µo·s¸ÜÃD
¥´¦L

¥j¨å­µ¼Ö¥æ¬y«Ç

David Oistrakh plays Mendelssohn - Violin Concerto in E minor

I. Allegro molto appassionato

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KA5hFdjXsM&hd=1


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npkChg-daoQ&hd=1


II. Andante

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MN1gjHfrQD4&hd=1


III. Allegretto non troppo - Allegro molto vivace

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBwIlzUuDXA&hd=1


David Oistrakh (1908-1974), violin
Kirill Kondrashin (1914-1981), conductor
The U.S.S.R. State Orchestra

TOP

Pachelbel Canon and Gigue (Original Version) conducted by Jordi Savall

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1pEJ9n5-D4&fmt=18


JOHANN PACHELBEL (1653-1706)

Canon and Gigue for three violins and basso continuo in D major

1. Canon

2. Gigue

Performed by Hesperion XXI
Directed by Jordi Savall


Pachelbel's Canon in original version - Musica Antiqua Köln


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtZjROpBReM&hd=1

TOP

Jordi Savall - Town Hall 2010

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60lSbfdnnQQ&hd=1

 

March 14th, 2010, Jordi Savall illustrates the versatility of an atypical rebab from the 13th century after the Lux Feminae performance. It was amazing to finally meet and speak with one of my musical idols.

 

JORDI SAVALL - Ductia (Cantiga 248)

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ATC44nm04UY&fmt=18

 

La Lira d'Espéria, 1996
http://www.jordisavall.es/

The instrument is an atypical form of ancient rebec (rebab) from the Orient and probably dating from the end of the 14th century.

The piece "ductia" is a recreation of a cantiga de Santa Maria (Alfonso X el Savio, 13th century)

"What we propose here is an attempt to recreate a certain art of sounding the bow during that medieval period... It is not intended to be either a hypothetical historical reconstruction of a concert of that time or a musicological study of facts that cannot be known with absolute certainity." Jordi Savall

 

 

TOP

Antonio Vivaldi Sonata "La Follia" (Corelli) opus 1 N¢X12 by Jordi Savall

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx1oNYg05Ew&hd=1

 

ª`·N:

 

¼v¤ù§t 18+ ÃèÀY, ¥¼¦¨¦~¤Å¤J!!!!!

TOP

Vivaldi -Concerto per due violini e viola da gamba. RV 578

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYePaIVwMXQ&hd=1

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHzpjLihKmk&hd=1

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7nkDo_KhRo&hd=1

 

Antonio Vivaldi -
Concerto per due violini e viola da gamba. RV 578 -
01/3. Adagio e spiccato -
Jordi Savall -
Le Concert des Nations

TOP

Mozart - "Ein Musikalischer Spaß" (A Musical Joke) - K522

1. Allegro

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HH0RYCieFUM&hd=1

2. Menuetto (Maestoso) - Trio

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVRa_NUWxp8&hd=1

3. Adagio Cantabile

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk0U2qJHQHM&hd=1

4. Presto

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S44TxEaAsDA&hd=1

Performed by Le Concert des Nations
Directed by Jordi Savall

*"A Musical Joke" is a composition by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; the composer entered it in his Verzeichnis aller meiner Werke ('Catalogue of all my Works') on June 14, 1787. The music is intentionally written to be funny, being liberally sprinkled with obtrusively clumsy, mechanical and over-repetitive composition, together with passages evidently designed to mimic the effects of inaccurate notation and inept performance. Commentators have opined that the piece's purpose is satirical -- that "[its] harmonic and rhythmic gaffes serve to parody the work of incompetent composers" -- though Mozart himself is not known to have revealed his actual intentions.

The piece consists of four movements, using forms shared with many other classical divertimenti. Nevertheless, the music has potential to appeal to the average audience of that time as a comedy, including:
1. Use of asymmetrical phrasing, or not phrasing by four measure groups, at the beginning of the first movement, which is very uncommon for the classical period.

2. Use of secondary dominants where subdominant chords are just fair.

3. The use of discords in the French horns, satirizing the incompetence of the copyist, or the hornist grabbing the wrong crook.

4. Use of a whole tone scale in the violinist's high register, probably in order to imitate the player's floundering at the high positions.

The piece is also notable for the earliest known use of polytonality, creating the gesture of complete collapse with which the finale ends. This may be intended to produce the impression of grossly out-of-tune string playing, since the horns alone conclude in the movement's tonic key: the lower strings behave as if the tonic has suddenly become B flat, while the violins and violas switch to G major, A major and E flat major respectively.

Some theorists believe that A Musical Joke is a parody of works by clumsy composers of Mozart's time. With such an assumption, one would find some points of the score hilarious, such as the more elementary developments of the theme, where the poor composer might feel the agony that he/she had to proceed with the development. Other theorists disagree with that view, saying that perhaps Mozart used parody and comedy as an excuse to try things that at the time were not in practice; the piece would then be intended in a more serious tone than so advertised but only for the composer himself.

The use of asymmetrical phrasing, whole-tone scales, and multitonality is quite foreign to music of the classical era. However, these techniques were later revisited by early 20th century composers like Claude Debussy and Igor Stravinsky, who were searching for a new musical language. In this later context, these conventions were seen as legitimate new techniques in serious music. In Mozart's time, however, these non-classical elements gives the piece its comedy and perfectly expresses the composer's sense of musical humor.

Remarkably, A Musical Joke is the first piece entered in Mozart's list of works following the death of his father Leopold on May 28th.

TOP

Land Hope and Glory (Sir Edward Elgar) - Dame Clara Butt (Contralto)

1911 Version:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CYrdooOautE&hd=1


1930 Version:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iefmyjEv6_0&hd=10

Lyrics

Solo
    Dear Land of Hope, thy hope is crowned,
       God make thee mightier yet !
    On Sov'ran brows, beloved, renowned,
       Once more thy crown is set.
   Thine equal laws, by Freedom gained,
       Have ruled thee well and long ;
   By Freedom gained, by Truth maintained,
       Thine Empire shall be strong.

Chorus
            Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free,
            How shall we extol thee, who are born of thee?
            Wider still and wider shall thy bounds be set;
            God, who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet,
            God, who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet.

Solo
    Thy fame is ancient as the days,
       As Ocean large and wide :
    A pride that dares, and heeds not praise,
       A stern and silent pride ;
    Not that false joy that dreams content
       With what our sires have won ;
    The blood a hero sire hath spent
       Still nerves a hero son.

Chorus

TOP

Sir Charles Santley - Simon the Cellarer (1903)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0bEKtKOokU&hd=1

One of the most celebrated Baritone of the 19th century, Sir Charles Santley (1834.2.28 ~ 1922.9.22) sings his signature song "Simon the Cellarer" for G&T in 1903. He made five recordings for G&T in 1903, and he also made about 8 or 9 records for Columbia in 1911 and 1913 (he was in his 80s!), and you can find one of those Columbia on YT.

Santley taught some of the most important and famous singers of the early 20th century, and his pupils included Clara Butt, Peter Dawson, Emma Albani, etc. He is also the OLDEST RECORDED OPERATIC SINGER who was ever recorded. It is hard to believe to hear someone who was born 180 years ago.

Speaking about his vocal style; it is quite unique, nothing like some later singers who sang at this period. But anyway, his vocal 'power' is still fine - no mistake, no breathlessness, no physical fatique - , despite the fact he was 69 years old when he recorded this.

Sir Charles Santley - To Anthea (Hatton)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1VgswCFfjk&fmt=18

with piano. Columbia master 6289, rec. London, 1913.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Le Nozze di Figaro (Ehi, capitano... Non più andrai, farfallone amoroso) 1903

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-xxtFEkKP0&fmt=18

TOP

Georges Boulanger (1893 - 1958) - Avant de Mourir (My Prayer ­ì¦±) §@¦±®a¿Ë¦Ûºt«µª©

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edmxadIa8K0&fmt=18


TOP

Montserrat Figueras - "Alma, buscarte has en Mí"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQcenVpWA84&hd=1



Letra: Poema de Sta. Teresa de Jesús
(Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada, 1515-1582)

Música: Moxica (Cancionero Musical de Palacio) s.XV-XVI

* * * * * * * * * * *

St. Teresa of Avila

Soul, thou must seek thyself in Me
And thou must seek for Me in thee.

Such is the power of love's impress,
O soul, to grave thee on My heart,
That any craftsman must confess
He ne'er could have the like success,
Howe'er superlative his art.

It was by love that thou wert made
Lovely and beautiful to be;
So, if perchance thou shouldst have stray'd,
Upon My heart thou art portray'd.

For well I know that thou wilt see
Thyself engraven on My breast
An image vividly impressed
And then thou wilt rejoice to be
So safely lodg'd, so highly blest.

And if perchance thou knowest not
Whither to go in quest of Me,
Go not abroad My face to see,
Roaming about from spot to spot,

For, soul, in thee I am confin'd,
Thou art My dwelling and My home;
And if one day I chance to find
Fast-clos'd the portals of thy mind
I ask for entrance when I come.

Oh, seek not for Me far away,
For, if thou wilt attain to Me,
Thou needest but My name to say
And I am there without delay.

TOP

¤T®úÀô(¥Õ¥ú¡B§õ­»ÄõªºÁn¼Ö¦Ñ®v)¡@US録­µ¡uある´¸れた¤éに¡vTamaki Miura "Un bel dì vedremo"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQdE03s_gJw&fmt=18


http://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-tw/%E4%B8%89%E6%B5%A6%E7%8E%AF

¤T®úÀô¡]1884¦~2¤ë22¤é¡Ð1946¦~5¤ë26¤é¡^¬O¤@¦ìª¾¦Wªº¤é¥»Án¼Ö®a¡C

¤T®úÀô¥X¥Í©óªF¨Ê¡A¯ªÄyÀR©£¡A¨ä¤÷¥À©M¤V¤Ò¤T®ú¬F¤Ó­¦³£¬OÀR©£¿¤¥X¨­¡C
1903¦~¦b¤é¥»¤Hªíºtªº²Ä¤@³¡ºq¼@¡m¶øµá¼Ú»P¤×ÄR¨fÓ}¡n¡]Orfeo ed Euridice¡^¤¤¡A19·³ªº¤T®úÀô³Q´£©Þ¬°¤k¥D¨¤¡C¦¹«á¡A§@¬°«Ò°ê¼@°|±MÄݤk¥D¨¤¬¡ÅD¦bºq¼@»R¥x¤W¡C

±q
1914¦~¶}©l¡A¤T®úÀô¥ý«á¦b¼w¡B­^¡B¬ü¡B¸q¤j§Qµ¥°ê¥Í¬¡¡A¦b¦U¦aºt¥X¦h³õ¨ÃÀò¦¨¥\¡C¯S§O¬O¦b¡m½¹½º¤Ò¤H¡n¤¤§êºtªº½¹½º¤Ò¤H±o¨ì¤F§@¦±®a´¶«´¥§ªºÆg½à∶¡u§@«~´N¹³¬O¬°¤T®úÀô¦Ó³Ð§@ªº¡v¡C¸Ó¼@¥Øºt¥X¦h¹F2000³õ¥H¤W¡C1935¦~¦^¨ì¤é¥»¤§«áÄ~Äò¬¡ÅD¦b°ê¤º»R¥x¤W¡C1946¦~¦bªF¨Ê³u¥@¡C

TOP

My Yiddishe Mama by Yosef Rosenblatt

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWWc7vBnSP0&fmt=18

Cantor Yossale Rosenblatt - Yivarech et Beit Israel - Psalm 115

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQ8dYrbAIZA&fmt=18

Yosef "Yossele" Rosenblatt (1882-1933) is generally considered to be the uncrowned king of cantorial music. People often refer to him just as "Yossele," a Yiddish diminutive of Josef.

Yossele was born in 1882 in the Ukrainian shtetl [small village] Belaya Tserkov--the first boy in the family after nine girls.His father, a Ruzhiner Hasid who frequented the court of the Sadagora Rebbe, was himself a hazzan. Recognizing his young son's extraordinary talent, Yossele's father began to tour with his son to help supplement the family income. The father would daven [pray] as the hazzan, but it was the child prodigy, Yossele, whom the crowds came to hear.There is a famous joke about a Cantor who calls himself the Third Yossele Rosenblatt... When he's asked who the Second Yossele Roseblatt might be, in great offense he retorts, "There could be no Second Yossele Rosenblatt!"

Rosenblatt's greatest hit was his recording of "Shir Hama'alot," Psalm 126, to a tune composed by Minkowsky. This psalm is said on festive occasions, just before the "Grace after Meals." This cheerful melody became so popular, that soon it was considered to be the traditional tune for this psalm. When the State of Israel was looking for a suitable National Anthem, Rosenblatt's "Shir Hama'alot" was proposed as a serious candidate.

....."Now a celebrity, Rosenblatt was in demand everywhere. Appearing just a few weeks later on the steps of The New York Public Library for the War Savings Stamp Campaign, he sang "The Star Spangled Banner," followed by "Keili, Keili," at the conclusion of which Enrico Caruso, the great star of the opera, stepped forward and kissed him."

In his foreword to this book, Rosenblatt wrote about his own recitatives:
"In producing them I was moved by the double impulse of serving the needs of the Jewish Cantor and of demonstrating to the musical world at large that genuine Jewish Chazanuth can still satisfy completely even the refined taste of today. ...I shall feel amply rewarded for my efforts when I shall see this work widely disseminated."


David Chevan produced a very interesting CD called " Days of Awe : Meditations for Selichot, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur." It is a collection of instrumental interpretations of Rosenblatt's compositions for the High Holidays. As such it is one of the finest "Jewish-Jazz" recordings, and a great Jazz instrumental anyway.

"I came to Rosenblatt years ago when I became interested in Hazzanut, which is the art of Jewish cantorial singing.
Rosenblatt had an incredible voice and really understood this art form. His krechts, or sobbing sounds, are profoundly emotional and his phrasing is equally moving. It occurred to me that I needed to learn more about him, so I began transcribing his recordings and learning more about the nuances of his singing style, especially his phrasing," explains bassist Chevan, who teaches at Southern Connecticut State University.

"The cantorial art of Hazzanut is a highly improvisatory process that reminds me of jazz improvisation. I hear and have found much more spontaneity in the singing of cantors than in most Klezmer music (which, incidentally is often called -- and I believe incorrectly so -- Jewish jazz)," he says, noting that he chose to transcribe Rosenblatt's renditions of High Holy Day prayers for several reasons.


"First, because of his incredible sense of melody. These pieces are infused with wonderful and emotionally powerful melodies. Second, because he was one of the greatest recorded masters of Hazzanut. His singing and improvisations are filled with nuances that are rivaled by only a few other cantors," notes Chevan. "Thirdly, his compositions are compelling. Each of the pieces I transcribed was like a miniature oratorio. In each of the pieces there were at least two or more complete music sections that might contain moments of operatic recitative, snippets of folk melodies, and large sections of improvised Hazzanut. When I transcribed and then arranged these for my band to perform the music came alive in fresh new ways that got me excited. I could hear and feel the spirit of the High Holy Days, the Days of Awe, in a new and meaningful way."

"As I was transcribing the various pieces I began to find certain places and patterns in Rosenblatt's choices as to when he would be in tempered pitch and when he used quarter-tones. I don't even know if he was aware that he was making quarter-tones as much as creating certain emphases that were attached as much to the text as anything else. I get the sense that he was very aware that the "out-of-pitch" notes created a certain drama that the congregation would have felt as supplication. In contrast there are sections, especially when he is singing more in the Yiddish song/freilakh style (strident and martial at times) that he is right on the money and everything is in more or less tempered pitch...

TOP

Casta Diva (Bellini's Norma) by Marian Anderson

Studio Version


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aF33C5b5p8&hd=1

Live Version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPGEiWAPm1M

Rosa Ponselle sings Casta Diva

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isoGu7utEBI&hd=1

Casta Diva - Claudia Muzio

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJZH0WLHAuE&hd=1

Casta Diva - Gina Cigna

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGwpSqoFkA4&hd=1

Ebe Stignani Sings Casta Diva



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=issgvna6Qos&hd=1

Anita Cerquetti sings "Casta Diva" from Bellini's Norma

1956 Studio Version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ARjhaZ5NN8&hd=1


1958 Live Version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4QZ0Vz-YHU&hd=1


Casta Diva -- Maria Callas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBW5a77wINQ&hd=1

TOP

¤Þ¥Î:
­ì©«¥Ñ LouisLee ©ó 5-1-2011 00:47 µoªí Casta Diva (Bellini's Norma) by Marian Anderson Studio Versionhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aF33C5b5p8&hd=1Live Versionhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPGEiWAPm1MRosa Ponselle sings Casta Diva http:/ ...

 

Norma©O®M¦±¬O¨©§õ¥§ªº¾_¥jÅव¹dµÛ, Casta Diva©O­º¦±¶WÃø! µ¥§ÚÅ¥¯ud¦AÂЩ«!

TOP

¬üÁn¡]Bel Canto)

 

¬üÁn¡]Bel Canto)¦b·N¤j§Q¤åªº·N«ä¬O¦pºqªº¤@¯ë®®¦Õ°ÊÅ¥ªº·N«ä¡D¬üÁnºq¤â«hªx«ü¨ã³Æ¤@¨Ç¯S©w¬üÁn§Þ¥©ªººq°Û®a¡A¨º»ò¦ó¿×¬üÁn§Þ¥©¡H¬üÁn´N¬O³z¹L¾A·í¦³¨t²ÎªºÁn¼Ö°V½m¡A±NÁn­µ°ª«×¶°¤¤¤Î±±¨îªº¤èªk¡A¤@¯ë¬üÁnºq¤â¥Ñ§C­µ¨ì°ª­µªºÁn°Ï­µ¦â¬Û·í²Î¤@¡A¨S¦³©úÅã®t§O¡A¥L­Ì¥Ñ¸¡µÄ¶i¤J¯ÝµÄ¡A¦A¶i¤JÀY¯Ýªº¹L´ç­µ¬Û·í¥­¶¶¡A絶¤£·|Åý¤HÅ¥¥X¦³¤TºI­µ¦âªº±¡§Î¡D¥[¤W¹ï­µ¼Ö±Û«ß½u±ø¬Û·í±Ó·P¡A¥L­Ì´¶¹M¹ï­µ·Ç¡ALegato Line¡]§Y­µ¼Ö½u±øªº©·«×¤Î¶ê·Æ«×¡^¡AÁn­µ¤j¤p¤Î¶Ç°eªº±±¨î±o¤ßÀ³¤â¡AµLÄß¼ÉÅS©ó·¥¤Ö¬Æ©Î¨S¦³°t¼ÖŨ¦«ªºÀô¹Ò¤§¤¤¡AÅý¤HÁn¦¨¬°³ÌÄ£¥Ø¿W¯Sªº¼Ö¾¹¡D¥Ñ©ó¥L­ÌÁn±a¤Î¦Ù¦×ªº¬X¶´©Ê©MÆF¬¡©Ê¬Û·í°ª¡A¥i¾AÀ³¬Û·í°ªÃø«×ªº¸Ë¹¢­µ¡A¬G¤@¯ë§¡¨ã³Æ°ÛªáµÄªº§Þ¥©¡A¦ý¾Ö¦³ªáµÄ§Þ¥©ªº¤£¤@©w¬O¬üÁnºq¤â¡D

 

ºq¼@­Y»Ý­n¥Î¨ì¨ã³Æ¬üÁn§Þ¥©ªººq¤â¡A¤@¯ë·|³Q«a¥H¬üÁnºq¼@ªº¯«¸t¥úÀô¡D¥Ø«e³Q¤½»{¬°¬üÁn¦±¥Ø¦Ó¤´¦b¤½ºtªº¼@½X¥]¬A¿Õº¿¡A»îÂ_«n¤s¡A©Ô§J¬ü¡A¹Ú¹C¤k¡A®üµsµ¥¡D¦Óªñ¤­¤Q¦~¨Ó³Q¤½»{¬°¬üÁnºq¤âªº«h¦³Ä¬¿AÄõ¤kÀï¡]Dame Joan Sutherland)¡A²ü®¦¡]Marilyn Horne) ¡AªÝ¦«§Q¡]Bartoli)¡AÄÁ¡D¦w¼w»¹¡]June Anderson¡^¡A¸¯¨©¬¥«½ ¡]Edita Gruberova¡^¡A±ä²Q¬ü¡] Sumi Jo¡^¡A¤Ú¥ï¼Ö´£¤Î§J³Ò´µµ¥¤H¡D¦Ó¥d©Ôµ·¡]Maria Callas¡^«h¬O·í¤¤³Ì´Iª§Ä³©Êªº¤@­Ó¡A¦o´X¥G¥u¬O¾Ì¤@¤v¤§¤O´_¿³¤F¬üÁnºq¼@¤Î´Xªñ¥¢¶Çªº¼@¥Ø¡A·í¤¤¥]¬A¿Õº¿©M»îÂ_«n¤s¡A¦ý¦Ü¤µÁÙ¬O¦³¦ºµw¬£°í«ù§_©w¦o¬O¬üÁnºq¤âªº»¡ªk¡A³oÂI©M¥H¤W²³¦hºq¤âªº¦¨´N¡A¤é«á¦³¾÷·|¦A½Í§a¡I

 

¿Õº¿¡]Norma)

 

»¡¦^¤µ¤Ñ­n½Íªº¿Õº¿(1831)¡A³o®Mºq¼@¬O·N¤j§Q¬üÁnºq¼@§@®a¨©¥§¡]Vincenzo Bellini 1801-1835)¹Ã¤ßÃw¦å¤§§@¡A¥L´¿¦³"¸Uª«¬Ò¥i±ó¡A°ß¿Õº¿¥Ã¯d¦s"ªº»¨±¡§§»y¡A¥i·Q¦Ó¤§¡A¦b¥L¤ß¥Ø¤¤¡A¿Õº¿¹ê¬O¨ä¤@¥ÍÃÀ³N¦¨´Nªºµ²´¹¡D

 

¦³»¡¦¹¼@¬O¨©§õ¥§¬°¦n¤Í¡A§Y¬üÁn¤k°ª­µ¯ü¸¦¶ð¡D¨Ø´µ¶ð«×¨­­q³y¡D¦ý¥ç¦³»¡¨©§õ¥§¥Í©ó·N¤j§Q©|¥¼²Î¤@ªº¤j®É¥N¡A°ê®a¥Á±Ú¹¡¨ü¶ø¦a§Q«Ò°êªºÀ£¹G¡A¥L©ó¼@¤¤§ë®g¤F±j¯Pªº¥Á±Ú·NÃÑ©M·P±¡¡A¬O«Âº¸²Ä¡]Verdi)µÛ¦Wºq¼@¡D§Æ§BµÜ¤H¥£Áõªº啓»X§@«~¡D

 

¨ä¹ê¿Õº¿ªº¬G¨Æ¼Ò¦¡¦³ÂI¹³¨å«¬ªº§Æþ´d¼@¡A¥Rº¡®a°ê±¡¤³¡D¥D­nÁ¿­z°ªÃf¥²¶·«O«ù­s¼äªº¤k²½¥q¡D¿Õº¿ÅʤW¤Fù°¨©ºªAªÌªº«ü­x©x¡AÁÙ°½°½½Ï¤UÂù¥Í¨à¡A±¤Âù¤è·P±¡¬°®a°ê©Ò¤£®e¡A¨k¤è«á§ó²¾±¡§OÅÊ©ó¤k¤è¼°¤Í¡A¦bÂù­«¥´À»¤U¡A¿Õº¿³´©ó±Y¼ìÃä½t¡A³Ì²×¬°±Ï·R­¦¡A¨à¤l¤Î¦n¤Í¡A¦o¿ï¾Ü¦ÛµI¥HÅ«¸o¡A¦b¦¹¤@¨è¡Aù°¨«ü´§©x°l®¬²ö¤Î¡A²×¸õ¤J¤õ°ï¤@¦P®î±¡¡D

 

¿Õº¿¬O¨å«¬ªº¬üÁn¼@¥Ø¡A¥Hªí¹F¤HÁn·¥¦Ü¬°¥Ø¼Ð¡A»P«á¨Ó¥j¨å®öº©®É´Á¤Î¼g¹ê®É´Áªº§@«~¤£¦P¡A¨S¦³«p­«ªº²Í¼Ö¡A°t¼Ö¤£·|³Ù»«¹Ü¥D¡A¤HÁn¦b¦n¨Ç®É¨è¬Æ¦Ü¬O¬Û·í¼ÉÅSªº°ß¤@ºt¥X¼Ö¾¹¡D¥Ñ©ó¾ã¼@§¡¬O¥Ñ¤k¥D¨¤¾á°_¡A¥Ñ²Ä¤@¹õ¶}©l¡A¤k¥D¨¤´X¥G¬O¨S¦³¤@¨è¥i¥H¥ð®§©Î°±¤U¨Ó¡A¦h­«¤G­«°Û¤Î¿W°Û¹ïÅé¤O¤ÎÁn½uªº­t²ü¬Û·í¤j¡A¨ä¥L¨¤¦â½Ñ¦p¨k¥D¨¤¡]¨k°ª­µ¡^¤Î¦¸¤k¨¤¡]¤k¤¤­µ¡^¥ç¬Û·í¦Y­«¡D

 

Casta Diva¡]¸t¼äªº¤k¯«¡^¥¿¬O¤k¥D¨¤©ó²Ä¤@¹õ©Ò°Ûªº²Ä¤G­ºµú¹Ä½Õ(Aria)¡A¼ÖÃйï®ð®§±±¨î¡AÁn­µªº¤ä¼µ¤O«×¤Î«ù¤[¤O­n¨D¬Û·í°ª¡A¦b¨S¦³¨¬°÷¼ö¨­±¡ªp¤U¡A­n§¹¦¨³o¤ä¦±¤l·|¬O¬Æ¬°§xÃøªº¥ô°È¡Aªp¥B¦b¾ã¼@¤¤¡A¤k¥D¨¤ªº¤º¤ßÀ¸¬Û·í½ÆÂø¡A·R±¡®a°ê¨âÃø¦s¡A¤º¤ß¥Ù¬Þ±Ã¤ã¬Û·í¿E¯P¡A¸àÄÀºtĶ¬O¶W°ªÃø«×¡D

 

¥Ñ©ó·N¤j§Q¬üÁn´¿¤@«×µL¬Æ«áÄ~ªÌ¡A¦]¦Ó»·»·¸¨«á©ó¥Ñ¥v¯S³Ò´µ¤ÎµØ®æ¯Çµ¥¤HÅ@¯èªº¼w¶øºq¼@¡A¬üÁn¼@¥Ø¶}©l¦¿ªe¤é¤U¡AÄòº¥¥¢¶Õ¡Aª½¦Ü¥d©Ôµ·¥X²{¡A¦oÁp¦P¼»©Ôªâµ¥¤H¡A¥H±j¯PªºÀ¸¼@´T«×°t·fÆF¬¡ªºªáµÄ§Þ¥©¡A±N¤@­Ó­Ó¬üÁn¨¤¦âºt±o²OºvºÉ­P¡A±È°_¬üÁn´_¿³ªº¨g¼é¡A¿Õº¿¦b»R¥x¥¢踪¼Æ¤Q¦~«á¡A²×¤S§ä¨ì¬°¨äª`¤J·sÆF»îªº¤k²½¥q¡I¥Ñ©ó¥d©Ôµ·¦¨¥\§JªAºtĶ¤Îºt°Ûªº§xÃø¡A¦o»PCasta Diva ¡]¸t¼äªº¤k¯«¡^³o­ºµú¹Ä½Õ´X¥G¤G¦X¬°¤@¡A±q©lºq¼@¤k¯«¤§¦W¤£³w¦Ó¨«¡A·N¤j§Q¤H¯É¯ÉºÙ¦o¬°Diva¡A«á´Á¶V¨Ó¶V¦h¤k§D³Q«a¥HDivaºÙ¸¹®É¡A·N¤j§Q¤H¤S¬°¦o³Ð³y¤FDivannaªº´LºÙ¡D©Ò¥H­n¹ý©³¤F¸Ñ¥d©Ôµ·»R¥x¤Wªº¦¨´N¡A¤@©w­n¬Ý¿ý¼v¡A¤£¥i¥H³æ¾aÅ¥°Û¤ù¡A¦]¬°°£¤F¦­´Á®üµsª©ªº¿ý­µ¡A¥d©Ôµ·¤j¦h¼Æªº¿ý­µ§¡¬O¦b¶Ú­µ°I°h´Á¿ý¤U¨Óªº¡D

 

¥H¤WLouis¥S©Ò¤¶²Ð²³¦hªºCasta Divaª©¥»¡A§Ú³Ì³ß·Rªº¬OMarian Andersonªºª©¥»¡AºqÃÀºtĶ§¡«D±`¨ì®a¡D¨ä¥Lª©¥»¿é¦b¸àÄÀ¤W¡D¦Ü©ó¥d©Ôµ·ªº³o­Óª©¥»«h¨Ã«D§Úªº¦Ü·R¡A©Ò¥H¿é¤F­Ó°¨»ó¡I¦ý­n¿ï¾Ü³Ì¨Îª©¥»¡A§ÚÁÙ¬O·|¿ï¥d©Ôµ·ªº¥t¤@­Ó¿ý­µ¡D¨ä¹ê¦o¤@¥ÍÄé¿ý¹L§¹¾ãªº¿Õº¿°_½X¨â¦¸¡D²Ä¤@¦¸¬°1954¦~¡A¨º®É¦oªºÁn½u©|¥¼°I°h¡A¸ûí©w¡A¦ý¸àÄÀ¤WÁÙ¦³¸W¨¤¡A¬Û«H³o¥ç¬OLouis¥S©Ò¤¶²Ðªºª©¥»¨Ó·½¡Aª½¦Ü¢°¢¸¢µ¢¯¦~ªº²Ä¤G¦¸¡A¦o¸g¾ú¤H¥Í¨Æ·~¤Î·R±¡ªº°_¶^«á¡A²×©ó¦b¸àÄÀ¤W¹F¦ÜµL¤H¯à¤ÎªºÅq®p¡]¦]¬°¦o¬O¦bºt¬¡¦Û¤v¡^¡A¥i±¤Án­µ¤w¤£¤j¥i¾a¡A¦ý³Ó¦b¦ÛµM¡D­n¿ï¤@®MCD¦¬ÂáA1960¦~¥Ñ¼»©Ôªâ«ü´§¡A¦³Corelli ¤ÎLudwig°Ñºtªºª©¥»¡]EMI CMS 7 630002) ºâ¬O³Ì¥­§¡ªºBest Buy Version¡A¦b¨º¸Ìªº¤k²½¥q¬O¦³¦å¦³¦×¡A¤[¸g¤º¤ßªi§éªº·R±¡±Ñ±N¡AÁn­µ¥Rº¡¤H©Ê温·x¤Î´d¶Ë¡I

 

  

­Y­n­Ý¤Îºtªº³¡¥÷¡A§Ú·|¿ï1958¦~¦o©ó¤Ú¾¤­µ¼Ö·|¤Wªººt¥X¡I¡]³o­µ¼Ö·|¤w¥XDVD! - EMI La Callas...toujours Paris 1958)

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGTxz_jIBy0

TOP

¤Þ¥Î:
­ì©«¥Ñ ªêºa ©ó 7-1-2011 02:18 µoªí ¬üÁn¡]Bel Canto)   ¬üÁn¡]Bel Canto)¦b·N¤j§Q¤åªº·N«ä¬O¦pºqªº¤@¯ë®®¦Õ°ÊÅ¥ªº·N«ä¡D¬üÁnºq¤â«hªx«ü¨ã³Æ¤@¨Ç¯S©w¬üÁn§Þ¥©ªººq°Û®a¡A¨º»ò¦ó¿×¬üÁn§Þ¥©¡H¬üÁn´N¬O³z¹L¾A·í¦³¨t²ÎªºÁn¼Ö°V½m¡A±NÁn­µ°ª«×¶°¤¤¤Î±± ...
ªêºa­ô¤£·\¬°ºq¼@±M®a, §Ú±N M. Anderson ±ÆÀY, ³£«Yı±o Youtube Ëݦhª©¥»«YÊ\°Û±o³Ì¦³¨ý¹D, ¦Ü©ó youtube ¼Ó¥D»{¬° the best callas ª©, §Ú¤Ï¦Óı±o¤£¥~¦p¬O, ©Ò¥H±Æ§À¡C

 

¥t¥~ݯ¨ì­Ó¥úºü¦~ª©, Patti ·í®É¤w¸g 63 ·³:

 

Casta diva - Adelina Patti, 1906

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kl02WT4KLvc&hd=1

TOP

Marian Anderson - Ave Maria (Schubert) 1939

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfHAa1jK1mU&hd=1


TOP

¤Þ¥Î:
­ì©«¥Ñ LouisLee ©ó 7-1-2011 12:19 µoªí ªêºa­ô¤£·\¬°ºq¼@±M®a, §Ú±N M. Anderson ±ÆÀY, ³£«Yı±o Youtube Ëݦhª©¥»«YÊ\°Û±o³Ì¦³¨ý¹D, ¦Ü©ó youtube ¼Ó¥D»{¬° the best 嘅 callas ª©, §Ú¤Ï¦Óı±o¤£¥~¦p¬O, ©Ò¥H±Æ§À¡C   ¥t¥~ݯ¨ì­Ó¥úºü¦~ª©, ...

 

Louis¥S¤£¥Î¤Ó¸ó奬¤p§Ì, §Ú¥u¨t¦]¬°°µ¹L吓ªíºtÃÀ³N©O¦æ, ©Ò¥H°_¨ìª¾¤Ö¤Ö, §ê¥Nªí啫!

 

M. Anderson¥i±¤¨t¶Â¤H, Ê\ªG­Ó¦~¥N, ´Nºâ°Û±o´X¦n, ³£·|­Ú¥Õ¤H¥´À£!

 

Patti 63·³¿ý­µ®É©úÅã¤wµL´_±¤¤é¥ú½÷, ¤¤®ð¤Î°ª­µ©úÅ㤣°÷¤O¤ô, ©Ò¥Hºq¤â­Y¤£¯à¦bÅq®p®É´Á¯d¤U¨Î§@, ¬O¤Q¤À¥i±¤ªº¤@¥ó¨Æ!

TOP

¥t¤@¥úºü¦~ª©:

 

Lilli Lehmann - Casta Diva 1907

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NUyCMF67jc&hd=1

TOP

Chopin Mazurka Op 56 No 2 - Landowska Rec 1951

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_LuxbNw89Y&hd=1

 

¥Î harpsicord ¼u¿½¨¹, ¯u«Y«eµL¥j¤H, «áµL¨ÓªÌ¡I¡I¡I

TOP

µo·s¸ÜÃD