19-06-2022 03:42 PM - edited 19-06-2022 03:44 PM
I love classical music, and I know the Countess likes it too. Maybe there are also lurkers who like it. 🙂
Anyway, maybe some will like to post classical music here (or listen to it).
You can post opera arias, piano recitals, orchestra concerts... - anything you like. Classical music is used in its broader meaning in this thread.
Please post links rather than embedding videos because sometimes the videos won't load.
Let's start...
Luciano Pavarotti - Una furtiva lacrima/lagrima (from L'Elisir d'Amore by Gaetano Donizetti)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J7JM0tGgRY
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 06-09-2022 03:03 AM
Donde lieta uscì from La Bohème by Puccini
Sung by Mirella Freni
on 06-09-2022 03:08 AM
Like the 1st movement of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, Träumerei from Schumann's Kinderszenen is only apparently easy. To play it well requires considerable skills.
on 06-09-2022 03:37 AM
Freni is the Mimi of dreams. No one sings this rôle better than she... and she's also perfect in Bizet's Carmen as Michaela. Beautiful, beautiful voice.
on 06-09-2022 03:47 AM
I totally agree.
on 06-09-2022 03:59 AM
Final scene of Puccini's Madama Butterfly (Madama Butterfly's death - one of the saddest scenes in the world of opera, in particular because of the farewell to her child)
Sung by Mirella Freni
on 06-09-2022 10:14 AM
@papermoon.lady wrote:Like the 1st movement of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, Träumerei from Schumann's Kinderszenen is only apparently easy. To play it well requires considerable skills.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6z82w0l6kwE
Beautiful, absolutely beautiful. Horowitz's playing is without flourishing, just the pure simplicity of the music and the tenderness of the approach...
Marc-André Hamelin is another pianist who does that; he completely removes his ego and lets the music speak. I can't give a link to his performance, because it's not on YouTube...
07-09-2022 07:49 AM - edited 07-09-2022 07:50 AM
There are other performances by Hamelin on YouTube, so let me link to one of those.
Schumann: Fantasy in C major, Op. 17. Played by Marc-André Hamelin.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGAQMPKDLGY&t=2788s
The link starts at the Fantasy. The whole of the video shows the entire recital which includes:
- 1st movement: 46:28
- 2nd movement: 59:38
- 3rd movement: 1:07:48
on 07-09-2022 08:44 AM
Pauline Viardot: No. 3 Plainte d'amour, VWV 4024 (from 6 Mazurkas de Chopin). Sung by Ina Kancheva.
And... papermoon.lady, especially for you (as I know you love the star-studded night sky):
Pauline Viardot: No. 12 Я долго стоял неподвижно/The Stars/Les étoiles, VWV 1059 (from 12 Poems
based on Poems by Pushkin, Fet and Turgenev). Sung by Ina Kancheva.
on 22-09-2022 12:38 AM
This has been a wonderful month for concerts.
Last Friday we went to a concert called WOMEN OF THE PIETÀ. It was all Vivaldi music, performed by female singers of Pinchgut Opera, soprano Miriam Allan, and female players from the Orchestra of the Antipodes.
I'll post links to the pieces that were performed.
And... if you're not familiar with Miriam Allan, you might want to listen to this: https://youtu.be/v3g7KTUN7oM (Fairest Isle, by Purcell, sung by Miriam Allan).
She was also one of the singers at the Duke of Edinburgh's funeral last year. One link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCHr6FIz7h8
on 22-09-2022 02:44 AM
And tonight - well, it's after midnight now, so I should say "last night" - we went to another wonderful concert. This also featured Miriam Allan as part of the Great Performers series; she was accompanied by Erin Helyard. The programme was Haydn and Schubert songs, as well as fortepiano pieces by the same composers and also by Mozart. The encore was a Mozart Lied. This recital was very, very beautiful.
I hope these give pleasure.