TracklistDisc 11. Lohengrin - Opening Credits2. Prelude To Act I3. Hrt, Grafen, Edle, Freie Von Brabant!4. Dank, Knig, Dir, Da Du Zu Richten Kamst!5. Seht Hin! Sie Naht, Die Hart Beklagte!6. Einsam In Trben Tagen7. Mich Irret Nicht Ihr Trumerischer Mut8. Wer Hier Im Gotteskampf Zu Streiten Kam...Gegrt, Du Gottgesandter Held!9. Nun Sei Bedankt, Mein Lieber Schwan!10. Zum Kampf Fr Eine Magd Zu Stehen11. Welch Holde Wunder Muss Ich Sehen?12. Nun Hret Mich Und Achtet Wohl13. Mein Herr Und Gott, Nun Ruf' Ich Dich - Gebet Des Knigs14. Durch Gottes Sieg Ist Jetzt Dein Leben Mein15. Erhebe Dich, Genossin Meiner Schmach!16. Du Wilde Seherin17. Euch Lften, Die Mein Klagen18. Elsa! - Wer Ruft?19. Entweihte Gtter! Helft Jetzt Meiner Rache!20. Wie Kann Ich Solche Huld Dir Lohnen21. Scenemusic22. In Frh'n Versammelt Uns Der Ruf23. Des Knigs Wort Und Will' Tu Ich Euch Kund24. Gesegnet Soll Sie Schreiten25. Zurck, Elsa! Nicht Lnger Will Ich Dulden26. Heil! Heil Dem Knig!27. O Knig! Trugbetrte Frsten! Haltet Ein!28. Welch Ein Geheimnis Mu Der Held Bewahren?29. Mein Held, Entgegne Khn Dem UngetreuenDisc 21. Prelude To Act III2. Treulich Gefhrt Ziehet Dahin3. Das Se Lied Verhallt4. Atmest Du Nicht Mit Mir Die Sen Dfte?5. Hchstes Vertraun Hast Du Mir Schon Zu Danken6. Weh, Nun Ist All Unser Glck Dahin!7. Introduction - Heil Knig Heinrich!8. Habt Dank, Ihr Lieben Von Brabant!9. Macht Platz Dem Helden Von Brabant!10. In Fernem Land, Unnahbar Euren Schritten11. Mir Schwankt Der Boden! Welche Nacht!12. Mein Lieber Schwan!13. Fahr Heim, Du Stolzer Helde14. Lohengrin - Closing Credits
I will ship by EMS or SAL items in stock in Japan. It is approximately 7-14days on delivery date. You wholeheartedly support customers as satisfactory. Thank you for you seeing it.
Franz Schreker's Die Gezeichneten a performance from the Salzburger Festspiele recorded live at the Felsenreitschule 26 July 2005.
Nikolaus Lehnoff's visionary staging of Wagner's opera for ENO.
From the Theatre Musical De Paris - ChateletA fairy tale with a moral Opera in three acts.
Owen Wingrave is perhaps Britten's most radical opera, both politically and artistically. Originally written for television, and here presented in a 2001 Channel 4 version, the 1970 score is based, like The Turn of the Screw, on a Henry James ghost story. Britten, though, is more in tune than James with the pacifism into which Owen revolts from a long family tradition of military service. The fluid, impassioned, often declamatory music given Owen makes him one of the most sympathetic of Britten's outsider protagonists, though he has a streak of self-centredness, which stops him being an implausible paragon. Gerald Finley is quite admirable in the part, conveying fully the sense that by losing and dying at the hands of family ghosts, Owen demonstrates the integrity which is central to his character. The other parts are admirably filled here, notably Martyn Hill as Owen's harsh General grandfather, Josephine Barstow as his aunt and Charlotte Hellekant as the fiancee who unknowingly sends him to his death. They and Elizabeth Gale are quite extraordinary in the first act quartet of recrimination and condemnation. This excellent performance compares vocally with the original on almost entirely equal terms--modern technology means that the ghost scenes are far more dramatic and plausible. Kent Nagano and the Berlin Orchestra do full subtle justice to the chamber orchestra sonorities of one of Britten's most interesting scores, never overstressing its complex musical architecture at the expense of the drama. On the DVD: Owen Wingrave is presented in a widescreen 16:9 visual aspect ratio with PCM stereo sound. It is accompanied by The Tender Heart, a documentary about Britten's career full of personal reminiscences by his surviving friends, colleagues and family, that concentrates on Peter Grimes, the War Requiem and Death in Venice, the three popular masterpieces of his early, middle and late career. It has menus and subtitles in English, French, German and Spanish. --Roz Kaveney
Unsuk Chin:Alice In Wonderland
A programme bristling with verve and irresistible rhythm presented by Kent Nagano and the Berlin Philharmonic who take us around the world on a musical journey that runs from classical ever-greens by Ravel and Gershwin to the thunderous pulse of Japanese percussion - with amongst the star guests of this gala evening mezzo-soprano Susan Graham and that black belt of the wadaiko drums Eitetsu Hayashi.Jean-Pascal Beintus: He Got RhythmMaurice Ravel: La ValseDaphnis et Chloe (Suite No. 2)Isao Matsushite: HI-Ten-YuEitetsu Hayashi: UtageZhao Jiping: Farewell My Concubine (Suite)George Gershwin: Fascinatin' Rhythm/The Man I Love/Nice Work If You Can Get It/Someone To Watch Over Me/Summertime/I Got Rhythm.
Kent Nagano conducts some of opera's greatest names in performances of Handels's music for the royal fireworks the Finale to Die Fledermaus.
Interviews with Kent Nagano and the musicians combine with footage of the orchestra in rehearsal to offer an insight into the close collaboration that takes place between conductor and players. Animated sequences portray episodes from Mozart's life. At the heart of the film is a technically and visually outstanding concert recording of Mozart's life. At the heart of the film is a technically and visually outstanding concert recording of Mozart's Symphony No. 41 made at the Philharmonic Hall in Berlin.
Kent Nagano conducts Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E flat major and Eroica (Op. 55) with the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchestre Berlin.Interviews, rehearsals footage, animated sequences and concert recording.
Please wait. Loading...
This site uses cookies.
More details in our privacy policy