Originally posted by kernelbogey
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'Bartered Bride' overture
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
If I wanted to hear the Bartered Bride overture, I'd turn to the old 1933 classic under Otakar Ostrcil, and hang around for the rest of the opera. It's the first and still best of the lot, in many ways! The overture goes at a lick too, as - frankly - it ought to, without sounding too virtuosic.
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Tradition has it that at the first performance one of the violinists was a butcher's son called A . Dvorak. He later conducted one of his symphonies at the Birmingham Festival and one of the viloinists there was a shopkeeper's son called E.Elgar. He too conducted, and at the premiere of his cello concerto in 1919 the cello section included a certain G.B. Barbirolli.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostTradition has it that at the first performance one of the violinists was a butcher's son called A . Dvorak. He later conducted one of his symphonies at the Birmingham Festival and one of the viloinists there was a shopkeeper's son called E.Elgar. He too conducted, and at the premiere of his cello concerto in 1919 the cello section included a certain G.B. Barbirolli.
His relationship with Smetana is an interesting one, marked by hero-worship on one side, and a mix of wariness, harshness and genuine helpfulness to his younger rival on the other.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThans for that , M-J. So, yet another viola-playing composer to add to Bach, Mozart, Vaughan Williams, Hindemith, Bridge, Britten and Rebecca Clarke.
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