A Colour Symphony : Miracle in The Gorbals - ballet suite : Overture 'Edinburgh'
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Title:
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A Colour Symphony : Miracle in The Gorbals - ballet suite : Overture 'Edinburgh' |
Otros títulos:
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Una Sinfonía de Color : Milagro en Los Gorbals : Obertura 'Edimburgo' |
Intérprete/ Colaborador:
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Sir Arthur Bliss; Sir Charles Groves; Royal Philharmonic Orchestra; Paavo Berglund; Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra; Vernon Handley; City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra |
Código CDU:
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Bl.01 |
Forma Musical:
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Overtures, Suites (Orchestra), Ballets, Symphonies |
Abstract:
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Although outspoken in his support of the post-World War I Parisian avant-garde during his youth, English composer Arthur Bliss ended his long career as a dedicated proponent of a more conservative, neo-Romantic musical aesthetic. Educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge and at the Royal College of Music (where he found his studies with Charles Stanford too stifling), Bliss' earliest music (all later withdrawn and subsequently destroyed by the composer) shows a strong knowledge of and interest in the music of Edward Elgar.
After service with the Royal Fusiliers (and later the Grenadier Guards) during the War, however, Bliss' musical aesthetic changed dramatically, and he quickly became known as a thoroughly "modern" composer, owing more allegiance to the exciting happenings on the continent than to the musical life of his own country. His music from the 1920s (such as the Rhapsody for two voices and chamber ensemble) is characterized by unusual vocal techniques, jazz influence, and ... |
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