Tag: Berlioz

  • Pierre Petit Photographer of History

    Pierre Petit Photographer of History

    This self-portrait of Pierre Petit (left) reminds me that I am overdue for a haircut. Petit, who lived from 1832 to 1909, photographed many of the important events and artists of his time. He was the official photographer of the International Exhibition of 1867. He reported on the construction of the Statue of Liberty. He photographed the Siege of Paris. He was the first to attempt underwater photography.

    I’m attaching his portraits of Berlioz and Delacroix, then I’m off to be shorn.

  • Happy Birthday Dame Janet Baker A Legend

    Happy Birthday Dame Janet Baker A Legend

    Happy birthday, Dame Janet Baker!

    An appreciation that ran in The Telegraph in 2013:

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/opera/10252457/Janet-Baker-a-dame-but-not-a-diva.html

    A fascinating interview from earlier this year with Joyce DiDonato:

    Baker’s classic recording of Berlioz’s “Les Nuits d’ été with Barbirolli:

    Live (performance begins at 10:37):

    Elgar’s “Sea Pictures”:

    Baker as Purcell’s Dido:

    Baker as Berlioz’s Dido (in English!):

  • NJSO Shakespeare Festival Lacombe’s Finale

    NJSO Shakespeare Festival Lacombe’s Finale

    Now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer, not by the son of York, but by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and its enterprising music director, Jacques Lacombe. For the second year in a row, Lacombe and the NJSO will present “Sounds of Shakespeare,” the sixth of the organization’s Winter Festivals to take place under his supervision.

    Next weekend will bring a Berlioz double-bill, with the “Symphonie fantastique,” followed by its seldom-heard sequel, “Lélio.”

    The program is “sort of ‘sideways inspired by Shakespeare,’” Lacombe says. “When Berlioz wrote ‘Symphonie fantastique,’ he was fascinated by a Shakespearean actress. At the end of the symphony, it’s sort of like his life is a total mess. The subtitle of ‘Lelio’ is ‘The Return to Life.’ The artist finds redemption in the creation of a fantasy on ‘The Tempest.’’”

    The weekend after that, the NJSO will join with the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey to present “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” with Mendelssohn’s complete incidental music.

    The performances will mark the final area appearances (in Princeton and New Brunswick) to feature Lacombe as NJSO music director. The orchestra will return under an assortment of guest conductors throughout the spring, but the remainder of Lacombe’s concerts this season will take place in the northern part of the state. He will be succeeded in the fall by Xian Zhang as the organization’s 14th music director.

    Find out more, including much on Berlioz’s over-the-top romantic escapades, in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/01/classical_music_njso_announces.html

  • Sir Thomas Beecham A Noisy Genius

    Sir Thomas Beecham A Noisy Genius

    “The British may not like music, but they absolutely love the noise it makes.”

    Happy birthday, Sir Thomas Beecham (1879-1961)

    More about Beecham here:
    http://www.theguardian.com/friday_review/story/0,3605,468909,00.html

    Beecham conducts Delius:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EX5MLdxcTv4

    Beecham conducts Berlioz:

    Beecham conducts Handel (as arranged by Beecham):

    Beecham conducts Sibelius:

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