwartet and in 1982 the Matthijs Vermeulenprijs for Car nos vignes sont en fleur. Posthumous he was awarded the Matthijs Vermeulenprijs 1997 for Three Shakespeare songs. Score available from Donemus: (http•••)
Yoshihisa Taira Sibelius André Jolivet Henri Dutilleux Olivier Messiaen Lili Boulanger Boulanger Florent Schmitt 1937 1966 1971 1974 1985 2003 2005
1st movement of Yoshihisa Taïra's - Pénombres I for 2 guitars and 12 strings. Rody van Gemert & Janne Malinen - guitars, Jyri Nissila - conductor, La Tempesta Orchestra Live recording from the Sibelius Academy Concert Hall 10.11.2005 Guitars: Sumio Kurosawa 2005 & Kauko Liikanen/Uwe Florath 2003 (http•••) Yoshihisa Taira (平 義久, 3 June 1937 in Tokyo – 13 March 2005 in Paris) Taira studied at the Tokyo University of the Arts. He moved to France in 1966 and studied at the Conservatoire de Paris. Among his teachers were André Jolivet, Henri Dutilleux and Olivier Messiaen. In 1971 he won the Prix Lili Boulanger, in 1974 the Grand Prix de Composition de la SACEM and in 1985 the Prix Florent Schmitt from the Académie des Beaux Arts. He was a composition lecturer at the École Normale de Musique in Paris.
All sounds created with ONEVIOLIN. ➤ Instagram - (http•••) ➤ Facebook - (http•••) ➤ Homepage - (http•••) Jean Sibelius - Finlandia (ONEVIOLIN cover) Music: Jean Sibelius, Op 26, no. 7 Lyrics: V.A.Koskenniemi Special thanks to: Ylläs - (http•••) Peak Performance - (http•••) Directed and edited by: Lili Nissilä Drone by: Eetu Leikas All sounds by: ONEVIOLIN
Non più?
Ogni giorno soclassiq cerca nuovi articoli, video, concerti e così via sulla musica classica e l'opera lirica, i loro artisti, luoghi, orchestre....
Jyri Nissilä ? Non abbiamo ancora raccolto molti contenuti su questo argomento, ma continuiamo a cercare.