Title: | Concerto for Violin and Wind Orchestra Op. 12 |
Otros títulos: | includes Kiddush for Chorus, Tenor and Organ and A Little Threepenny Music Concierto para violín y orquesta de viento op. 12 incluye Kidush para coro, tenor y órgano y un poco de música de tres centavos |
Intérprete/ Colaborador: | Kurt Weill; Amor Artis Chamber Choir; Johannes Somary; Grayson Hirst; Yuval Waldman; Ray Pellerin |
Código CDU: | Weil.01 |
Forma Musical: | Concertos (Violin with wind ensemble) Synagogue music -- Sabbath services. Suites (Wind ensemble) Operas -- Excerpts, Arranged. |
Abstract: | The son of a cantor, Kurt Weill was born in Dessau into a family that took in operatic performances as a main form of entertainment. When Weill was in his teens the director of the Dessau Hoftheater, Albert Bing, encouraged him in the study of music. Weill briefly studied composition with Engelbert Humperdinck and was already working professionally as a conductor when he attended composer Ferruccio Busoni's master classes in Berlin. Delighted to see the positive responses of an audience to his first collaboration with playwright Georg Kaiser, Der Protagonist (1926), he thereafter resolved to work toward accessibility in his music. In 1926 Weill married actress Lotte Lenya, whose reedy, quavering singing voice he called "the one I hear in my head when I am writing my songs." In 1927 Weill began his collaboration with leftist playwright and poet Bertolt Brecht; their first joint venture, Mahagonny-Songspiel (1927), launched the number "Alabama Song," which, to their surprise, became a ... |