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Archive for October, 2012

 
31. October 2012   |   No Comments

Kreativ oder irrsinnig?

Diego Stocco and his instruments

Habt ihr schon mal was von einem Experibass gehört? Nein? Dann sind euch die Experivioline, das Arcophonico und Luminopiano wahrscheinlich genauso unbekannt. Der Erfinder dieser eher kuriosen Instrumente ist der Amerikaner Diego Stocco. Sein Credo, das unkonventionelle Musizieren. Das ein oder andere Video ist euch vielleicht schon bekannt:

Music from a Dry Cleaner:

 

 

oder Music from a Tree:

 

 

Für sein neuestes Projekt “Custom Built Orchestra” hat er die oben erwähnten Instrumente selber hergestellt und sein eigenes Orchesterstück komponiert und aufgeführt.

 

 

Was ist eure Meinung zu Diego Stocco’s Schaffen? Kreativ oder irrsinnig?

 

Didier

30. October 2012   |   No Comments

Wie funktioniert ein Dudelsack?

Wir haben den luxemburgischen Dudelsack Spieler Gilles Wunsch vor seinem Konzert in der Philharmonie getroffen und ihn gebeten, uns sein in unserer Gegend doch eher ungewöhnliches Instrument detaillierter vorzustellen.

Was ist ein “Reed”? Was ist ein “Chanter”? Was ist ein “Drone”? More

29. October 2012   |   No Comments

Win 2 tickets for the concert of your choice!

As we announced on our fanpage on October 15th, we now want to give one of our 7,000 friends two tickets for a concert of their choice. How to enter the contest?

From today on until Wednesday (October 31rd) at midnight, you are invited to post a message (below as a comment to this post) with a word or sentence you associate with the Philharmonie Luxembourg. We will pick one out and contact the author by email. Easy, isn’t it?

28. October 2012   |   No Comments

Himmlische Juwelen

Spion, Diplomat.,Geistlicher, Komponist. Agostino Steffani hat all diese Tätigkeiten ausserordentlich erfolgreich ausgeübt, auch wenn sein Name bislang  einem breiteren Musik-Publikum eher unbekannt sein dürfte. (Luxemburgische Konzertgänger können mir an dieser Stelle gerne wiedersprechen, da sie vielleicht zu jenen gehören, die im Dezember 2010 einer der beiden Vorstellungen von Steffanis Oper “Niobe – Königin von Theben” im grand Théâtre beigewohnt haben)
Dieser Tatsache hat sich die italienischen Sopranistin Cecilia Bartoli angenommen und widmet sich in ihrem neuen Album ganz dem italienischen Ausnahmetalent Steffani.

Dass Steffani als Musiker ebenfalls mit diplomatischen Missionen betraut wurde, war im 17. Jahrhundert nichts Aussergewöhnliches. Offensichtlich erwies er sich auf diesem sehr tückischen Parkett aber als äusserst talentiert und geschickt, so dass er ab Mitte der 1690er Jahre praktisch vollamtlicher Diplomat wurde und der Musik fast ganz den Rücken kehren musste. Das Spionieren und Verhandeln liess im nur noch sehr wenig Zeit zum Komponieren.

 


Cecilia Bartoli hat ihre Freundin Donna Leon mit auf die Entdeckungsreise von Steffani genommen und sie gebeten, einen Text über die intrigante Persönlichkeit zu verfassen. “Als ich für mein neues Aufnahmeprojekt auf die wunderbare Musik eines längst vergessenen Komponisten stieß, der ein geheimnisumwittertes Leben führte, wusste ich sofort: Das ist ein Fall für Donna Leon“, so Cecilia Bartoli. Entstanden ist ihr letzter Roman “Jewels of Paradise“, der im Diognenes Verlag erschienen ist.

 

Didier

 

22. October 2012   |   No Comments

Diana Krall – concert pics

Diana Krall & Band – photo (c) Sébastien Grébille

 

Diana Krall – photo (c) Sébastien Grébille

 

Diana Krall – photo (c) Sébastien Grébille

 

Diana Krall & Band – photo (c) Sébastien Grébille

19. October 2012   |   No Comments

Celtic connections

James MacMillan and Gilles Wunsch

The adventure continues tonight! Earlier this week we interviewd Scottish conductor James MacMillan and Luxembourgian bagpiper Gilles Wunsch. They give you a glimpse of what to expect in the second concert of the “Aventure+” series.

Watch James MacMillan telling us about the importance of his Scottish heritage.

And Gilles Wunsch about how he came to play the bagpipe (in German).

In case you missed it, Joanna MacGregor, artistic advisor of the series, took some time earlier this season to explain the idea behind this concert. You can watch the video here.

19. October 2012   |   No Comments

Celtic connections

James MacMillan and Gilles Wunsch

The adventure continues tonight! Earlier this week we interviewd Scottish conductor James MacMillan and Luxembourgian bagpiper Gilles Wunsch. They give you a glimpse of what to expect in the second concert of the “Aventure+” series.

Watch James MacMillan telling us about the importance of his Scottish heritage.

And Gilles Wunsch about how he came to play the bagpipe (in German).

In case you missed it, Joanna MacGregor, artistic advisor of the series, took some time earlier this season to explain the idea behind this concert. You can watch the video here.

18. October 2012   |   No Comments

Vivre avec son temps

Der Rosenkavalier

On entend souvent dire que le monde d’aujourd’hui change à une vitesse folle. Il y a moins d’un siècle, Richard Strauss a probablement déjà senti cette accélération et a décidé de vivre avec son temps. Après avoir connu un succès retentissant, tant commercial que critique, l’opéra Der Rosenkavalier (1911) est adapté quinze ans après la première au médium le plus moderne de l’époque: le cinéma… muet. More

15. October 2012   |   No Comments

The Jazz Baroness

 

Nica Rothschild – photo taken from www.smallscreenscoop.com

She was born in an old Jewish family and grew up in the British aristocracy. Her life was all mapped out; it should have been the conservative and traditional existence of an aristocratic heiress and society girl. She married a French baron, founded a family. Then came WW2, when she decided to send her children to the USA and to fight alongside her husband. She learned to fly Lancaster bombers and later was decorated for her war services and made a lieutnant.

A few years after the end of the war, she heard Duke Ellington’s “Black, brown and beige ” symphony. “I got the message that I belonged where that music was. There was something I was supposed to do. I was supposed to be involved in it some way. I got a really clear message. It wasn’t long afterwards that it happened, that cut out from there. It was a real calling.*


This real calling the Baroness was talking about happened in 1948 or 1949, when her friend Teddy Wilson made her listen to Thelonius Monk’s “Round midnight”. This tune changed her life. She left her family and went to New York, with one single goal in mind: Meet this genius!

Until her death in 1988 the Baroness stayed in New York. She supported many jazz musicians (Sonny Rollins, Horace Silver, Barry Harris, Art Blakey a.o.) and didn’t care much about segragation laws. She did everything she could to back Thelonius Monk so he could entirely concentrate on music. She even went to jail for him. For several decades she also inspired these musicians. The result is a quite long list of songs written for or inspired by Nica de Koenigswarter (born Kathleen Annie Pannonica Rothschild, 1913-1988).

Here are a few of them:
Sonny Rollins – Poor butterfly

 

Thelonius Monk – Pannonica

 

Horace Silver – Nica’s Dream (here performed by The Jazz Messengers)

 

Kenny Dorham – Tonica

 

Sonny Clark – Nica

 

Thelonius Monk – Bolivar Blues

 

If the Baroness’s story interests you, you should have a look at her biography written by Hannah Rothschild (The Baroness – The search for Nica, the rebellious Rothschild) or watch the documentary directed by the same Hannah Rothschild, entitled “The Jazz Baroness“.

 

Didier

 

* excerpt from “The Baroness – The search for Nica, the rebellious Rothschild”, Hannah Rothschild, Virago Press – p. 144

12. October 2012   |   No Comments

This was week 41

Janine Jansen and Valery Gergiev – photo (c) Sébastien Grébille

On Monday, we had the London Symphony Orchestra with Valery Gergiev and Janine Jansen. This was the first out of four concert dedicated to the Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. Remember that you can download our «Discover Szymanowski» app for free in the App-Store (Click here) and find out more about this great composer through videos (with Valery Gergiev, musicians of the LSO,…), podcasts and blog posts. More

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Philharmonie Luxembourg

Inaugurated in 2005, the Philharmonie Luxembourg now hosts over 400 events a year (classical music, jazz, world music, new music) and is one of Europe’s main concert halls. it is also the home of the Orchestre Phiilharmonique du Luxembourg.

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