Showing posts with label Klassische Musik mit Klaus Döring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Klassische Musik mit Klaus Döring. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2019

The difference between a German Baroque Organ and ...

... a French symphonic organ?


Olivier Latry performs at Saanen Church in Gstaad, Switzerland as part of the Gstaad Menuhin Festival 2019
Olivier Latry performs at Saanen Church in Gstaad, Switzerland as part of the Gstaad Menuhin Festival 2019. Picture: Gstaad Menuhin Festival
By Rosie Pentreath
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Ahead of his appearance at Gstaad Menuhin Festival, we talked to Notre-Dame organist Olivier Latry about the challenges and opportunities that come with playing different organs around the world.
For his recent appearance at Gstaad Menuhin FestivalOlivier Latry traded Notre-Dame Cathedral’s French symphonic organ (which is sadly undergoing repair, since the devastating fire at the Cathedral in April) for the German Baroque organ of Saanen Church in Switzerland.
It turns out that preparing for a concert of organ works in a new town, city, country or continent isn’t as simple as rocking up to the keyboard and using muscle memory to reel off Bach’s finest fugues or Widor’s wildest arpeggios.
Indeed, according to Latry, it’s not like being a pianist who might have to take into account slight variations in an instrument’s touch or pedal weights. There are huge .differences and it’s not the case that an organ by any other name would sound as sweet…


"The sound is different, especially the attack of the bite,” Latry explains. “The German organ is very precise on the attack of the note, whereas the French symphony organ has an inertia like that of a symphony orchestra.
“It’s comparable to the French language where we do not have so many articulations or consonants as in Germany where they have consonants everywhere. You can hear it in the pipes.”
And whereas a flautist and violinist, say, can bring their own instrument to a new venue, and a pianist will be greeted with a pretty familiar situation when they sit at a new piano, an organist can be confronted with any number of keyboards, keyboards in different places (i.e. arranged vertically versus horizontally), different stops and entirely different ranges of octaves.
Olivier Latry, Notre-Dame organist
Olivier Latry, Notre-Dame organist. Picture: Gstaad Menuhin Festival
“In Saanen, the German organ has many high stops and is based vertically, and the sound is lighter. On a French organ, the sound is darker and it would be a more horizontal set-up. In terms of sound, it’s like the difference between a quartet(German Baroque) and the Berlin Philharmonic (French symphonic).”
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So, no going on autopilot for an organist, then?
“No way,” responds Latry. “It’s like driving a car where the indicator control is no longer on the left where you expect it, but on the right, so you can’t go into autopilot mode.
“And on some organs, it’s like driving a car where the accelerator is on the side that you expect the break to be! So, we have to be very careful all the time.”
Saanen Church in Gstaad, Switzerland
Saanen Church in Gstaad, Switzerland. Picture: Gstaad Menuhin Festival

Who is Olivier Latry?

Olivier Latry is the French organist who has worked at the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris since 1985. He studied organ with Gaston Litaize and composition with Jean-Claude Raynaud, among others.
Telling us about Litaize, Latry said, “We had what was called tea time: we turned the organ off, went into the room behind it and heard all these stories about Paris in the 1920s and 30s.
“Litaiz told us, ‘my greatest chance in life was to be 20 during the 30s in Paris’ and I have always remembered that. Knowing all these stories told by someone who lived that time just brings it to life. It was incredible.”
Olivier Latry is Professor of Organ at the Paris Conservatoire.
The Menuhin Festival in Gstaad was established by violinist Yehudi Menuhin in 1957, following visits to the region in the previous two years in which he had been scouting out suitable locations for a summer residence.
“Local tourism officers motivated Menuhin to have a look in Saanen Church and to bring his violin,” Gstaad Menuhin Festival director, Christoph Müller tells us.
“He played some notes here and he fell completely in love with the church. He decided in a very spontaneous moment to organise two concerts on 2 and 4 August 1957, with his friends Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears.”
From this illustrious trio – sounds like a set of dream dinner party guests, to us – the festival continued and grew around this ethos of making beautiful music with friends in a stunning part of Switzerland.
“This group was the birth of the Gstaad Menuhin Festival and a manifest for the spirit for the event,” Christoph explains. “He invited friends and played chamber music with them in the relaxed atmosphere here. It grew, and he was artistic director for forty years until 1996.”
Christoph Müller, Gstaad Menuhin Festival director
Christoph Müller, Gstaad Menuhin Festival director . Picture: Gstaad Menuhin Festival
Gstaad Menuhin would become one of the most important festivals in the Alps, according to Müller, and by the 1990s was the second largest festival in Switzerland (after Lucerne).
Today, the festival has expanded to the Gstaad Menuhin Festival Academy, the Gstaad Menuhin Festival Orchestraand the Gstaad Digital Festival, for those who can’t make it over to Switzerland.
This year’s theme is Paris and along with Latry, highlights have included performances from soprano Patricia Petibon and pianist Bertrand Chamayou, with concerts from the likes of pianists Gabriela Montero and Yuja Wang, and cellist Gautier Capuçon.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Ranked from worst to best ...

The biggest songs in West Side Story

Tony and Maria in West Side Story
Picture: United Artists
By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM
634
It has possibly the greatest musical score of all time, and it’s all based around that ominous, uncomfortable tritone… but which songs are really the best? Here’s our definitive ranking* of Bernstein’s songs from West Side Story.
*Tears were shed and friendships ruined in the making of this listicle.
  1. A Boy Like That

    A duet between Anita and Maria, this is Anita’s final piece of wisdom for her sister-in-law, before Tony’s (spoiler alert) sticky end. The tempo constantly flits between 3/4 and 4/4 time, creating a feeling of unease. More than anything, it just makes us think: why didn’t Maria just listen to wise old Anita? It would have saved her a lot of upset.
  2. Cool

    The tritone, also known as the devil’s interval, is frankly everywhere in West Side Story – so this is by no means the only example of it on this list. ‘Cool’, like ‘Maria’ and ‘Gee, Officer Krupke’, is based around the devil’s interval, and it creates a dark, stilted atmosphere to tell the audience that something is up. (It’s not that we don’t like ‘Cool’, by the way, it’s just Bernstein wrote too many bangers.)
  3. I Feel Pretty

    In eighth place, it’s Maria’s solo ‘I Feel Pretty’. It’s a bit twee, but the song will always be charming, sweet and one of Bernstein’s most memorable melodies.
    Lyricist Stephen Sondheim described the idea behind this song as “simple’. The New York Times elaborated, saying that Sondheim “said he was never particularly fond of his lyrics in ‘West Side Story’, especially ‘I Feel Pretty’.”
  4. Jet Song

    Tritone klaxon! In the ‘Jet Song’, the juicy interval appears prominently, but is never resolved. By leaving it unresolved, Bernstein builds that uncomfortable, ominous atmosphere that will set the tone for the rest of the musical.
  5. Gee, Officer Krupke

    ‘Gee, Officer Krupke’, the great comic number in the musical, is a perfect example of Bernstein and Sondheim’s incredible teamwork. It kicks off in a light, vaudeville style, before launching us into another whopping great tritone in the first interval.
  6. Tonight

    Ah, those sweet teenage dreams of finding a Shakespearean man to sing to us on our parents’ balcony... In their first love duet, Maria and Tony are suspended in time, while the rest of the world fades away. Oh, and there are no tritones here – only nice, loved-up fourths and fifths. *swoons*
  7. Maria

    There’s no greater example of the tritone than in ‘Maria’. After that echoed build-up (which makes it sound a bit like poor Tony is lost in a train tunnel somewhere) a great big tritone comes in as Tony exclaims Maria’s name aloud for the first time.
    But the mood here couldn’t be further from the menacing feeling the tritone normally creates – and that’s because it’s only there for a moment, before it resolves to create a lovely perfect fifth interval.
  8. Something’s Coming

    In third place, it’s the musical’s tagline. Full of jumpy rhythms, ‘Something’s Coming’ is based on a syncopated ostinato, which is repeated throughout. It sets the tone for Tony becoming disillusioned with gang violence, and his desire to leave the Jets.
  9. America

    Grab your castanets! ‘America’ is the biggest dance number in the musical, and Sondheim’s rhyming game is exceptional here. Beginning with triplets, it paints a nostalgic picture of Puerto Rico, before moving into 6/8 time and that earworm-y C major melody.
  10. Somewhere

    ‘Somewhere’ has probably found the most fame outside of the musical – and at least a smattering of our Bernstein-shaped tears can be attributed to this final, heartbreaking love duet.
    It borrows the tune from the slow movement of Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Piano Concerto, but the final note is shifted a tone higher, hinting at a brief moment of hope for the star-crossed lovers.
Te Deum is performed at the opening ceremony of the Eurovision Song Contest 2013

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Lang Lang married fellow pianist Gina Alice Redlinger

 – and the wedding photos are ridiculously glamorous



Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger
Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger. Picture: Social Media

By Kyle Macdonald, ClassicFM London
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The two love-birds tied the knot in Paris, and the photos were just beautiful.
Twitter was overflowing with good wishes over the weekend, as keyboard superstar Lang Lang announced his marriage to fellow pianist Gina Alice Redlinger. And the photos of their nuptials were a virtuoso display all on their own.
Chinese media reported that the couple's ceremony took place at a hotel in Paris, followed by a banquet for guests at the Palace of Versailles. And the snaps they shared were just as romantic and Parisian as you would hope.

Who is Lang Lang's wife?

24-year-old Gina Alice Redlinger has been performing as a concert pianist since the age of 8, initially learning with German pianist Irina Edelstein. She went on to study music in Hamburg and now has performed around the world. Gina Alice is also a composer.

Gina Alice and Lang Lang met in Berlin. Here she is with the spectacular Busoni transcription of Bach's Chaconne:
Our congratulations to the happy couple. We wish them many, many years of happy duets together.



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はああああ〜〜〜〜〜〜ランランと結婚して、ヴェルサイユ宮殿で結婚式なんて最高すぎる💕😂本当に絵になる2人💕いつまでも見ていたい。ランラン 、アリスさん、心からおめでとうございます🎉
Marriage with Lang Lang, Palace of Versailles wedding💕what a ultimate dream ❣️

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Chinese pianist and his half-German, half-Korean bride held their wedding banquet at the Palace of in . They studied with the same teacher and have cooperated many times. They performed an impromptu piano duet at their reception.

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