Russian composer, pianist and professor of music
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Carlos Iribarren | El quinto episodio de primeras sinfonías rusas incluye 4 movimientos de sendos autores que aún no habían sonado en esta serie orquestal de Hoy Toca. Los responsables de la música tan interesante que ilumina esta entrega son Alexander Borodin, Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov, Anton Arensky y Alexander Scriabin, cuyos primeros intentos sinfónicos oscilan entre finales del siglo XIX y comienzos del XX. Es música de mucho nivel que Carlos Iribarren y Mario Mora quieren que disfrutes en un viaje lleno de matices y sonidos emocionantes; así de apasionante es la nueva entrega de Hoy Toca, el programa de Clásica FM que te quiere sorprender.
Sand unter den Füßen, Seeluft um die Nase und Musik im Ohr. Komm mit auf eine musikalische Reise an die Nordsee: Endlose Wellen und Geschichten von fremden Gestaden. Diese Musikstücke hörst Du in dieser Folge: Jon – "Am Meer" // Norma – "Gul ruad blä" // Joseph Haydn – "Klavierkonzert F-Dur, Adagio" // Stephan Diez – "Above" // Anton Arensky – "Romanze" // Den Podcast "WDR 3 Klassik Crush" findest du hier: https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/wdr-3-klassik-crush/94599094/ Wenn Du eine Idee oder einen Wunsch zu einem musikalischen Thema hast, dann schreib mir eine Mail: playlist@ndr.de
Programa dedicado a presentar obras del repertorio de música clásica creadas para el ballet. Selección realzada por Carolina Valdés. Martes a las 12:00 hrs. en 95.1 FM y www.radioudec.cl
Everyone knows Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. Even if United Airlines hadn't made the piece ubiquitous, it seems like the one piece of classical music almost everyone knows besides the beginning of Beethoven's 5th symphony is Rhapsody in Blue. But did you know that Gershwin wrote a second rhapsody for piano and orchestra? We know Shostakovich's later works for their intensity, drama, and depth, but did you know that Shostakovich was a completely different composer when he was a young man? That he wrote funny, sarcastic, and wildly experimental music? How about Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber and his Battalia a 10? Or Ethel Smyth's string quintet? Or the music of Teresa Carreno? Leonard Bernstein used to talk about the infinite variety of classical music because there's simply an endless treasure trove of great and often totally unknown classical music out there. So today, I want to take you on a bit of an archeological expedition, exploring 10 pieces you've (probably) never heard of, but really have to listen to. My list includes some very recognizable names, including Ravel, Gershwin, and Shostakovich, but also some names you might know less well, like Anton Arensky, Milosz Magin, and Teresa Carreno. Join us and discover something new!
Synopsis Under the old Julian calendar in use in Czarist Russia, on today's date in 1861, the Romantic composer Anton Arensky was born in Novgorod. If you prefer, you can also celebrate Arensky's birthday on July 12 – the same date under the modern Gregorian calendar, but Arensky was such a Romantic that the Old Style date seems, well, more appropriate somehow. Arensky studied with Nicolai Rimsky Korsakov, and admired the music of Tchaikovsky. Arensky taught at the Moscow Conservatory and published two books: a “Manual of Harmony” and “A Handbook of Musical Forms.” His own students included a number of famous Russian composers, including Scriabin, Rachmaninoff, and Glière. Arensky wrote three operas, two symphonies, concertos, chamber works, and suites for two pianos – but it's his Piano Trio in D minor that gets performed and recorded more often than any of his other works. A victim of tuberculosis, Arensky spent the last years of his life in a Finnish sanatorium. He died young – just 44 years old – in 1906. Music Played in Today's Program Anton Arensky (1861 – 1906) –Piano Trio No. 1 (Rembrandt Trio) Dorian 90146
Conduce: José-María Álvarez Contenido: Anton Arensky: 1. Sinfonía No. 1 en si menor Op. 4 (IV)2. Trío con piano No. 1 en re menor Op. 32 (II)3. Obertura del ballet “Noches egipcias” Op. 504. Quinteto con piano en re mayor Op. 51 (III)5. Cantata sobre el X Aniversario de la Coronación de Alejandro III Op. 26
Swetlana Meermann-Muret hat Anfang März 2020 im SWR Studio Kaiserslautern Aufnahmen für ihre neue CD „Miniatures Russes“ gemacht, auf der Raritäten der Komponisten Anatoly Lyadov und Anton Arensky zu hören sind. Die russisch-deutsche Pianistin lebt zwar in Frankreich, ist aber im Südwesten keine Unbekannte: Ihr Konzertexamen hat sie an der Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe abgelegt und zudem war sie Stipendiatin der Villa Musica Rheinland-Pfalz. Im SWR2 Musikgespräch unterhält sich Martin Hagen mit Swetlana Meermann-Muret über das außergewöhnliche CD-Repertoire.
Pianisten Lucas en Arthur Jussen zijn al jaren geliefd op concertpodia in binnen- en buitenland. De nieuwe cd ‘The Russian Album’ is opnieuw uitgebracht bij het Deutsche Grammophon label. Ditmaal hebben de broers geprobeerd de magie van de Russische muziek te vangen. Het werk bevat een selectie van de meesters Dmitri Sjostakovitsj, Sergei Rachmaninov, Igor Stravinsky en Anton Arensky. Presentatie: Jellie Brouwer
Anton Arensky é da escola russa, um grande compositor que merece a sua atenção. Acompanhe com Aroldo Glomb e Eduardo.
On the latest episode of the AYO podcast, violinist Adrian Biemmi chats to us about his favourite memory on an AYO program. Last year at National Music Camp 2019, the Weiss Chamber Orchestra performed Anton Arensky’s Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky. The piece evoked an immediate emotional response for Adrian, who had played it for the first time many years beforehand when he had just started out playing violin. Discover more about the piece and Adrian’s AYO experience.
durée : 01:58:23 - Été Classique Après-midi du samedi 13 juillet 2019 - par : Aurélie Moreau - Felix Mendelssohn, Heinrich Marschner, Joseph Rheinberger, Jean-Sébastien Bach et Anton Arensky accompagnent votre samedi après-midi … - réalisé par : Sophie Pichon
This week on Sticky Notes we're going on an archeological expedition, digging up 10 rarely(if ever) heard pieces which we've all been missing out on. This list covers rare pieces from composers as popular as Gershwin, Shostakovich, and Ravel, but also much less well-known composers like Milosz Magin, Teresa Carreno, and Anton Arensky. We'll go over each one of these pieces, putting them into context with the famous music that was being written at the time. You will also get to hear Ethel Smyth describe her experiences meeting Brahms, something you don't want to miss! Thanks for listening!
Works for piano trio performed the Claremont Trio.Sean Shepherd: TrioAnton Arensky: Piano Trio in D Minor, Op. 32The Claremont Trio are longtime favorites at the Gardner Museum, and so it seemed fitting that they were part of the opening series at the Museum’s new Calderwood Hall almost exactly a year ago: on January 22, 2012. Their program featured another debut, too: the world premiere of the young composer Sean Shepherd’s Trio for piano trio, written especially for the Claremont Trio. Shepherd says he was inspired by the architecture of the new hall as he wrote the piece: “I was taken with the unusual shape of the hall, a vertical cube with three wrapping balcony levels hovering nearly directly over a square stage,” he writes.Shepherd’s work is followed on the program by an early recording of the Claremont Trio in the Gardner’s former concert hall, the Museum’s Tapestry Room. We’ll hear their rendition of Anton Arensky’s Piano Trio, a well-loved piece by a little-known composer. The trio has been heard before on the Gardner podcast—in episode 44—but it bears repeating.We’ll start with Sean Shepherd’s 2012 trio before journeying back in time to Arensky’s, from 1894.
Donald Macleod explores the life and work of Anton Arensky
01. SERGEI TANEYEV, The Dawn of Recording, Mozart: Fantasie in C Minor, K. 39602. JOSEF HOFMANN, The Dawn of Recording, Anton Rubinstein: Contredanse A, no. 303. ANNA ESSIPOVA?, Godard: Gavotte in G, op. 81, no. 204. PAUL PABST?, Tchaikovsky-Pabst: Paraphrase on Sleeping Beauty05. EDDY BROWN, The Dawn of Recording, Haydn-Burmester: Minuet in F, from Symphony No. 9606. Ward Marston, The Julius Block Cylinders, Ward Marston on Youtube07. JASCHA HEIFETZ violin and WALDEMAR LIACHOWSKY piano, Cui: Orientale, from Kaleidoscope, op. 5008. SERGEI TANEYEV? and LEO CONUS, Leo Conus: Suite for Piano Four-Hands09. ANTON ARENSKY piano; JAN HR?MAL? violin; and ANATOLY BRANDUKOV cello:, The Dawn of Recording, Arensky: Piano Trio No. 1 in D Minor, op. 32 First movement - Allegro 10. MADAMOISELLE NIKITA (LOUISA MARGARET NICHOLSON)? (1872?unknown), soprano and PYOTR SCHUROVSKY? (1850?1908), pianoVerdi: Ernani, involami, from Ernani11. LAVRENTII DONSKOI? (1857 or 1858?1917), tenor and unidentified pianist, Rubinstein: O pechal I toska from Nero12. LEO TOLSTOY. With Countess Sofia Andreevna Tolstaya (Wife, 1844?1919), Tatiana L?vovna Tolstaya-Sukhotina (Daughter, 1864?1950), and Tatiana Mikhailovna Sukhotina-Albertini (Granddaughter, 1905?1996)14 February 1895 Russia (Tolstoy and his wife), 2 November 1927; (C245) Vevey, Switzerland (Tolstoy?s daughter and granddaughter)