User:Schissel/Tmp
Was to go on Talk:Ferdinand Hiller
[edit]A list of a few references, some important, some less so. The first I'm fairly sure is, the rest are miscellany. I will try to sort them out.I'm reasonably sure that the symphony that Liszt conducted on January 14 1852 in Weimar (p 287, Cornell U Press edition, Alan Walker, Franz Liszt: The Weimar Years, 1848-1861.) (Es muss doch Frühling werden) is neither symphony described in the article. I think he may have written some five or six symphonies, at any rate.
Before Hiller and Liszt's relationship soured and ended, before the incident at the Aachen festival (a lot isn't in this article yet- is Walker's book regarded as that biased or even debatable? Inquiring minds do want to know.) Looking at some other information available about Hiller one sees a 125th Psalm dedicated to MacFarren (will replace with a cite journal, but the link is The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular > Vol. 5, No. 116 (Jan., 1854), pp. 322-324, [1])
(Much praised [2] for his conducting of the Beethoven Missa Solemnis - even more difficult at the time, a 1855 Cologne performance.)
(also note and use this particular review of concerts he gave in London in 1871 "Dr. Ferdinand Hiller's Recitals",
The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular -- Vol. 15, No. 338 (Apr., 1871), p. 45 -- no author specified.
(does not have a page but is not a vanity composer, so fixing the former fact...)
Yuri Aleksandrovich Falik (July 30 1936 - January 23?6? 2009) was a Ukrainian composer of classical music. (Not sure of days, more sure of 1936. Worklist partial at http://www.neue-russische-musik.de/falik.htm .) See: de:Juri Alexandrowitsch Falik
translation-attempt
[edit]Yuri Aleksandrovich Falik (July 30 1936 in Odessa – January 23 2009 in Saint Petersburg) was a Russian composer and conductor of Ukrainian birth.
Falik studied from 1955 to 1962 at the Leningrad Conservatory, and in 1962 received first prize at the International Cello Competition in the 8th World Festivals in Helsinki. In his compositions to that point, besides the influences of Igor Stravinsky, Dmitri Shostakovich, and Sergei Prokofiev that of his teacher Arpov can also be felt. Works as of 1968 are more mature, less dependent on models.
Falik was a professor at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory and rose in Russia and abroad as a conductor.
Selected works
[edit]- Student works: Five preludes, oboe concerto, symphony for strings and percussion
- 2nd string quartet (1965)
- Skomorochi - Concerto for wind quintet and percussion (1966)
- Ballett-Mysterium in einem Akt: Tyll Ulenspiegel (after Charles de Coster) (1967)
- Oresteia, choreographic trilogy (1968)
- Inventions for Vibraphone, Marimba and five Tomtoms (1968)
- Light symphony (1968)
- Violin concerto (1971)
- 3rd string quartet (1975)
- Elegiac music - in memoriam Igor Stravinsky (1975)
- 4th string quartet (1976)
- Symphonic Etudes (1977)
- 5th string quartet (1978)
Improve this and then add to Anders Eliasson when finished
[edit]Anders Eliasson (April 3 1947) is a Swedish composer, born in Borlänge in Dalarna [3]. Compositions include several symphonies (the broadcast of the premiere of the 4th, published in score by Gehrmans of Stockholm in 2006), a trombone concerto (published in 2001? [4]), a concerto for bassoon and strings (1982; recorded together with his first symphony on CD), and chamber works including a notturno for bass clarinet, cello and piano (published 1982 [5]), various works entitled Disegno, for flute (1984) [6] [7], for string quartet (1975) [8], trombone (1985) (recorded by Christian Lindberg in 1989 [9]), piano (published 1985), clarinet (published 1980 [10]) ( and other groups . One of his earlier works for larger forces is the Canto del vagabondo in memoria di Carolus Linnaeus for orchestra, womens' chorus and "voce bianca" (1979, recently published in a study score by Musikproduktion Jürgen Hoflich).
Weblink to save
[edit]- Weblink to keep memorized: COUMES
Merge
[edit]Next projects:
- Finish PH Miles bio. Not hard now I think. (done , sort of.)
- Merge Karl von Ordóñez and Carlo d'Ordóñez in one or the other direction. Been years already. (still needs doing :( )
- Ari Rasilainen (b.1959, see de:Ari Rasilainen, es:Ari Rasilainen, etc.
(mostly at IMSLP these days but not gone from here and have not forgotten I have responsibilities. Sorry though...) (Sept.6 '11)