Lully: Le Roi Danse


Selection of opera, ballet etc. movements of the works by Jean-Baptiste Lully.
(Soundtrack from the movie: Le Roi Danse)

1. Lully: Te Deum Motet a deux choeurs 00:00
2. Cordier: La Bocanne primitive
3. Cordier: La Bocanne compliquée
4. Lully: Phaéton — Troupe dAstrée dansante
5. Lully: La Nuit Ballet — Ouverture
6. Lully: La Plaisiers Ballet — Sarabande
7. Lully: La Nuit Ballet — Le Roi représentant le soleils levant 10:14
8. Lully: Xerxes Ballet — Air pour les matelots jouants des trompettes marines
9. Lully: Xerxes Ballet — Air pour les esclaves et singes dansants
10. Lully: Xerxes Ballet — Air pour les postures de Scaramouche
11. Lully: Xerxes Ballet — Air pour les docteurs, Frivelins et Polichinelles
12. Lully: Xerxes Ballet — Air pour les esclaves dansants
13. Lully: Idylle sur la paix — Air pour Madame la Dauphine
14. Lully: Alcidiane Ballet — Ritournelle et air de Mademoiselle Hilaire 21:01
15. Lully: Alcidiane Ballet — Ouverture
16. Lully: Triumphe de LAmour — Ouverture
17. Lully: Persée — Entrée des divinités infernales
18. Lully: Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme — Marche pour la cérémonie des Turcs 30:05
19. Lully: Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme — Giourdina
20. Lully: Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme — Chaconne des Scaramouches, Frivelins et Arlequins
21. Lambert: Ombre de mon amant (Air de cour)
22. Lully: Triumphe de LAmour — Prélude pour la nuit 38:13
23. Cambert: Pomone — Passons nos jours dans ces vergers
24. Cambert: Pomone — Que voyez-vous mes yeux
25. Lully: Armide — Plus jobserve ces lieux 47:14
26. Lully: Atys, «Le Sommeil» — Dormons, dormons tous
27. Lully: Armide — Passacaille 58:08
28. Lully: Armide — Prelude
29. Lully: Les Folies dEspagne
30. Lully: Les Amants magnifiques — Entrée dApollon
31. Lully: Triumphe de LAmour — Entrée dApollon 01:07:28
32. Lully: Triumphe de LAmour — Deuxieme air
33. Lully: Isis — Cest lui dont les dieux ont fait choix
34. Lully: Armide — Que léclat de son nom
35. Lully: Amadis — Esprits empressés a nous plaire

Reinhard Goebel
Musica Antiqua Cologne

J.S. Bach: St. John Passion, BWV 245 / Part One - No.1 Chorus: "Herr, unser Herrscher"


Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group

J.S. Bach: St. John Passion, BWV 245 / Part One — No.1 Chorus: «Herr, unser Herrscher» · The Monteverdi Choir · English Baroque Soloists · John Eliot Gardiner

Bach, J.S.: St. John Passion

℗ 1986 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

Released on: 1986-01-01

Producer: Dr. Andreas Holschneider
Producer: Charlotte Kriesch
Producer, Recording Producer, Studio Personnel, Balance Engineer: Karl-August Naegler
Studio Personnel, Recording Engineer: Wolf-Dieter Karwatky
Studio Personnel, Recording Engineer: Gregor Zielinsky
Studio Personnel, Editor: Gernot Von Schultzendorff
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Author: Anonymous

Auto-generated by YouTube.

Johannes-Passion, BWV 245, II. Teil: 39. Chorus "Ruht wohl, ihr heiligen Gebeine"


Provided to YouTube by harmonia mundi

Johannes-Passion, BWV 245, II. Teil: 39. Chorus «Ruht wohl, ihr heiligen Gebeine» · Collegium Vocale Gent · Philippe Herreweghe

J.S. Bach: Johannes-Passion

℗ harmonia mundi s.a.

Released on: 2007-07-31

Artist: Collegium Vocale Gent
Orchestra: Collegium Vocale Gent
Artist: Philippe Herreweghe
Conductor: Philippe Herreweghe
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach

Auto-generated by YouTube.

J.S.Bach Concerto no.1 in D Minor BWV 1052 Polina Osetinskaya Anton Gakkel


NEW AMAZING MUSIC-VIDEO ON THIS CHANEL
youtu.be/ZCPWPh06FwE — Benjamin Britten
youtu.be/BK3aTsBKj9M — Arshia Samsaminia
youtu.be/_h2-h831iLw — Roberto Di Marino

J.S.Bach HARPSICHORD Concerto in D Minor BWV 1052 Polina Osetinskaya piano
The Mariinsky String Orchestra
Conductor: Anton Gakkel www.antongakkel.org/
St.Petersburg, Mariinsky Theatre, Concert Hall 29.03.2015
0:05 — 1mvt / 8:15 — 2mvt / 16:13 — 3mvt
The life of pianist Polina Osetinskaya can be divided into two stages. The first – that of “wunderkind” (a word that Polina herself cannot abide) – was when Polina performed as a girl in huge halls filled with excited sensationalists. The second, which has continued to the present day, is essentially her victory over the first. It is both a reference to serious performing and to exacting audiences.
Polina Osetinskaya began to perform at the age of five. At the age of seven she entered the Central School of Music of the Moscow Conservatoire. Polina gave her first concert at the age of six at the Great Hall of the Vilnius Conservatoire in Lithuania. Together with her father who accepted the role of manager, the young Polina began to undertake frequent tours throughout the former USSR to packed halls and ovations. In her own country Polina was possibly the most famous child of her time and her relationship with her father was portrayed by the mass media as some kind of soap opera after the thirteen-year-old Polina decided to leave her father and study music seriously at the school of the Leningrad Conservatoire under the acclaimed teacher Marina Wolf.
Polina began to tour once again while still a student at the St Petersburg Conservatoire. (The pianist subsequently completed a postgraduate course at the Moscow Conservatoire under Professor Vera Gornostayeva.) She has appeared with the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Orchestra of the Weimar National Opera, the Academic Symphony Orchestra of the St Petersburg Philharmonic (Honoured Ensemble of Russia), the State Academic Svetlanov Symphony Orchestra, the Moscow Virtuosi and the New Russia orchestra among other ensembles.
Polina Osetinskaya’s onstage partners have included conductors Saulius Sondeckis, Vassily Sinaisky, Andrei Boreiko, Gerd Albrecht, Yan Pascal Tortelier and Thomas Sanderling. Polina Osetinskaya has performed at the Wallonie Festival in Brussels, the Mainly Mozart festival, the Frédéric Chopin Festival in Miami, the Stars of the White Nights festival and the December Evenings festival among numerous others.
The pianist has been awarded the Maly Triumph prize. In 2008 she wrote her autobiography Farewell, Sadness, which became a bestseller.
Polina Osetinskaya generally creates unusual and frequently paradoxical solo programmes. She almost always includes works by contemporary composers, frequently justaposing them with traditional classical works: “Contemporary music is not just a continuation of older music. It also helps us discover ideas and beauty in older music that have been lost over decades of the blind museum generation and mechanical and often soulless performing.”
Polina Osetinskaya often performs works by post-avant-garde composers such as Valentin Silvestrov, Leonid Desyatnikov, Vladimir Martynov, Georgs Pelēcis and Pavel Karmanov.

The pianist collaborates with many recording companies including Naxos, Sony Music and Bel Air.
#polinaosetinskaya #musicaaldente #полинаосетинская #бах

Kommt ihr Töchter (Matthäuspassion Bach), Wiltener Sängerknaben, Academia, Stecher


Live:
Wilten Boys Choir
Academia Jacobus Stainer
Soloists: Wilten Boys, Bernhard Berchtold, Daniel Schmutzhard, Philippe Spiegel, Oliver Sailer, Patrik Reiter, Philipp Meraner, Sebastian Mair, David Kerber;
Leitung: Johannes Stecher
Osterfestival Tirol 25.3.2016, Congress Innsbruck Saal Tirol

J.S.Bach - French Suites


Andras Schiff — Piano
BWV 812 813 814 815 816 817
The French Suites, BWV 812--817, are six suites which Johann Sebastian Bach wrote for the clavier (harpsichord or clavichord) between the years of 1722 and 1725. The suites were later given the name French (first recorded usage by Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg in 1762) as a means of contrast with the English Suites (whose title is likewise a later appellation). The name was popularised by Bachs biographer Johann Nikolaus Forkel, who wrote in his 1802 biography of Bach, «One usually calls them French Suites because they are written in the French manner.» This claim, however, is inaccurate: like Bachs other suites, they follow a largely Italian convention.

There is no surviving definitive manuscript of these suites, and ornamentation varies both in type and in degree across manuscripts.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Suites_(Bach)