Jim, I played this Mozart on same record I have today.
What do you think of this lady, Jim . I rather like it
https://youtu.be/MmX-lVH3XWU
What do you think of this lady, Jim . I rather like it
https://youtu.be/MmX-lVH3XWU
Classical Music for Aficionados
Jim, I played this Mozart on same record I have today. What do you think of this lady, Jim . I rather like it https://youtu.be/MmX-lVH3XWU |
I love her Len and have done for decades, her hands were tiny but that most certainly never deterred her. None other than Horowitz marvelled at her dexterity, in fact I have somewhere in my house a picture that shows her Horowitz and Arrau backstage at a concert she had given. In fact when they came to congratulate her on her performance she threw her arms around Arrau and then kneeled in front of Horwitz and kissed his hands and he then pulled her to her feet and he then kissed her fingers and said she was a marvel. I think she was a marvel too not only for her Mozart but her Iberian music also especially her Albeniz which can be ferociously difficult but her little hands coped admirably. That soundbite was superb. |
Richard Strauss VIOLIN CONCERTO Pavel Sporcl (violin) Prague Symphony Orchestra Jiri Kout Supraphon 2009 In 1933 Strauss (1864-1949) was appointed to two important positions in the musical life of Nazi Germany: head of the Reichsmusikkammer and principal conductor of the Bayreuth Festival. The latter role he accepted after conductor Arturo Toscanini had resigned from the position in protest of the Nazi Party. These positions have led some to criticize Strauss for his seeming collaboration with the Nazis. However, Strauss's daughter-in-law, Alice Grab Strauss [née von Hermannswörth], was Jewish and much of his apparent acquiescence to the Nazi Party was done in order to save her life and the lives of her children (his Jewish grandchildren)... Further, Strauss insisted on using a Jewish librettist, Stefan Zweig, for his opera Die schweigsame Frau which ultimately led to his firing from the Reichsmusikkammer and Bayreuth. In 1948, a year before his death, he was cleared of any wrongdoing by a denazification tribunal in Munich.---wiki Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D minor, Op. 8 Allegro https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1leKe9Uy2g Lento ma non troppo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6Qwsq7wxyo Rondo. Presto https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lOuFMp-9Do Cheers |
Before a concert Liszt mingled with the audience, charming them with his
witty remarks. He had a semicircle of chairs placed around the piano on
stage so that illustrious guests could sit near him and converse with
him between pieces. He added extra bits of his own invention to the
pieces he was playing, improvising cadenzas, tremolos, double octaves,
and trills even to iconic pieces like Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata. He
brought his silk gloves on stage and threw them down to be fought over
by audience members. Women were said to carry his discarded cigar butts
in their cleavages. When he broke piano strings, as he often did in his
performances, people collected the broken strings and had them made into
bracelets. https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/nothing-sheer-racket |