• CA
  • EN
logo palabrab750
logo palabrab750

nubeclarah500

  • Blog
      • Back
      • Posts
      • We listened to
      • Composers
      • Song series
  • Contributions
  • Clippings
  • Library
  • Concert Hall
      • Back
      • Seasons in Europa
      • Song recitals in Catalunya
  • About Liederabend
  • CA
  • EN

SV16 - An die Nachtigall

Details
Published: 10 August 2016
Song of the week: An die Nachtigall (J. Brahms) - J. Banse, A. Madžar.
 
Kay Nielsen - The NightingaleAs I told you last week, I'll devote the four remaining weeks of August to the Schubertiade Vilabertran, in a similar way to what I did last year: in those four posts, briefly I will go over the six song recitals we are going to listen in Vilabertran, and I'll recover the pieces included in those concerts that we previously listenend on Liederabend.

Today, I'm talking about the first recital, the SV16 opening concert, that will take place on August 18, within eight days. We'll listen to two regular artists at the festival, mezzo-soprano Juliane Banse and pianist Wolfram Rieger, who will perform songs by Brahms, Schubert and Duparc. When reviewing the program, which [...]

Requiescat

Details
Published: 03 August 2016
Song of the week: Requiescat (G. Butterworth) - R. Williams, I. Burnside
 
altThere are some composers, painters, writers, actors, you name it, that we especially like even though there're not among the most important. At one particular moment, they catch our attention and since then, we follow them with interest; They, eventually, become part of our top names and we even love them a little more because they are considered (please pay attention to the quotation marks) "minor" ones. I would say George Butterworth isn't a well-known composer outside the UK, but I fell in love with his music long time ago. That's why I dedicate the first post of August to him, when I was supposed to start my summer posts; Next Friday marks the centennial of his death and I didn't want to miss this date without a thought for him. So please let me share this week a song by George Butterworth and next week, I’ll begin my posts around the Schubertiade Vilabertran.

Rich and famous

Details
Published: 27 July 2016
Song of the week: Vorrei morire (P. Tosti) - A. Kraus, E. Arnaltes
 
altWe are in peak summer and it seems that anything has changed at Liederabend... Shouldn’t summer be a time to relax and slow down our pace? Anyway, in two weeks’ time, we're beginning four brief posts focused on the programme of the Schubertiade Vilabertran but today we could listen to something lighter than Lied.
 
Some time ago we spoke of French romance. The genre was born in the eighteenth century, at the French court, and after the revolution, it spread among bourgeois families. It had little impact outside the salons and it faded out when mélodie was born; In salons, however, romances were still sung because mélodie, intended to professional musicians, wasn't a real option. Such a fashionable entertainment in Paris became also  [...]

Enrique Granados’ works for piano and voice

Details
Published: 20 July 2016
Song of the week: La boira (E. Granados) - G. Ahualli , B. Mariño
 
Majas al balcón - Francisco de GoyaWithin the opus of the composer Enrique Granados (Lleida, Spain 1867-1916), his works for voice and piano carry great weight; they represent on the one hand, the will to transcend with lyrical flights from the keyboard (of which he was a master as performer, improviser and composer) and on other hand, with his intention to create a corpus of great quality, that would be an equal to the great song cycles by the rest of the European composers, and which due to the zarzuela output by Spanish composers in the 19th century, had been overwhelmingly marginalized. His corpus is articulated around two fundamental cycles, the Tonadillas and Amatorias which, as we will see, are very different in style and features. They are heterogenic cycles but both represent two milestones in terms of the extensive Lieder compositions in the first quarter of the 20th century; they open the way [...]

D is for Dichterliebe

Details
Published: 13 July 2016
Song of the week: Wenn ich in deine Augen seh' (F. Schumann) - C. Maltman, G. Johnson
 
The hand book of mediaeval alphabets and devices - Henry Shaw

Last post of Liederabend's alphabet before the end of the season, D is for Dichterliebe. In fact, it was about to be "C is for cycle", but then C is for contemporary wouldn't have been possible; choosing an alphabet has something to do with puzzles. So I thought I could choose a cycle that would represent all of them. I could have chosen "W is for Winterreise" but W was occupied with... Well, W was already occupied. And as I said the last time that I spoke about it, I'm crazy about Dichterliebe. I would say there is no other cycle I've listened so much, so greedily; sometimes I avoid listening to it because I know that I could initiate another Dichterliebedependency period. Why do I love it so much? Here I give you five reasons, there are many more ...

  • 91
  • 92
  • 93
  • 94
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100

Cartell Schubertiada 2025

We talked about the composers...

and about the poets...

They sang...

and were accompanied by...

Series

The same poem, one more song
serie mateix poema
The Buch der Lieder and ten composers
serie tristes
The 10 saddest songs
serie tristes
The 10 happiest songs
serie felices
Ten buggy songs
serie cuques
Wilhelm Meister's Songs
serie Wilhelm
Lied goes pop
serie pop
Abecedari Liederabend
serie abecedari
The ESMUC Master's Degree in Lied visits us
serie esmuc
MENÚ
Entrades del blog
Hem escoltat
Col·laboracions
Recull de premsa
Biblioteca
Temporades a Europa
Recitals a Catalunya
SONG SERIES
The same poem, one more song
The 'Buch der Lieder' and ten composers
The 10 saddest songs
The 10 happiest songs
Ten buggy songs
Wilhelm Meister's Songs
Lied goes pop
Abecedari Liederabend
The ESMUC Master's Degree in Lied visits us

guidobannerlargo250

logo palabrab200
silvia@liederabend.cat
Política de cookies
Política de privacitat
logodp c100