Originally posted by mercia
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Alphabet associations - I
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amateur51
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amateur51
The wonderful Julius Katchen was a keen collector of netsuke
Entrance of the Gladiators was originally entitled Grande Marche Chromatique by its composer Julius Fučík
Julius Reubke wrote a massive Sonata on the 94th Psalm as the psalm of the day for the Shir Shel Yom of Wednesday.
Sir Julius Benedict conducted Felix Mendelssohn's Elijah at Exeter Hall, for the first appearance of Jenny Lind in oratorio
Four Juliusiseses as requestedLast edited by Guest; 24-09-12, 11:08.
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amateur51
Originally posted by mercia View Postwunderbarissimo
I think the law has been upheld
For Anna's Law (not that she upholds it, apparently )
The wonderful Julius Katchen was a keen collector of netsuke
Entrance of the Gladiators was originally entitled Grande Marche Chromatique by its composer Julius Fučík
Julius Reubke wrote a massive Sonata on the 94th Psalm as the psalm of the day for the Shir Shel Yom of Wednesday.
Sir Julius Benedict conducted Felix Mendelssohn's Elijah at Exeter Hall, for the first appearance of Jenny Lind in oratorio
I'll work on a K while I'm having a cawfee
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amateur51
What K links a musical entitled after a work of Dumas, a ballet named after a noisy root, and a musician who was forced to create deceptive musical harmony in Europe and who flowered finally in North America?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostShare your thoughts, vints -
"As a side-line to his major operatic works, in 1920 Szymanowski wrote the ballet grotesque Mandragora in which the Harlequin's arietta is the only brief vocal component. The work was a commission from Warsaw's Teatr Polski; it was to serve as a grand musical coda to Moliere's Le Bourgeois Gentilliomme. The ballet's plot, hastily devised in a restaurant by the composer working jointly with the directors of the production, was modeled on the Italian commedia dell' arte filled with unrestrained frolics. The King lusts after Columbine, a newly-arrived captive in his harem. However, she is set free by Harlequin, the Captain and the Doctor by a trick in which an elixir made of the roots of mandragora directs the King's lust back to his Queen. The music, scored for chamber ensemble (string quintet, several wood-wind instruments, percussion and piano) is marked by French-style lightness and humor."
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Postfrom an unidentified source :
"As a side-line to his major operatic works, in 1920 Szymanowski wrote the ballet grotesque Mandragora in which the Harlequin's arietta is the only brief vocal component. The work was a commission from Warsaw's Teatr Polski; it was to serve as a grand musical coda to Moliere's Le Bourgeois Gentilliomme. The ballet's plot, hastily devised in a restaurant by the composer working jointly with the directors of the production, was modeled on the Italian commedia dell' arte filled with unrestrained frolics. The King lusts after Columbine, a newly-arrived captive in his harem. However, she is set free by Harlequin, the Captain and the Doctor by a trick in which an elixir made of the roots of mandragora directs the King's lust back to his Queen. The music, scored for chamber ensemble (string quintet, several wood-wind instruments, percussion and piano) is marked by French-style lightness and humor."
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amateur51
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Posthmmm. Wonder what Amateur is thinkin'.
nutKracker?
Kount of Monte Kristo??
Korsican Brothers???
the three musKeteers????
the Konspirators?????
.... [ back to the drawing room for another glass of madeira, methinks ]
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