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Übersetzerdienste - Translation Services

Übersetzerdienste - Translation Services Even after retiring as German Consul, I am still accredited as a German translator and interpreter for the German, Swiss and Austrian Embassy as well as for Regional Trial Court Davao City and all courts nationwide. Please pm for via doringklaus@gmail.com further information. I'll be answering your messages as soon as possible. Please be patient. Auch nach meiner Pensionierung als deutscher Konsul bin ich weiterhin als deutscher Übersetzer und Dolmetscher für die deutsche, schweizerische und österreichische Botschaft sowie für das Regional Trial Court Davao City landesweit akkreditiert. Für weitere Informationen senden Sie bitte eine PN an doringklaus@gmail.com. Ich werde Ihre Nachrichten so schnell wie möglich beantworten.

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Friday, September 30, 2022

The Opera in the Symphony: Weber’s Symphony No. 1

We are most familiar with Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826) from his opera Der Freischütz. Weber’s connections with the theatre began in childhood where he grew up in his father’s traveling theatre. His father, uncle to Mozart’s wife Constanze Weber, had been, with his brother, a member of the orchestra in Mannheim. Weber went on to write other operas, including Silvana (1810), Euryanthe for Vienna (1822-23), Oberon for London (1825-26) and, at his death, left the unfinished opera Die drei Pintos, which was completed by Mahler some 60 years later in 1888.


In 1807, Weber wrote two symphonies. At the time, he was in Carlsruhe working for Duke Eugen, who was himself a talented oboist. The orchestration of the symphonies matches the staff of the duke’s orchestra: a single flute, pairs of oboes, bassoons, horns, and trumpets, but no clarinets. There was the usual string complement, although sometimes the double basses are permitted freedom from being always tied to the cellos.


Weber’s Symphony No. 1 has closer ties with his operatic work than with the changes in symphonic form that Beethoven was experimenting with at the same time. Weber’s work would have fallen right in the middle between Beethoven’s Eroica (1805), his 4th symphony (1807), and his 5th (1807-8).


Just like an opera overture, the first movement starts with a call for attention. The first theme comes in the lower strings and the second theme was for the wind players. Even Weber described the movement as more of an overture than a symphonic movement.


This recording comes from a radio concert in April 1951 from Carnegie Hall in New York, with the New York Philharmonic led by Greek conductor Dimitri Mitropoulos. From 1949, Mitropoulos was co-conductor of the New York Philharmonic with Leopold Stokowski and in 1951 became the sole music director. Under his tenure, the Philharmonic expanded their repertoire, both through commissioning new works and by championing the music of forgotten composers, including, at the time, the symphonies of Gustav Mahler, a task that was taken up by his protégé, Leonard Bernstein.

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Uros Peric Perry - What`d I Say (Ray Charles Tribute)


L'Indifference - Cafe Accordion Orchestra


One of the most beautiful melodies ever written...


Oscar Hammerstein II - his music and his life


 American lyricist, librettist and producer

    

By The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica • Last Updated: Aug 19, 2022

Born: July 12, 1895 New York City New York

Died: August 23, 1960 (aged 65) Pennsylvania

Awards And Honors: Pulitzer Prize Grammy Award (1960) Academy Award (1946) Academy Award (1942)

Notable Works: “Carousel” “Oklahoma!” “Rose Marie” “Show Boat” “South Pacific” “The Desert Song” “The King and I” “The Last Time I Saw Paris” “The Sound of Music”

Oscar Hammerstein II, (born July 12, 1895, New York, New York, U.S.—died August 23, 1960, Doylestown, Pennsylvania), American lyricist, musical comedy author, and theatrical producer influential in the development of musical comedy and known especially for his immensely successful collaboration with the composer Richard Rodgers.


The grandson of the opera impresario Oscar Hammerstein, he studied law at Columbia University before beginning his career in the theatre. Between 1920 and 1959 he wrote all or part of about 45 musical dramas for stage, film, or television. Until he became exclusively Rodgers’ librettist in 1943, Hammerstein wrote lyrics for several other composers, among them Vincent Youmans, Rudolf Friml, Sigmund Romberg (“Lover Come Back to Me”; “Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise”), and Jerome Kern (“All the Things You Are”; “The Last Time I Saw Paris”). Among Hammerstein’s best known early works are Rose Marie (1924; music by Friml); The Desert Song (1925; music by Romberg); and the Jerome Kern musicals Sunny (1925) and Show Boat (1927), which includes the perennial favourites, “Ol’ Man River” and “Only Make Believe.”


After a period of less successful writing for films he teamed with Richard Rodgers in creating Oklahoma! (1943; winner of the Pulitzer Prize, 1944), Carousel (1945), and South Pacific (1949; Pulitzer Prize in 1950), combining bright tunes with relatively sophisticated stories—a blend then unfamiliar to the stage but later widely adopted. Hammerstein’s lyrics are often marked by a simplicity and sensitivity perhaps best exemplified by “If I Loved You” (from Carousel).


Rodgers and Hammerstein formed a music publishing firm, Williamson Music, Inc., and from 1949 were theatrical producers for their own works as well as for those of many others. Other musical comedies with Rodgers include The King and I (1951), The Sound of Music (1959), Flower Drum Song (1958), and the film State Fair (1945).


Hammerstein won Academy Awards for the songs “The Last Time I Saw Paris” from Lady Be Good (1941) and “It Might as Well Be Spring” from State Fair (1945). In addition, he received three Tony Awards for South Pacific and one for The King and I.

Some Enchanted Evening


Now we are free - Joslin - Gladiator Soundtrack - Hans Zimmer, Lisa Gerrard


Sunday, September 25, 2022

Romantico



HAUSER & Caroline Campbell - Czardas


HAUSER & Caroline Campbell - Czardas
17,117,014 views  Nov 13, 2018  Follow HAUSER:
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Hauser and Caroline Campbell performing Czardas (Csárdás) by Vittorio Monti at the "HAUSER & Friends" Gala Concert in Arena Pula, Croatia, August 2018

Ivo Lipanovic, conductor
Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra

Filmed and edited by MedVid production and Hauser
Audio produced by Hauser and Filip Vidovic (Morris Studio)

SEA OF TRANQUILITY - Stive Morgan

SHADOWS - Giovanni Marradi


Friday, September 23, 2022

Giovanni Marradi - Together

Dave Brubeck - Take Five

Pearl Harbor Suite (Main Theme)



Pearl Harbor Suite (Main Theme)
21,015,772 views  Jul 17, 2017  Suite (arranged by myself) of the main theme of the 2001 film Pearl Harbor, from the Original Soundtrack and the Complete Recording Sessions. Composed by Hans Zimmer. Part of #HansZimmerMondays, a prelude to my Hans Zimmer Tribute Medley, coming on August 28th (EDIT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z74Es...).
Tracklist:
0:00 Tennessee
3:28 Evelyn Can't Break Up/Spy/Romp
4:42 I'm Pregnant

As Time Goes by (From "Casablanca")




As Time Goes by (From "Casablanca")
1,347,495 views  Jan 19, 2017  Provided to YouTube by TuneCore

As Time Goes by (From "Casablanca") · Beegie Adair

As Time Goes By

℗ 2012 Burton Avenue Music