================================Ernst von Dohnányi Suite for orchestra in F sharp minor ("Suite romantique"), Op.19 1. Andante con variazioni (Andante con moto) Parts1&2-52. Scherzo (Allegretto vivace) Parts3-53. Romanza (Andante poco moto) Parts4-54. Rondo (Allegro vivace) Part5-5The Royal Philharmonic Orches6tra/Malcolm Sargent================================Related information:English music The MikadoSargent conducted Gilbert and Sullivan recordings in four different decades. His early recordings with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company for HMV included The Yeomen of the Guard (1929), The Pirates of Penzance (1929), Iolanthe (1930), H.M.S. Pinafore (1930), Patience (1930), Yeomen (excerpts 1931), Pirates (excerpts 1931), The Gondoliers (excerpts 1931), Ruddigore (1932) and Princess Ida (1932). More than 30 years later, for Decca, he recorded Yeomen (1964) and Princess Ida (1965) with the company. In addition, between 1957 and 1963, Sargent recorded nine of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas for EMI, with the Pro Arte Orchestra, the Glyndebourne Festival Chorus and soloists from the world of oratorio and grand opera. These were Trial by Jury, Pinafore, Pirates, Patience, Iolanthe, The Mikado, Ruddigore, Yeomen and The Gondoliers. Sargent used an orchestra of thirty-seven players at the Savoy Theatre (the same number as Sullivan, but sometimes added a few more when recording.[94]During World War II, Sargent and the Liverpool Philharmonic accompanied Albert Sammons, the dedicatee, in his 1944 recording of the Delius' Violin Concerto. Later, in 1965, with Jacqueline du Pré, in her début recording, Sargent recorded Delius' Cello Concerto coupled with the Songs of Farewell (1965). At the end of the war, Sargent turned to recording Elgar. A recording regularly chosen over all others in comparative surveys is the first of Sargent's two versions of Elgar's The Dream of Gerontius with Heddle Nash as tenor and the familiar Sargent pairing of the Huddersfield Choral Society and the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, recorded in 1945.[95] Sargent was also the conductor for Jascha Heifetz's famous 1949 recording of Elgar's Violin Concerto and Paul Tortelier's first recording of the cello concerto in 1954. He also recorded Elgar's Wand of Youth, Suite 2, with the BBC; the Pomp and Circumstance Marches 1 and 4 with the LSO; and the Enigma Variations with the Philharmonia. Sargent made two recordings of Holst's The Planets: a monaural version with the LSO for Decca (1950) and a stereo version with the BBC for EMI (1960). He also recorded shorter Holst pieces: the Perfect Fool ballet music and the Beni Mora suite.In 1958, Sargent recorded Walton's Belshazzar's Feast, one of his specialties, which was reissued on CD in 1990 and again in 2004. Sargent recorded Walton's Façade Suites in 1961. With the LSO, Sargent recorded Walton's Orb and Sceptre March. He also made a stereo recording of Walton's first symphony in the presence of the composer, but Walton privately preferred André Previn's recording,[96] issued in January 1967, the same month as Sargent's.[97] Of Vaughan Williams' shorter pieces, Sargent recorded, with the BBC in 1960, Tallis Fantasia (which he also recorded with the Philharmonia), and with the LSO, Serenade to Music (1957; choral version) and Toward the Unknown Region. He also recorded Vaughan Williams' overture The Wasps with the LSO. Although the heyday of live performance of Sargent's Coleridge-Taylor signature piece at the Albert Hall was by then long gone, Sargent, the Royal Choral Society and the Philharmonia made a stereo recording in 1962 of Hiawatha's Wedding, which has been reissued on CD. In 1963, Sargent recorded Gay's The Beggar's Opera, one of his few operas on record other than Gilbert and Sullivan. This was also reissued on CD (Pro Arte Orchestra). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_Sargent================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music. [ More Detail ]
J Adam drops in from up yonder to give us a live performance of the cadenza to Boccherini's cello concerto in Bb 1st m. during one of the OPEN MIC / TALENT SHOWS here at the SOUTH BAY TALENT CENTER in San Jose (a San Jose Public Arts Commission project by Jon Brumit) [ More Detail ]
Cello Concerto in E Minor op. 85 (1919) by Edward Elgar (1857-1934). Live performance of the San Francisco School Of The Arts Instrumental Music Department's Orchestra conducted by Jerry Pannone and featuring cello soloist Jessica Lizardo. Note: this video has been shortened (original play time was 11:49) to comply with YouTube's 10-minute video length limit. Contact SFSOTA for high quality audio and video. [ More Detail ]
Daniel Shafran J.C. Bach Cello Concerto C MinorLive Recordings.*Note: If you liked this video, please support the artist by purchasing his products. Thank you.* [ More Detail ]
Daniel Shafran J.C. Bach Cello Concerto C MinorLive Recordings.*Note: If you liked this video, please support the artist by purchasing his products. Thank you.* [ More Detail ]
Daniel Shafran J.C. Bach Cello Concerto C MinorLive Recordings.*Note: If you liked this video, please support the artist by purchasing his products. Thank you.* [ More Detail ]
Natalie Clein is the award winning cellist has had a new cello concerto written especially for her which she is premiering on 28 June. It's part of Hackney Music's celebration of the Beijing Olympic Games and Hackney's role in London 2012. [ More Detail ]
Project: BBC Proms 2007Client: BBC Radio XTrailsThe BBC Proms is the largest festival of classical music in the UK, running for 8 weeks from 13th July to 8th September, with over 70 concerts at the Royal Albert Hall. All of them are broadcast on Radio 3 and many televised on BBC4. We were commissioned to produce a trail for Radio 2, 3, 4 and FIVE Live. Our brief was to create sounds associated with summer, made up to resemble Elgar's Cello Concerto. [ More Detail ]
Stefan Moberg plays the sarabande from J. S. Bach's third suite for solo cello in C major, BWV 1009. Recorded live in Caroli Church, Malmö, Sweden in May 2004.Stefan Moberg - recipient of the 2008 Guido Vecchi PrizeStefan Moberg was born in Gävle, Sweden in 1979, started playing the cello when he was 16 and made his debut in Elgar's cello concerto at the age of 18. At the Malmö Academy of Music he studied with Hege Waldeland, graduating with a Master's Degree in 2006. He also studied with Melissa Phelps at the Royal College of Music in London as an ERASMUS scholar. Currently, Stefan is studying with Professor Mats Rondin at the Malmö Academy of Music, graduating with an Artist's Diploma in 2008. Recent engagements include a very well received performance of the Prokofiev Sinfonia Concertante, op. 125 in die Philharmonie in Berlin in January 2008.As a soloist and member of different chamber music groups and orchestras, Stefan has performed throughout Scandinavia, Europe, North and South America and has appeared at the "Geneva Arts Festival" in Geneva, NY, USA and the "Festival Internacional de Música Clásica Contemporánea de Lima" in Lima, Peru among others. Stefan has also recorded for the German label CPO and the Swedish label Phono Suecia, as well as live recordings of chamber music for the Swedish Radio P2. Stefan's repertoire already includes the standard concertos by Elgar, Haydn, Saint-Saëns and Dvorak as well as contemporary concertos, like the one dedicated to Stefan by the young Swedish composer Daniel Fjellström.Stefan's great interest in and love for chamber music has developed in collaborations with trumpet player Håkan Hardenberger, pianist Imogen Cooper and violinists Levon Chilingirian and Gilles Apap. Through the Danish-Swedish Cultural Foundation Stefan was invited to perform in the series "Sweden's Premiere Young Artists" during 2007. Thanks to the generous support of SAS and Ericsson, Stefan is able to perform on a J. B. Ceruti cello, made in Cremona, Italy in 1810. [ More Detail ]
Earth Wind &Fire Hall of Fame Shining Star Video Producer Carolynfujii The Recording Academy®3402 Pico Boulevard, Santa Monica, California 90405www.grammy.comFor Immediate ReleaseNEWS RELEASE2008 GRAMMY HALL OF FAME® INDUCTEES ANNOUNCEDThe Recording Academy® Honors Timeless Recordings, from "It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing") to "Roxanne"SANTA MONICA, Calif. (Dec. 19, 2007) — The Recording Academy® announced the newest additions to its GRAMMY Hall Of Fame®, adding 70 recordings to a timeless list that now includes 798 titles. The Hall Of Fame serves as a celebration and reminder of the triumphs and achievements of the recording arts. Selections are drawn from all categories of music, acknowledging the diversity of musical expression for which The Recording Academy has become renowned.Here are a few of the 70 inductees...OLIVER!Original Broadway CastColumbia (1962)Musical Show (Album)"OVER THERE"Nora BayesVictor (1917)Traditional Pop (Single)PROKOFIEV: PETER AND THE WOLF (OPUS 67)Serge Koussevitzky cond. Boston Symphony Orchestra; Richard Hale, narratorVictor (Red Seal) (1939)Classical (Album)RAVEL: DAPHNIS ET CHLOE (COMPLETE BALLET)Charles Munch cond. Boston Symphony OrchestraRCA Victor (1955)Classical (Album)"ROXANNE"The PoliceA&M (1978)Rock (Single)"SEVEN COME ELEVEN"Benny Goodman SextetColumbia (1940)Jazz (Single)"SH-BOOM"The ChordsCat (1954)R&B (Single)"SHINING STAR"Earth, Wind &FireColumbia (1975)R&B (Single)SHOSTAKOVICH: CELLO CONCERTO NO. 1 IN E FLAT, OP. 107Eugene Ormandy cond. Philadelphia Orchestra; Mstislav Rostropovich, cellistColumbia (1960)Classical (Album)"SITTIN' ON TOP OF THE WORLD"The Mississippi SheiksOkeh (1930)Blues (Single)Please excuse the typo error for ralph noted as Randy on video promoGod Bless Our FamilyUnderstanding from the Heart (Poem in Video)From Footprints Special Collectors EditionWe may indeed hear and never understand.We may see and never perceive.For peoples hearts grow faint,Their ears heavy with eyes closed.Unless we perceive with our eyes and ears,Only then can we have understanding from the heart.I thank God always, because I hear the love &faithThat you have towards the LordAnd I pray that the sharing of your faithPromotes the love of Jesus Christ for God always. For we derive such comfort and joy,For loves sake, that love should always be given. For our love towards each other should be so genuine. And it shall beThat our prayers are so answered,And our souls so saved,By the Understanding from the Heart.Author Carolyn Joyce Carty CopyrightVisit http://faithweb2.tripod.comhttp://www.myspace.com/carolynfujiihttp://www.livevideo.com/carolynfujii [ More Detail ]
www.TinaGuo.comLive Recording of Tina Guo playing the Elgar Cello Concerto, mvt 2 with the Petrobras Symphony of Brazil. Summer 2007.Live Video from Concert Coming Soon! [ More Detail ]
www.TinaGuo.comLive Recording of Tina Guo playing the Elgar Cello Concerto, mvt 3 with the Petrobras Symphony of Brazil. Summer 2007.Live Video of Concert Coming Soon! [ More Detail ]
In this episode we play the cello concerto in C Major by Joseph Haydn. We decided to play it with organ since it sounds more like an orchestra and it makes a nice match. We are playing in a wonderful church called Mountainview United Church. We hope you enjoy it. [ More Detail ]
Lincoln Center's Emmy Award-winning television series Live From Lincoln Center continues its 32nd season with a live telecast from Avery Fisher Hall of the New York Philharmonic's 2007 all-Dvoøák opening night concert. Maestro Lorin Maazel will lead the orchestra in the Carnival Overture and Symphony No. 7 in D Minor and Yo-Yo Ma will join them for the magnificent Cello Concerto. [ More Detail ]
An exploration of Dvorak's Cello Concerto including interview footage with Yo-Yo Ma and performance footage from the New York Philharmonic. Live From Lincoln Center broadcast on September 18, 2007. [ More Detail ]
In this unedited video of a live performance, 12-year old cellist Juan-Salvador Carrasco plays Saint-Saens Cello Concerto no.1 in A minor with the Orquesta Sinfónica de Coyoacán conducted by Richard Markson (Mexico City; March 11, 2007). [ More Detail ]
In this unedited video of a live performance, 12-year old cellist Juan-Salvador Carrasco plays Saint-Saens Cello Concerto no.1 in A minor with the Orquesta Sinfónica de Coyoacán conducted by Richard Markson (Mexico City; March 11, 2007). [ More Detail ]
Here are the final 3 minutes of the 4th movement of the Elgar Cello Concerto from my senior cello recital (June 2003). I was 18 years old and the venue is the Pequot Library in Southport, CT. This was my last public performance on the cello - I only perform as a singer-songwriter now. But many people have asked about this aspect of my prior life, and I wanted to share it.(I wasn't a prodigy or anything, so please don't expect perfection or the genius of Jaqueline du Pre).buy CDs and merch: http://www.emilyasen.com/index2.htmlmore music: http://www.myspace.com/emilyasenmore videos: http://www.youtube.com/emilyasen [ More Detail ]