troelsmeister skrev:Mens jeg hører Patricia Barber -Modern Cool, var der måske nogle af jer inviede der ville smide et link til det med mælken. Den kniber det mig nemlig noget med? :oops:
http://www.coffeegeek.com/guides/frothingguide
Guiden holder ord for ord, men giver først rigtig mening når man har lært det!
Selv har jeg fået fod på det med mælken og er nu gået i gang med kunsten
(der findes oseaner af billeder og video'er på nettet):
http://www.latteart.org/latteart.htm
vilmann skrev:moderigtig
Det må være noget i retning af 20 år siden jeg sidst har været med på noderne
Om et øjeblik bliver Kubík'en, som jeg har taget med på arbejde, sat på.
macwerk skrev:
Så skal i nok få fred for mig
Men jeg har haft et par forrygende dage
Resten af ugen står der Shostakovich på programmet
Nogen tænker sig om, de laver altid kvalitet – her er tænkt lidt extra. Dvorak’s store koncerter i kombi med han excellente trioer. De 3 kunstnere er de samme – først som solist – så uden orkester i sublimt kammerspil.
Jeg håber de tænker færdigt så klaverkoncerten med den unge Melnikov fuldender hat-tricket. De to nedenstående er mine ”referencer” og den manglende Melnikov må vi indtil videre nøjes med at høre som 3. hjul i trioerne. Vi har heldigvis en pragt Scriabin solo plade med ham.
DVORAK Cello Concerto Op.104, 'Dumky' Trio Op.90. Jean-Guihen Queyras, Isabelle Faust, Alexander Melnikov, The Prague Philharmonia / Jiri Belohlavek. Harmonia Mundi SACD
DVORAK Violin Concerto Op.53, Piano Trio in F minor Op.65. Isabelle Faust, Jean-Guihen Queyras, Alexander Melnikov, The Prague Philharmonia / Jiri Belohlavek. Harmonia Mundi
Of all the famous and fruitful musical friendships, that between Brahms and Dvorák was one of the most felicitous. Right from their first meeting in 1878, Dvorák's style was in thrall to the musical heritage of the older composer. The Violin Concerto and the Third Piano Trio certainly belong to this period 'under the influence'.
Dedicated to Joachim, as was that of Brahms, the Violin Concerto in A minor is a clearly structured work, controlled in its outpourings, yet highly characteristic of what was to become Dvorák's personal style. Opus 65 is a work born out of struggle with the composer rewriting long passages of the work, and even rearranging the order of the movements. Considerably more moody and dramatic than many of his earlier works, there is a palpable weight and seriousness to this work from the opening chords. There may have been several contributing factors as to the overall gloominess of Opus 65. One was the death of his mother, whom he revered greatly; another may have been the failure of his opera Dimitrij, for which German critics accused the composer of having no dramatic talent. There is certainly no shortage of drama in this chamber work.
Isabelle Faust was Gramophone Young Artist of the Year for her first recording of sonatas by Béla Bartók, in 1997. Alexander Melnikov was selected as a 'BBC New Generation Artist' from 2000 to 2002. Jean-Guihen Queyras was the solo cellist of the Ensemble Intercontemporain with whom he recorded the Ligeti Cello Concerto conducted by Pierre Boulez (Gramophone Contemporary Music Award). For harmonia mundi, he has released two solo CDs; the first dedicated to Britten's suites (HMN911670) received great critical acclaim from the British press, and the second, featuring works by Kodaly, Kurtag and Veress (HMC901735), was awarded a Diapason d'Or.
Jirí Belohlávek, a leading conductor in international circles today, has been a household name in Prague since the 1970s. He worked as Chief Conductor of the Prague Symphony Orchestra (1977-1989) and has worked with the Czech Philharmonic since 1973 first as a guest, from 1981 as a permanent conductor and in 1990-1992 as Chief Conductor. In 1994 he established the Prague Philharmonia and has been its musical director since. In 2003 he accepted the same post in the Slovak Philharmonic. He has been Chief Guest Conductor of the National Theatre in Prague since 1998. During the period 1995-2000 he was Chief Guest Conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra and he has returned to rave reviews this summer, in (more) Dvorák, at the Proms. His Tristan at Glyndebourne was universally applauded and short-listed for the 2004 Royal Philharmonic
Society Awards.
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