Showing posts with label Cite de la Musique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cite de la Musique. Show all posts

Friday, February 18, 2011

The Fairy Queen at Cité-μ

The Fairy Queen, Cité de la Musique in Paris, February 15 2011



Philip Pickett ..... conducting
Mauricio Garcia Lozano ..... director

Joanne Lunn ..... soprano
Dana Marbach ..... soprano
Faye Newton ..... soprano
Christopher Robson ..... countertenor
Tim Travers-Brown .... countertenor
Ed Lyon ..... tenor
Joseph Cornwell ..... tenor
Michael George ..... bass-baritone
Simon Grant ..... bass-baritone


New London Consort

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Embellish Your Winter Evenings


Here is what you can see/listen for free and heat up these last 10 days of December 2010:

Thursday, November 11, 2010

HK Gruber et al. at Cité de la Musique

Das Berliner Requiem, Cité de la Musique - Paris, November 10 2010


Vom Tod im Wald (Kurt Weill)
Busking (Heinz Karl Gruber)
Das Berliner Requiem (Kurt Weill)

HK Gruber ..... conductor
Håkan Hardenberger ..... trumpet
Rainer Trost ..... tenor
Florian Boesch ..... baritone

Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France
Choeur de Radio France

Ed: on this link you may listen to the recording of this concert

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Anemic Strauss at Cité de la Musique




Metamorphosen - R.Strauss
Piano Concerto #20 - Mozart
Also sprach Zarathustra - R.Strauss

Friday, October 8, 2010

October at Cité de la Musique

October, film-concert, Cité de la Musique, October 7 2010


October: Ten Days That Shook the World 
[Октябрь (Десять дней, которые потрясли мир)] by Sergei Eisenstein

Music by Dmitri Shostakovich
Orchestre National d'Île de France
Dmitry Yablonsky .... conductor

Friday, May 14, 2010

Octobass and Harpolyre

Octobass has nothing to do with Octomom  :)

Cité de la musique in Paris is fun place visit. Adjacent to the Conservatory, it's a home to one of the world's best contemporary music orchestra, L'ensemble intercontemporain. In the complex there is a very good shop, plenty of space for workshops, seminars, educational programs, in addition to a fantastic auditorium... And there is a huge Musics Museum  -- Musée de la Musique -- where you can see more than 40,000 pieces of musical instruments, exposed chronologically so you get a feeling of how and why the orchestral music  evolved.



You can see many fancy instruments, such as octobass -- almost double in size with respect to a double bass (pic above). Berlioz apparently liked it a lot --for his huge orchestral experiments-- but since it was too large, the strings too thick... the instrument disappeared from all standards.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

We will barock you (1): Acis and Galatea at La cité de la musique

 Acis and Galatea, La cité de la musique, May 4, 2010

Joanne Lunn and Ed Lyon


Philip Pickett  conductor
 
Ed Lyon  Acis
Joanne Lunn  Galatée
Michael George  Polyphème
Joseph Cornwell  Damon
     Andrew King  Coridon
Faye Newton  
Jelena Kordic
Simon Grant


New London Consort

Friday, April 9, 2010

Massacre à la Cité de la Musique de Paris

Cité de la Musique à Paris, April 8, 2010, Massacre (an opera by Wolfgang Mitterer)


Ludovic Lagarde director
Peter Rundel conductor

Elizabeth Calleo  la duchesse de Guise
Valérie Philippin  le roi de Navarre
Nora Petrocenko  la reine de Navarre
Jean-Paul Bonnevalle  Henri III
Lionel Peintre  le Duc de Guise
Remix Ensemble

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Adams and Glass in Paris

In the country of Boulez you don't expect to hear too much music by the American minimalists, such as John Adams or Philip Glass.

Yet in March there was a whole lot of events honoring John Adams, including the French premiere of his opera "A Flowering Tree" at the Cité de la Musique [Cité was co founded by Pierre Boulez!].
The press apparently liked the idea and appreciated the music by Adams. Moreover, the world's coolest television [Arte, of course] --via ARTE Live Web--  offered a free video of the entire concert with John Adams conducting the Asko-Schönberg Ensemble. The concert took place 10 days ago in Paris; the video is free and can be found here.


As for Philip Glass, his chamber operas have been relatively often performed but in smaller parisian theaters. To wit, "In the Penal Colony", that he composed in 2000, will be premiered tonight at the Théâtre Athénée with Yours Truly in the front row  :)

Thursday, March 18, 2010

2010-2011: Cité de la musique - Paris

The place where you can sens the love for music much more than elsewhere is this wonderful Cité de la musique. It is much less starry than in the other operatic or concert houses, but the program is always much better structured around the specific themes, covering the music that you rarely see programmed in the main concert houses. In their premises you can visit a Music Museum (excellent!), they organize seminars, workshops, round tables with authors, artists, they give you free access to their ginormous Media Center...

Yes, the stars perform there sometimes too, and in my opinion they perform even better -- perhaps because they perform the music they don't normally do in other concert houses.


And their auditorium is excellent -- the best in Paris! They will officially announce their program for 2010-2011 season this evening and already tomorrow it will be available on their web-site.

I received the program this morning and will type a list of say 20-30 concerts/events to see next season  à la Cité.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Chopin in Paris & Edna Stern performs on a Pleyel piano

Last week in the Cité de la musique in Paris was opened the exhibition Chopin à Paris [it will run through June 6]. If you're in Paris or plan to come, I would wholeheartedly recommend you to visit the place (on the same go you may visit their very interesting Musée de la musique; it's in the same building).

It's a nicely organized exhibition with many Chopin's manuscripts, his correspondence with Eugène Delacroix and George Sand. There are plenty of drawings, many of which emphasize Chopin's  constant feeling of being in exile despite the fact that his father was French.  He grew up in Poland and most of his work was in one way or another dedicated to Poland.

Fred loved Norma by Bellini, and especially Act 3 of Robert le Diable by Meyerbeer. Since his work is intimately related to the Pleyel pianos, there is a section describing his contact with Pleyel (the son).  In one section of the exhibiting hall there is a large Pleyel piano and there was a man playing various pieces by Chopin, who'd explain the details concerning the variety of structures in Chopin's music, relating them to various periods of his life.  

Pleyel piano from 1842, in the Amphitheater of the Cité de la musique in Paris.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

4e Biennale de Quatuors à cordes - en cours

Excellent programme de la 4e Biennale de Quatuors à cordes, actuellement à la Cité de la Musique.
 

















Arte Live Web rediffusera quelques concerts en direct de la Cité :
Au passage, je signale que la vidéo de Rosmersholm d'Ibsen, mis en scène par S.Braunschweig au théâtre parisien la Colline et filmé le 10/01/2010, est disponible sur Arte Web.