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| [#6498] Mzt Piano Quartets forgot whether it was in these pages that trollope talked about the versions of Mozart's piano quartets < 07-03-18 23:05 Mozart: Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor, K.478 / Piano Quartet No. 2 in E flat major, K.493 Christian Zacharias (piano) / Frank-Peter Zimmermann (violin) / Tabea Zimmermann (viola) / Tilmann Wick (cello) [recorded November 1988] TDK DV-PQWAM: DVD (2002) 4:3 PAL DVD-5 LPCM stereo, AC3 5.1, & dts. I wonder whether this piece of recording and that in the EMI Encore CD are the same. ![]() |
trollope 202.xxx.xxx.133 |
2007-05-02 23:04 | |
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| [#6499] Mzt Piano Quartets Listen to this CD last night, Top of casting recoeded 1959. ![]() |
trazom 218.xxx.xxx.20 |
2007-05-04 15:14 |
| [#6500] Mozart's Opera Hi Trazom, You can also try this one - Cosi Fan Tutti http://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Cos%C3%AC-tutte-Wolfgang-Amadeus/dp/B00004VVZM ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.232 |
2007-05-04 21:30 |
| [#6501] Mozart's Opera Thank Eric for your recommentation Just listen to this young David Garrett, He played smooth & enjoyful. ![]() |
trazom 218.xxx.xxx.20 |
2007-05-05 00:22 |
| [#6502] New Curzon DVD Clifford Curzon: The BBC Recitals Schumann: Kinderszenen, op.15 Brahms: Capriccio in D minor, op.116 1959 Schubert: Moment Musical No.3, D780 Schubert: Impromptu No.4 in A flat Schubert: Sonata for piano No.21 in B flat, D960 (1968, in colour) 2 DVDs (1+bonus) Extra features: BBC Desert Island discs radio programme (Clifford Curzon chooses the recordings he would want to take to a desert island) Photo gallery Discography Original sleeve gallery Audio interviews - Curzon speaks about teachers Schnabel, Landowska ... Fritz Curzon (his son) reads from an article by Clifford Curzon Gold Medal acceptance speech at the Royal Philharmonic Society ![]() |
trollope 202.xxx.xxx.133 |
2007-05-07 12:58 |
| [#6503] Jacques Loussier Trio's Bach 1 DVD + 1 CD ![]() |
trollope 202.xxx.xxx.133 |
2007-05-07 13:02 |
| [#6504] Violin Showpiece again Another 2 Violin showpiece records. Erick Friedman's preformance 果然是精彩 ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.232 |
2007-05-09 00:45 |
| [#6505] La Follia La Follia played by recorder. ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.232 |
2007-05-11 00:46 |
| [#6506] From Mao to Mozart Watch this "moive" years ago and re-visit it recently on DVD. http://www.amazon.com/Mao-Mozart-Isaac-Stern-China/dp/B0000524FI/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/002-1731557-6666465?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1178979765&sr=8-1 In DVD, there is "Extra" clips on Stern's return to China 20 years later with the musicians grown up. They are only kids when the film is initially made. It is a pity the lady who plays Brahms violin concerto does not show up in the "Extra". I like how Stern plays Brahms in this film and his recording with Ormandy of that period. There is also Professor Tan talking about his story in the era of Japaness invasion and Cultural Revolution. The video ends with a 1962 recording on Tan's playing the slow movement of Schumann Violin Sonata in D. His story together with the melancholy Violin Sonata are very touching. By the way, do you guys have any suggestion on Schumann Violin Sonata, it is my first encounter on this piece. ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-12 22:28 |
| [#6507] Violin Sonatas Eric, I think if you like Martha Argerich, you will like this one. Schumann Violin sonata 1 & 2 (Recorded 1986). http://www.deutschegrammophon.com/imgs/s250x250/4192352.jpg |
trazom 203.xxx.xxx.74 |
2007-05-12 23:15 |
| [#6508] Violin Sonatas Another recomendation: Faure Violin Sonatas http://www.naxos.com/catalogue/item.asp?item_code=8.550906 ![]() |
trazom 203.xxx.xxx.74 |
2007-05-12 23:25 |
| [#6509] Violin Sonatas Thanks Trazom. |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-12 23:39 |
| [#6510] The Pianist http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pianist_(2002_film) Watch this film in TV recently. The Chopin pieces in the film 非常動聽 which I did not notice before. Nocturne in C-sharp minor Ballade No. 1 in G minor Grande Polonaise brillante |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-12 23:45 |
| [#6511] The Pianist Today, listen to Dvorak Cello Concerto. ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-13 00:20 |
| [#6512] Cello Lynn Harrell plays Dvorak again. 好聲. ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-13 00:22 |
| [#6513] Cello 好好聲 Sonata for Cello and Piano Composer: Sergey Prokofiev, Dmitry Shostakovich Performer: Yuli Turovsky, Luba Edlina http://www.amazon.com/Prokofiev-Shostakovich-Sonatas-Yuli-Turovsky/dp/B000000ACG/ref=sr_1_1/002-1731557-6666465?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1178987006&sr=8-1 ![]() |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-13 00:26 |
| [#6514] Shostakovich Sonata fpr Cello and Piano Music note of the Shostakovich Sonata for Cello and Piano http://www.guildmusic.com/catalog/gui7219z.htm Review from Gramophone of the record under Chandos label. http://www.gramophone.co.uk/gramofilereview.asp?reviewID=8504078&mediaID=11039&issue=Reviewed%3A+Gramophone+4%2F1985 |
erictang 219.xxx.xxx.138 |
2007-05-13 00:40 |
| [#6515] Shostakovich Sonata fpr Cello and Piano Turovsky and Edlina are most under-rated. Luba Edlina is wife of the great first violinist of the original Borodin string quartet, Rotislav Dubinsky. Of course the Borodin is still for me one of the greatest string quartets of the century, through its various incarnations, linked by the incomparable cellist Valentin Berlinsky. It is arguable that Dubinsky was its best first violinist ever. Yuli Turovsky is also excellent Russian cellist. His conducts the small group I Musici de Montreal in many memorable CDs on Chandos. But one of the greatest thing in the Chandos roster is the Borodin Trio, comprising Edlina, Dubinsky and Turovsky. There's no loser among their discography, and something like the Brahms piano quartets put the other versions to shame. Passionate, musically big performances. Salute! Sometimes Edlina has been criticized for being not too detailed or refined, but these critics never listen with their hearts. --------------------------------------- Dubinsky wrote one of the greatest biographies by a musician, "Stormy Applause", sadly likely out-of-print. http://www.amazon.com/Stormy-Applause-Making-Music-Workers/dp/1555531199 Amazon.com Though written remarkably well and full of brave, defiant flashes of wit and humor, this is a sad and haunting book. Dubinsky was the founder and for 30 years the first violinist of the Borodin String Quartet, one of the supreme ensembles of its kind. Here he describes a musician's life under a totalitarian regime: the soul-destroying restrictions and constant dangers, exacerbated by a pervasive anti-Semitism--officially illegal but actively encouraged and ruthlessly practiced by the authorities. The quartet's original players were all Jews, though the cellist was a half-Jew who passed as Russian; the second violinist and violist were eventually replaced by Russians. Dubinsky was the "artistic director" in charge of rehearsals and musical decisions, but the quartet's activities, including the members' personal interrelationships, were completely dominated by politics. And indeed so is the narrative: Dubinsky only rarely talks about music, though always movingly and with insight, and never explains how the group attained its greatness. Certain scenes stand out: Stalin's and Prokofiev's deaths on the same day; vignettes of Russia's greatest musicians, such as Shostakovich (whose quartets they played), Oistrakh, Richter, and Rostropovich; the group's tours abroad, affording the first, overwhelmingly tempting glimpse of freedom; an anti-Russian demonstration in Cincinnati, defused when Dubinsky confronted the crowd; and the cellist's near-fatal automobile accident in California. Ever present is the paralyzing fear of the mercenary, soulless Russian bureaucracy. Dubinsky emigrated to America in 1975, formed the Borodin Trio with his wife, pianist Luba Edina, and was chairman of the Chamber Music Department at Indiana University until his death not long ago. --Edith Eisler From Library Journal These chronicles of a Jewish musician in the postwar Soviet Union--sometimes awkwardly written, often amusing and affecting--are by the first violinist of therenowned Borodin Quartet. Concerned solely with the author's experiences as a Soviet artist from 1949 to 1975, the year he emigrated to the United States, the works make little mention of Dubinsky's childhood and family. Much is made of anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union, the realities of working for a Soviet cultural agency, and the omnipresence of vodka in the lives of the people. Lyrical when he writes of people he loves and biting when the subjects are less than lovable, Dubinsky offers funny stories that balance the acrimony. Memorable is the one about how the quartet got to the head of a restaurant line by posing as foreigners and speaking in Italian musical terminology. - Bonnie Jo Dopp, District of Columbia P.L. ![]() |
doctorjohn 218.xxx.xxx.15 |
2007-05-13 11:43 |
| [#6516] Great new classical site A great site! very opinionated and entertaining classical writer! http://hkclassical.com/ |
doctorjohn 218.xxx.xxx.15 |
2007-05-13 13:25 |
| [#6517] Great new classical site He must be Mutter's fans! |
trazom 203.xxx.xxx.1 |
2007-05-14 00:03 |