疫情期間,最大型的個人演出製作 The Enlightened Classics,明晚9pm首播!
難得文化中心音樂廳空置數月,我決定邀請著名裝置藝術家 Keith Lam,重新改造香港音樂界最高殿堂。
跨界合作,難度就在於如何找到那一個共通的思維,繼而以各自的專業一起演繹同一個想法。
其實和 Keith 早已相識數年,一直可謂惺惺相惜,奈何我倆都是「冇腳的雀仔」,總是馬不停蹄,遠赴世界各地演出,沒有機會好好坐下來大幹一場。
而在疫情的鬼使神差之下,兩位的檔期都奇蹟地騰空出來,亦造就了這一場難得的製作。
The Enlightened Classics,Enlightened 是指燈光,亦希望以光代表希望。Classics 是一系列古典名曲,加上爵士和電子音樂重新演繹。
最後,衷心感謝康樂及文化事務署 (LCSD) 的邀請,容許我們把如此破格的想法付諸實行,為這段黯然的疫情時間,添上一點令人雀躍的色彩。
連結收看直播: https://bit.ly/2Apy2tM
歌單:
1. Shostakovich 蕭斯達高維其
Strings Quartet No. 8, Op. 110 (2nd movement)
第八弦樂四重奏,作品一一零 (第二樂章)
2. Handel–Halvorsen韓德爾–哈爾沃森
Passacaglia for Violin and Cello
帕薩加利亞舞曲
3. J.S. Bach巴赫
Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV 1043 (1st movement)
雙小提琴D小調協奏曲,BWV 1043 (第一樂章)
4. J.S. Bach / Gounod巴赫 / 古諾
Ave Maria
聖母頌
5. Paganini 帕格尼尼
Caprice No. 24
第24 號隨想曲
6. Tchaikovsky柴可夫斯基
Dance of The Sugar Plum Fairy
糖梅仙子之舞
7. Chopin蕭邦
Fantasie Impromptu
幻想即興曲
8. Mozart莫扎特
Alla Turca
土耳其進行
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過44的網紅古典不古典,也在其Youtube影片中提到,何姿儀/楊尹賓 這集繼續分享開車必聽的音樂清單,介紹了幾位我們最愛的偉大音樂家-Carlos Kleiber, David Fray, Valery Afanassiev...等 祝你有一個愉快的音樂與開車夜晚 Khachaturian: Violin concerto mov.3 Verdi: ...
bach violin concerto no 2 在 Fan-Chiang Yi 范姜毅 Facebook 的最佳貼文
【誠心推薦】 ♩.♪
誠心推薦這些好到讓人驚艷的經典歷史錄音轉錄,這系列所捕抓到與忠實呈現出的氣場(aura),更加加深了我自以前對這些大師透過傳記與無數錄音錄影所得到的體會認知!
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(下面貼文轉貼自古殿Analogy歷史轉錄,文字分享自瓦力Wales Xie)
#古殿第二波歷史轉錄限時開跑了
以前實體音樂鼎盛的年代,在火車站前那幾家唱片行,一待就是一個下午。現在想起,那個時代真是美好啊。
印象中有一次,彼時還是音響初哥的瓦力還在那裡玩「紅配綠」,耳邊一直傳來咳嗽聲。仔細一聽,才發現有人在彈鋼琴。那琴音聽來雖然古璞,卻是那樣的溫暖,怎樣聽也不會讓人感到心煩意亂,在夏日空調好像壞了的唱片行午後,反而有種鎮定心神的效果。
我就跟著那張帶有雜音的鋼琴,心神飛到了很遠的地方,很少有這麼奇妙的感受,和音樂的第一次親蜜接觸,心靈觸見了天堂。
要結帳的時候,我才不好意思地問長得很可愛的店員(太可愛了,跟她講話真的要鼓起勇氣啊),「剛剛一直播的這張唱片是什麼啊?」
「鋼琴家李帕第的最後音樂會。」她輕巧地說。
弔詭的是,那是我第一次聽到李帕第的名字,而那次,竟然是他告別人生的最後表演。
第一次,也是最後一次。偶然的人生多麼巧合。
更弔詭的是,當我把這張唱片買回家之後,好聽依舊好聽,不知什麼,空氣中有什麼不見了,聽起來少了幾分自在的靈光。我想,不(只)是因為正妹店員不在我家的緣故。
直到我聽到了古殿這次的轉錄,神奇地,我仿若走進時光記憶長河,掉進了那個夏日午後,雖然已是中年,感覺才第一次青春。
這次團購,棒棒強打,比上次13張小提琴陣容更堅強。光看那張天價的「MARTZY的首版巴哈無伴奏」就知道了,拜託,這張別搶太凶,也留給我一張。(有道是,大提琴女神有杜普蕾,小提琴則是Martzy…...)
老規矩,老優惠,一張500,瓦力還幫您向古殿要加碼,1-16張全購另有一張【神祕CD】贈送。
手刀直入,快在留言加一,也來搶救你的李帕第和福特萬格勒的青春老靈魂吧!
#還沒開團已有多人預訂全套
#版權無問題都是五十年以上錄音
#每張都是黑膠的分身
#走過路過不要錯過
【古殿歷史轉錄:黃金之聲】
1.福特萬格勒:1951年拜魯特音樂節開幕 貝多芬第九號交響曲(1951)
Wilhelm Furtwangler: Beethoven Symphony no.9 1951(古殿編號:GDMC-33-21)
2.李帕第:最後音樂會(1950)
Dinu Lipatti: Last Recital 1950(古殿編號:GDMC-33-22)
3.福特萬格勒&蕾菲布:莫札特第20號鋼琴協奏曲等(1954)
Wilhelm Furtwangler & Yvonne Lefebure: Mozart Piano Concerto no.20 etc.(古殿編號:GDMC-33-23)
4.瑪爾姬:巴哈無伴奏小提琴無伴奏 第一集(1954-1955)
Johanna Martzy: Bach The Unaccompanied Violin Sonatas Vol.1(古殿編號:GDMC-33-24)
5.艾爾里:巴哈無伴奏小提琴無伴奏 第一集(1969)
Devy Erlih: Bach 6 Sonatas & Partitas for Violin Vol.1(古殿編號:GDMC-33-25)
6.史塔克:巴哈無伴奏大提琴組曲 第一集(1959)
Janos Starker: Bach Suites for Unaccompanied Cello Vol.1(古殿編號:GDMC-33-26)
7.科爾托:蕭邦第二號鋼琴奏鳴曲「送葬」等(1953)
Alfred Cortot: Chopin Piano Soata no.2 etc.(古殿編號:GDMC-33-1)
8.巴克豪斯:莫札特鋼琴曲集(1955)
Wilhelm Backhaus: Mozart Piano works(古殿編號:GDMC-33-27)
9 & 10.安塞美:皇家芭蕾 兩枚組CD(1958)【這套2CD是1000喔】
Ernest Ansernet: The Royal Ballet 2CD Set(古殿編號:GDMC-33-28&29)
11.阿根達:西班牙舞曲(1958)
Ataulfo Argenta: Espana(古殿編號:GDMC-33-30)
12. 坎波里 & 阿根達:柴可夫斯基小提琴協奏曲(1958)
Campoli & Argenta: Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto(古殿編號:GDMC-33-31)
13.伯恩斯坦:蕭士塔高維契第五號交響曲「革命」(1959)
Leonard Bernstein: Shostakovitch Symphony no.5(古殿編號:GDMC-33-32)
14.拜倫堅尼斯 & 孔德拉辛:普羅高飛夫第三號&拉赫曼尼諾夫第一號鋼琴協奏曲(1962)
Byron Janis & Kondrashin: Prokofiev Concerto no.3 & Rachmaninoff Concerto no.1(古殿編號:GDMC-33-33)
15.李希特 & 孔德拉辛:李斯特鋼琴協奏曲第一號與第二號(1961)
Richter & Kondrashin: Liszt Piano Concertos no.1 & 2(古殿編號:GDMC-33-34)
16.美國蒸氣火車的聲音(1960)
RAILROAD SOUNDS(古殿編號:GDMC-33-35)
👉古殿網路購買平台(每一張都可看詳細的曲目介紹❤❤)
https://pachmannwang.wpcomstaging.com/product-category/%e5%8f%a4%e6%ae%bf%e6%ad%b7%e5%8f%b2%e8%bd%89%e9%8c%84cd%e7%ac%ac%e4%ba%8c%e6%b3%a2/
bach violin concerto no 2 在 Fan-Chiang Yi 范姜毅 Facebook 的最佳貼文
Farewell. Ida – Ida Haendel 192?-2020
So Ida has left us – a legend has departed. What a violinist! What a woman! Magnificent, unique, incorrigible – she was a law unto herself.
First, the playing: a film about her was aptly entitled: ‘I AM the Violin.’ And she was! The violin was her life; she mastered it, devoted so much of her existence to it, cared so much about it. Every performance was an event, which she took absolutely seriously, giving each concert her all. She spoke through her violin, proved herself through it, lived within the music she made. She was a marvel, an icon; each note she played was the result of total conviction – and as a consequence was totally convincing. She had been groomed from the beginning to be a star – and a star she was.
But she was also an adorable person. I had heard of her, of course, from my childhood onwards – hadn’t everybody? But I didn’t meet her until - I think - 2000, when I attended a memorable recital she gave at the Wigmore Hall (apparently her debut there!), concluding with a magisterial performance of Enescu’s 3rd sonata. I’d heard, to my delight, that she’d heard me somewhere, and had liked it, so I dared to go backstage afterwards. Having enthused about her playing, I rather uncertainly told her that I was Steven. She looked at me disbelievingly. ‘You’re NOT’ she announced, in her wonderful deep voice. I assured her that I certainly had been last time I looked in the mirror. She accepted this, and proposed that we play the Brahms Double together. It was such an honour; but alas, I just couldn’t do the dates she suggested.
I came across her shortly thereafter, however, at the Verbier Festival. I’d seen that she was giving masterclasses there, so when I saw her, I asked how they were going. She looked at me severely. ‘Steven,’ she boomed, wagging her finger. ‘I don’t teach.’ I was puzzled; she was, after all, advertised as the teacher of the violin class. ‘So you like teaching?’ I said, provoking her. The finger wagged again. ‘Steven,’ she repeated with equal seriousness, ‘I don’t teach.’ ‘So how’s the teaching going?’ I asked. Her finger was on its way in my direction, and she’d started to say my name in the same tone of voice – when suddenly her face broke into a big smile. ‘Oh – so you’re a tease,’ she said. After that, we got on famously. My other main memory of that Verbier encounter was of her examining something – I couldn’t see what - in the hotel lobby, and then calling me over. It turned out that the object in her hands was an album of recent photos of her. ‘Look, Steven,’ she commanded urgently. ‘Don’t I look gorgeous?’
Later, we took her to dinner near her flat in London. Tottering through the streets in her high heels, she suddenly came to a stop in front of a (closed) clothes shop, where either a pair of gold shoes or a gold dress (I can’t remember which) had caught her eye. It was impossible to budge her, late though we were for the restaurant. ‘Wouldn’t I look wonderful in that?’ she asked us challengingly. We agreed that she would. ‘I’m coming back here tomorrow morning,’ she assured us. She spoke that night about her appearance. ‘You think I dress like this just to go out?’ she asked. ‘No! Catch me at breakfast – I’ll look just the same.’ Her pride in her appearance was never-changing. Perhaps in someone else it could have been too much – but with Ida, it was wonderful, admirable; life-affirming, in fact, like her pride in her playing.
It is funny that already I’ve seen two obituaries giving her age five years apart. She’d certainly have preferred the younger estimate… It was impossible to get the truth out of her. I remember asking another glorious violinist-character, Lorand Fenyves, whether he knew Ida. ‘Oh yes, of course!’ he replied. ‘I knew her when I was 16 and she was 15.’ He paused. ‘And now I’m 80 and’ his eyes twinkled, ‘she’s 55!’
Although we never got to play the Brahms Double together, we did perform the Beethoven Triple concerto with Martha Argerich and the Rotterdam Philharmonic under the then little-known Yannick Nezet-Seguin in (I think) 2006. Now THAT was an experience – to put it rather mildly… Playing with those two way-larger-than-life ladies was something not to be forgotten; the two adored each other, and it was great fun to witness their interaction. Ida had only played the piece once before, as I remember; but she played it with utter conviction. And Martha was – well, Martha. And Yannick kept the whole thing together, somehow. So – it was special…
It was supposed to happen again, in Miami (where Ida lived); but alas, it didn’t. Still, I kept in touch with Ida and on one memorable occasion got to interview her at the Wigmore Hall (there’s a recording of that occasion on Youtube). She also came down to Prussia Cove once for three days, her visit culminating in a breathtaking account of the Bach Chaconne (she sported an almost equally breathtaking dress to match!) at the Hall for Cornwall. We also played and taught/didn’t teach together in 2010 at the Summit Music Festival, just outside New York. That was another unforgettable experience. At the concert that concluded the festival, Ida played virtuoso pieces with the orchestra that would have been impressive in someone thirty years younger – even younger – than she was. But equally Ida-ish was the post-concert experience. For some reason, it got very late, and it was well after midnight when we were taken in search of food. Not surprisingly, there were few options in the countryside at that time of night; but eventually we found a 24-hour diner. We went in and occupied a table. Looking around at the bikers and other rather unpredictable-looking types, I was a tad nervous; not Ida. I fortified myself with a margarita; she had tea. At one point, the conversation turned to Schumann, and his 2nd violin sonata (which at that time I didn’t know very well). I asked a question about it. ‘You want to hear how it goes?’ Ida demanded to know. She strode over to her violin-case, pulled out the violin, and to the astonishment (and then, luckily the delight) of the assembled company, began to play it. A photo taken at the time (below) shows me a little less than comfortable – and her absolutely in her element.
Oh, Ida. By the last time I spoke to her – too long ago, but not that long ago – I’d heard that she’d become very forgetful, so wasn’t quite sure whether to call her or not. But I dialled anyway, and the phone was answered. ‘Hello, Ida?” ‘Who is it?’ ‘It’s Steven – Steven Isserlis.” Silence – then the phone went dead. Oh dear. I tried again. This time I was able to hold her attention long enough to remind her who I was. We started to talk, and as the conversation progressed, she evidently remembered more and more about our friendship. It was true that she repeated herself a lot; but still – she was very much Ida, the same wonderful voice, the same love of life.
And now she’s gone. Farewell, Ida the legend; we humanoids will miss you – but thank you, thank you for giving us so much. Everything, in fact.
bach violin concerto no 2 在 古典不古典 Youtube 的精選貼文
何姿儀/楊尹賓
這集繼續分享開車必聽的音樂清單,介紹了幾位我們最愛的偉大音樂家-Carlos Kleiber, David Fray, Valery Afanassiev...等
祝你有一個愉快的音樂與開車夜晚
Khachaturian: Violin concerto mov.3
Verdi: La traviata Act 1/Dell'invito trascorsa
Bach: Keyboard concerto No.5 in F minor BWV 1056, mov.1 -David Fray
Beethoven: Symphony No.7 mov.1 -Carlos Kleiber
Schubert: Moment musicaux, Op,94 D780 Allegro Moderato -Valery Afanassiev
Apple: https://reurl.cc/2gvV3E
Spotify: https://reurl.cc/m9NA7W
Soundon:https://sndn.link/bugudian/mSAjwE
Youtube: https://reurl.cc/v18yZ1
Kkbox: https://reurl.cc/14pn5G
搜尋關鍵字:古典不古典
#每周四晚上準時上架
#快來訂閱
#喜歡我們介紹的音樂片段可以去買完整版的CD喔
#每首曲子的購買連結都會放在臉書及各平台上