Title: | The Complete Orchestral Collection |
Otros títulos: | Gershwin : Complete Orchestral Collection : Centennial Edition Works for Piano and Orchestra : Works for Orchestra : Works for Chorus and Orchestra La Colección Completa Orchestral Gershwin : La Colección Completa Orchestral : Edición del Centenario Obras para Piano y Orquesta : Obras para Orquesta : Obras para Coro y Orquesta |
Intérprete/ Colaborador: | George Gershwin; Erich Kunzel; Cincinnati Pops Orchestra; William Tritt; Stewart Goodyear; Richard Hawley; Timothy Berens; Central State University Chorus; William Henry Caldwell |
Código CDU: | Ge.03 |
Forma Musical: | Popular Music, Concertos (Piano), Piano with Orchestra, Orchestral Music, String Orchestra Music, Arranged. Suites (Orchestra) Choruses, Secular (Mixed voices) with Orchestra |
Abstract: | The great musical border crosser of the twentieth century, George Gershwin excelled in the fields of concert music and popular song alike. The son of Jewish immigrants from Russia, he was born Jacob Gershvin in Brooklyn on September 26, 1898. His father ran a great variety of small businesses, and George, in the words of the New Grove Dictionary of Music, "excelled at street sports." He also studied the piano and was introduced to the European classics by his teacher, Charles Hambitzer. Gershwin immersed himself in popular music after dropping out of school in 1914 and getting a job as a salesman for the music publisher Remick. He was influenced by ragtime and stride piano music, and as a songwriter enjoyed his first hit in 1920 with "Swanee," recorded by the leading vocalist of the time, Al Jolson. Gershwin and his brother Ira became one of the great creative teams in the history of music, each attuned to the considerable subtleties of which the other was capable. Their 1924 musical ... |