Podcast appearances and mentions of cecile licad

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Best podcasts about cecile licad

Latest podcast episodes about cecile licad

The New Criterion
Piano Evening with David Dubal & Cecile Licad

The New Criterion

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 85:16


On October 24, the Friends and Young Friends of The New Criterion gathered at The Players with David Dubal for a special version of his beloved piano evenings, featuring Cecile Licad performing Frédéric Chopin's 24 Preludes, Op. 28.

Miss Maple Mysteries
The Mer Bleue Bog Body

Miss Maple Mysteries

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2024 24:39


 A sensational discovery could be a perfectly preserved 3,000 year old mummy, or much more recent foul play.Music from Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, www.gardnermuseum.org Chopin: Nocturne for piano No. 13 in C minor, Op. 48, No. 1, performed by Cecile Licad, pianoand David Anderson: Four Short Pieces, performed by DaXun Zhang, double bassfrom Rag & Bone Puppet Theatre. Story by Kathy MacLellan, read by Kathy. Production by John Nolan.Visit our website to read about all our activities.

En pistes ! L'actualité du disque classique
L'hommage de Gaëtane Prouvost et Eliane Reyes à l’école franco-belge de violon

En pistes ! L'actualité du disque classique

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2020 118:33


durée : 01:58:33 - En pistes ! du vendredi 15 mai 2020 - par : Emilie Munera, Rodolphe Bruneau Boulmier - Au menu du jour également : Cecile Licad poursuit son anthologie de la musique pour piano américaine avec un disque Gershwin, Vivaldi par la violoncelliste Ophélie Gaillard et l'Ensemble Pulcinella, Kaëlig Boché et Thomas Tacquet redonnent vie aux mélodies du méconnu Jean Cartan... - réalisé par : Olivier Guérin

Greenroom Conversations
S04E04 - Cecile Licad

Greenroom Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 34:38


Listen to S04E04, our conversation with Cecile Licad on Apple, Spotify, and Sticher. Cecile Licad called “a pianist’s pianist” by The New Yorker, joined us to talk about her international career, starting as a prodigy and leading to her current project of American music. http://www.barrettartists.com/artist.php?id=clicad    

The Truth CS:GO Podcast
#79: Starladder Major Week Two, You Are God

The Truth CS:GO Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2019 34:18


Rambling about Starladder Major Legends stage and listening to some Chopin and wondering about whether we are in fact god. Music by Beaufort @beaufort.asia Chopin by Cecile Licad, published by Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum under this license: https://imslp.org/wiki/IMSLP:Creative_Commons_Attribution_Non-commercial_No_Derivatives_3.0 and Harald Vetter under this license: https://imslp.org/wiki/IMSLP:Creative_Commons_Attribution_4.0 Twitter: @thetruthcsgo. Email: thetruth@thetruthcsgo.com. Discord: https://discord.gg/ArWCXuy

The Concert - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
182. A Musical Trek Through Switzerland

The Concert - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2014


Work for solo piano performed by Cecile Licad:Liszt: Années de pèlerinage, Premiere année: Suisse, S. 160I hope you’re ready for a journey.This week, we’re packing up and accompanying Franz Liszt on a journey through Switzerland—in the form of the first part of his massive piano suite Années de pèlerinage or “Years of Pilgrimage.” Year One, “Switzerland,” will comprise the entirety of our podcast, running a bit more than 45 minutes in its entirety.The work is an undeniable product of the Romantic era, a sort of musical “bildungsroman”—a coming-of-age journey—inspired by the composer’s own, real-life travels.The movement titles are evocative: The Chapel of William Tell, At Lake Wallenstadt, Pastorale, Beside a Spring, Storm, Obermann’s Valley, Eclogue (a type of bucolic poem), Homesickness, and, finally, The Bells of Geneva.Each movement begins a few lines of poetry. The passage that precedes the final movement perhaps sums it up best. Liszt writes, quoting the narrative poem, Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage: “I live not in myself,” “but I become / Portion of that around me.”We’ll hear this monumental work played by pianist Cecile Licad.

The Concert - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Works for solo piano performed by pianists Cecile Licad and Jean-Frédéric Neuburger.Chopin: Nocturne in F-sharp minor, Op. 48 No. 2Chopin: Fantasie in F minor, Op. 49Chopin: Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat Minor, Op. 35On February 26, 1832, a young pianist named Frédéric Chopin made his debut at the intimate Salle Pleyel, to a room filled with music-world notables including Franz Liszt and Felix Mendelssohn. He would go on to revolutionize the way composers wrote for the piano, and the way pianists played it. We’ll begin with his Nocturne in F-sharp minor, Op. 48 No. 2, as performed by Cecile Licad. Next we’ll hear a slightly longer work, the Fantasie in F minor, Op. 49 No. 2. This more expansive work earns the title “fantasy” from its semi-improvisatory nature—we move through a series of different sections, with different themes, that unfold in succession. The performance is again by Cecile Licad. Finally, we’ll hear Chopin’s Second Sonata in B-flat minor, as performed by pianist Jean-Frederic Neuburger. The four-movement piece roams widely, from the stormy opening to the famous third-movement funeral march, all culminating in a virtuoso perpetual motion finale with rapid-fire triplets.

Musica classica y beyond
Set 32 - Bach. Wings. Marenzio. Alban Gerhardt. Reynaldo Hahn

Musica classica y beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2011 16:44


1 - Diálogo Yanomami/ Yanomami dialog 2 - "Corrente" da/from "Partita em lá menor/in A minor, BWV 1013". Lisia Beznosiuk, flauta/flute. 3 - Walking in the park with Eloise (James McCartney). Wings. 4 - ¨Tribus miraculis" (Marenzio). St. Paul´s Cathedral Choir.John Scott, regente/conductor. 5 - "Chanson villageoise Op. 62 N. 2" (David Popper). Alban Gerhardt, cello. Cecile Licad, piano. 6 - Canto do bicudo/ Brazilian bridcall 7 - "Romance em lá maior/in A major (Reynaldo Hahn). Charles Sewart, violino/violin. Stephen Coombs, piano Gostou? Então clique em LIKE e também em FOLLOW. Ou se inscreva pelo iTunes para receber atualizações////// Fancy my sets? So please click LIKE and also FOLLOW. You can always subscribe with iTunes. http://www.facebook.com/heloisafischer http://www.vivamusica.com.br

The Concert - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Works for solo piano performed by Cecile Licad.Liszt: Two LegendsLiszt: Three Pieces from Années de PèlerinagePerhaps no composer was more skilled than Liszt in his painterly use of the piano, deftly evoking a wide range of images and emotions. We begin this episode with the composer’s Two Legends, both based on the lives of saints. In the first—St. Francis of Assisi preaching to the birds—swirling, shape-shifting flocks are evoked by high tremolos in the piano. The second Legend tells the story of St. Francis of Paola walking on the water. In a clever musical counterpart to the first, Liszt again uses swirling textures, this time in the bass, meant now to depict rolling waves. Next on the program is a selection of movements from Liszt’s three-volume Années de Pèlerinage, or Years of Pilgrimage. Spanning three hours when performed in full, the pieces range from evocations of the sculpture, poetry, music, and landscapes that Liszt encountered in his journeys to more abstract spiritual meditations. We’ll hear three selections from the first book, about his travels in Switzerland.

The Concert - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Works for voice and piano and piano solo, performed by soprano Jeanine De Bique, and pianists Warren Jones and Cecile Licad.Obradors: SongsRachmaninoff: Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minorToday's podcast is for the unabashed romantic. We begin with songs by the Catalan composer Fernando Obradors. Written between 1921 and 1942, Obradors' songs capture the spirit of the classic Spanish poetry with a freshness and immediacy that has made them an enduring hit, with both singers and audiences. Then we move on to one of the great Romantic piano works: Rachmaninoff's second piano sonata. Just as Obradors' songs seem to have an essential Spanish-ness, Rachmaninoff's sonata has often been called uniquely Russian in its fierce passion and brooding expressiveness.