Posts

Showing posts with the label lieder

The Songs & The Plays - Kean on Shakespeare

Image
The Songs & The Plays Listen on Youtube Love’s Labours Lost (1593-94) A revised and polished version of this play was presented for Queen Elizabeth I and her court at Christmas 1598. However the elevated language and subject matter of the drama suggests it was always intended for a sophisticated and highly literate audience. There are two parallel plots – one ‘high’ comedy and one ‘low’ comedy. In the high comedy the King of Navarre and his friends make a pact to ‘fast and study’ and to have no contact with women for three years. No sooner have they agreed than the Princess of Aquitaine and her ladies in waiting arrive to discuss ‘state matters’. Inevitably the King falls in love with the Princess and his friends with the French ladies in waiting. The Gentlemen find loophole in their vows and woo and win women with a dance. The Ladies become aware of their broken vows and treat the noblemen with scorn. In the low comedy the page Moth and the clown Costard ridicule the exaggerated m...

The English Art Song - A Shakespeare Perspective

Image
  The English Art Song - A Shakespeare Perspective William Shakespeare loved music and recognised its use as a theatrical tool. Nearly all of his thirty-seven plays contain music of some kind, which he has most skilfully used for dramatic, comic, or atmospheric purposes to great effect. Tragic heroines sing, swan-like, before death; clowns and fools are given the liberty to sing bawdy or controversial lyrics; impassioned suitors serenade in vain; lovers sigh; rogues celebrate the joys of country life; fairies sing lullabies; supernatural spirits cast spells; and villagers entertain with popular songs and ballads. Before wider literacy poems were always sung to communicate, memorise and disseminate the poem. Today Shakespeare’s genius is recognised across the world and the dissemination of his works via music has been very important. For over 400 years composers have been inspired by Shakespeare’s texts, writing operas, ballets, overtures, symphonic poems, musicals, suites, or...

Austria: Music & Majesty - A Full Lieder Recital Program for Mezzo-Soprano

Image
Austria: Music & Majesty Recital   Johannes Brahms:   born 7 th of May 1833, in Hamburg;   died 3 rd of April 1897, in Vienna. Brahms’ unrequited love for his close friend Clara Schumann inspired many of his song settings. He lived a modest life but was buried with great ceremony and honour, in Vienna’s Zentralfriedhof, near the remains of Beethoven and Schubert. 1. Vergebliches Ständchen         The Futile Serenade              Opus 84 No 4         1882                                                       Niederrheinisches Volkslied 2. Von Ewiger Liebe                     Eternal Love   ...