Originally posted by Flay
View Post
Alphabet associations - I
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Northender
-
Northender
Comment
-
Northender
-
Originally posted by Northender View PostHandel aria 'A Serpent In My Bosom'
Bax - Serpent Dance (for piano)
The Serpent Dance has a somewhat convoluted history. It is the middle movement of a set of excerpts from incidental music Bax composed for a production of J. M. Barrie's play The Truth about the Russian Dancers. Diaghilev's legendary Ballet Russes took London by storm in the early part of the century, and audiences were particularly smitten with the ballerina Tamara Karsavina. Bax's own admiration for her led to his participation in the 1920 Barrie project, in which the ballerina played a lead role. The pieces were later arranged for piano solo and dedicated to Reginald Paul, a Royal Academy of Music professor. Some of the material was recycled from a 1911 Bax ballet called Tamara (which was never performed).
Time for a T, or shall we wait until morning?Pacta sunt servanda !!!
Comment
-
-
Resurrection Man
-
Originally posted by mercia View Postjust been reading about the serpent - wikipedia says the contrabass version is called an anaconda and the soprano is a worm
[and ophicleide means "keyed serpent"] - now you know
A more apt name for the soprano would have been an asp.Pacta sunt servanda !!!
Comment
-
-
Northender
-
Northender
A 'T', please, linking works composed by four Russians and a Ukrainian, starting in 1950-51 and ending in 1997.
Comment
-
further thoughts - is it the word twenty-four ?
Shostakovich Preludes & Fugues 1950-51
Kapustin (Ukraine) - 1997 - opus 82 - 24 Preludes & Fugues
Rakov 1961 - 24 Children's Pieces in all keys
Shchedrin 1964/1970 - 24 Preludes & Fugues
Weinberg 1968 (for 'cello) - 24 Preludes
Tsintsadze 1971 - 24 PreludesLast edited by mercia; 17-09-12, 10:59.
Comment
-
-
Northender
The word is indeed Twenty-four!
Shostakovitch, Shchedrin and Kapustin all feature in my list. They wrote sets of Twenty-Four Preludes and Fugues, as did the two you're missing, whose contributions date from 1990 and 1994.
Comment
Comment