• CA
  • EN
logo palabrab750
logo palabrab750
  • Cabeza de coco, grano de café.
    Con lindas motitas,
    Con ojos grandotes como dos ventanas que miran al mar.

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

The harpist and Felix

Details
Published: 15 June 2016
Song of the week: An die Turen will ich schleichen (F. Schubert) - M. Peter, H. Deutsch
 
Mignon und der Harfer - Gustav JägerIn my previous post of the Wilhelm Meister's series, I told you the story of Mignon that, as we discovered, was also the story of the harpist: they were father and daughter, even though they didn't know it. Wilhelm and his friends learned it almost by chance, when the Marquis noticed a tattoo on the dead girl's arm and identified her as his missing niece. Now we go into Chapter 10 of Book VIII, the last one of the novel. Wilhelm and his friends must decide whether to tell the Marquis what they know about his brother Augustin, the harpist, so they decide to send a letter to ask the doctor who's taking care of him if the harpist would be prepared to hear the news. When they start worrying because they don't get an answer, the doctor arrives at the castle, accompanied by a stranger, a relatively young man, well dressed and looking calm. Wilhelm recognizes him when he hears [...]

Odd programmes

Details
Published: 08 June 2016
Song of the week: I hate music (L. Bernstein) - J. Tourel, L. Bernstein
 
altA few days ago some tweeps had a conversation about the programme of mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato in the song series at the Teatro de la Zarzuela in Madrid (a similar programme to that of Renée Fleming at the Teatro Real some days before) that mixed without complexes song, opera and zarzuela. We wondered in that conversation why some singers, when they have a reputation that allows them to do whatever they want, do "that" and we described the program as meaningless, inconsistent or odd. We ruled out that they don't know how to make a good programme (of course they do!), we asked ourselves if it has something to do with the way they understand showbiz (given that both singers are American), and we point out that maybe it has more to do with singers and promoters' profile (promoters meaning also audience). If Mrs DiDonato and Mrs Fleming were [...]

Thoughts are free

Details
Published: 01 June 2016
Song of the week: Verschwiegene Liebe (H. Wolf) - I. Bostridge, A. Pappano
 
James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket,On 31th August 1888, Hugo Wolf had just come back to Vienna from Bayreuth and was staying at his friend Friedrich Eckstein's place, a house in a busy neighborhood. The composer was walking along the garden trying to read some poetry by Joseph von Eichendorff but noise from a nearby factory disturbed him, and someone whistled and a carpet was rhythmically being shaken. How on earth could he concentrate on reading! Suddenly, however, he got into the house, sat at the piano and composed Verschwiegene Liebe in one go. That's how Ernst Decsay explains it in his composer’s biography, the first one to be published; maybe he embellishes a bit the story but truth is that Wolf borrowed his friend his house near Lake Attersee, much quieter, and between 21st and 29th September, he wrote ten lieder on Eichendorff's poems since he used to compose very fast when [...]

Mignon's story

Details
Published: 25 May 2016
Song of the week: So lasst mich scheinen (F. Schumann) - L . Hunt Lieberson, J. Drake
 
altWe're arriving at the last three posts in the series about Wilhelm Meister's songs, all being well, the series will be finished before this season ends. In our previous post of the series, I talked about Mignon's death and funeral (Chapters 3 to 8 in the VIII book). During the ceremony, and thus we ended it, the Marquis, a gentleman who happens to be in the castle on business trip, notices a tattoo on Mignon's arm and identifies her as his missing niece. We get now into Chapter 9, the penultimate one in the novel, where the abbot reads to the group the story that the Marquis told him. I've already metioned that Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship is full of soap opera plot twists, haven't I? Well, just keep reading...

It rings a bell! (III)

Details
Published: 18 May 2016
Song of the week: Gott erhalte Franz, den Kaiser (F.J. Haydn) - E. Ameling, J. Demus
 
alt

We welcome again our dear readers from the blog La brújula del canto. A month ago we launched a collaboration with its author, Isabel Villagar, a mini-series of posts about world-famous Lieder. So famous that we might not know they're Lieder. In our first post, we listened to Brahms’ best known work, his lullaby, and now we're listening to Hadydn’s best known work, this one:

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

Cartell Schubertiada 2025

LIFE Victoria 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