New York Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini plays Prelude to Act 1 and Act 3 from La Traviata. Recorded for Victor on March 18th and 29th, 1929.
Piano piano così....agitato, alè, stringendo sempre ancora ancora ancora....................
-------------------------------------
Few orchestral conductors have attained the public recognition accorded Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957), due in part to his many recordings and frequent broadcast performances, but also to his conducting style. In a career spanning 68 years, he did more than anyone to revive the popular image of the all-powerful maestro...
In 1885, at age 19, he graduated from the Parma Conservatory as a cellist, and joined an opera company for a tour of South America. When in Rio de Janeiro, the incompetence of the Brazilian conductor engaged for the tour so incensed the Italian singers and players that he was forced to resign, and the 19-year-old cellist was asked to take the baton for Verdi’s Aida. By the end of the tour he had led 26 performances of 11 operas, all from memory.
Between 1887 and 1895, Toscanini conducted in many Italian opera houses, and in 1896 became the principal conductor of Turin’s Regio Opera House, leading the first Italian performances of Wagner’s Götterdämmerung, Tristan and Isolde and Die Walküre, and the première of Puccini’s La Bohème, as well as a series of highly successful orchestral concerts. He was the principal conductor at La Scala, Milan, from 1900 to 1908, and first appeared at New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 1908, where he conducted the première of Puccini’s La fanciulla del West (in 1910).
Recalled to La Scala in 1919, he reformed the orchestra and took it on a triumphant tour of the U.S., conducting 67 concerts in 77 days, followed by an Italian tour in which he led 38 concerts in 56 days. From 1926-1927, he was a guest conductor with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, and in 1929 left La Scala to become its permanent conductor, a post he filled until 1939.
In 1937 Toscanini was invited by NBC to conduct broadcast concerts in America with a new symphony orchestra specifically created for the purpose. He then toured with that orchestra to South America in 1940 and throughout the United States in 1950. He also conducted a memorable series of concerts with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in London between 1935 and 1939.
Toscanini’s opposition to Fascism and Nazism was implacable. In 1931, he was attacked for refusing to play the Giovanezza, a Fascist anthem. In the same year he was the first non-German conductor to appear at the Wagner Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, but refused to return in 1933 in protest of the Nazi’s treatment of Jewish musicians. He also turned his back on the Salzburg Festival because the Jewish conductor Bruno Walter’s performances there were not broadcast in Germany. In 1938-1939, he conducted without fee at a festival in Lucerne, Switzerland, where the orchestra was composed entirely of musicians who had fled German persecution.
Toscanini’s conducting style featured a precise, vigorous beat and vivid body-language, which orchestras understood and responded to with dramatic results. By the end of his career he had memorized 250 symphonic works, and over 100 operas. Though he enthusiastically embraced post-Romantic, twentieth century music, he virtually ignored the new breed of American composers that were making their mark by the 1950s.
It was not false modesty, but genuine humility that led him to say in an interview “I am no genius. I have created nothing. I play the music of other men. I am just a musician.“
-------------------------------------
Un Ballo in Maschera - Preludio - Toscanini NBC (1954) :
Toscanini sings “Morrò, ma prima in grazia“ (soprano aria from Un Ballo in Maschera):
-------------------------------------
“sembra di vedere il maestro al lavoro!“
e alòra!!!!! grazie per aver pubblicato questo documento!!!!
-------------------------------------
1 view
290
81
2 months ago 03:25:40 1
La traviata LIVESTREAM from Saturday 10-26-2024 7:30 PM CST
2 months ago 00:03:55 2
Giuseppe Verdi, La traviata - Libiam ne’ lieti calici (Harding/ Lombardi/ De Tommaso)
2 months ago 00:04:34 3
Julia Muzychenko: “Alfredo, Alfredo, di questo core” - ACT 2- La Traviata - Verdi
2 months ago 04:14:05 1
Maria Callas - 50 Most Beautiful Opera Arias
2 months ago 00:06:01 1
La Traviata: “Addio, del passato” Julia Muzychenko | Opera Grand Avignon.
2 months ago 00:06:34 1
Verdi. La Traviata: È strano… ah, fors’è lui- Julia Muzychenko- Teatro Mayor Bogotá
2 months ago 01:51:00 1
Classical Music for When You’re on a Deadline
2 months ago 02:25:47 2
Nuit de la Voix 2017 : le replay
2 months ago 00:10:03 1
Julia Muzychenko- Verdi: “È strano!… Ah, fors’è lui…Sempre libera” La Traviata
2 months ago 00:04:58 1
La Traviata | Teneste La promessa…- Addio del passato ACT 3 | Julia Muzychenko - Teatro Mayor Bogotá
2 months ago 00:20:45 1
Verdi: La Traviata- Duet of Violetta - Germont “Madamigella Valéry” Julia Muzychenko & Serban Vasile
2 months ago 03:19:53 1
50 Best Choruses
2 months ago 00:03:54 1
“Parigi, o cara” - La Traviata (Verdi)- Julia Muzychenko, Paolo Fanale.
2 months ago 00:11:07 1
Maria Callas Incredible ! La Traviata London 1958 , Rec Private Wonderful Sound Titonut 2017
2 months ago 00:34:01 1
Великие Композиторы - Джузеппе Верди
2 months ago 03:00:35 1
Classical Melancholy - The Most Sorrowful Classical Songs
2 months ago 00:07:31 1
Teneste la promessa... Addio del passato (uncut); La Traviata; Montserrat Caballé
2 months ago 00:03:27 1
Parigi o cara (from the Opera “La Traviata“ by G. Verdi)
2 months ago 00:04:55 1
Montserrat Caballé - Addio del Passato
2 months ago 00:05:10 1
Dame Joan Sutherland and Luciano Pavarotti - ’Parigi, o cara’ Verdi’s La traviata
2 months ago 00:03:05 1
La Traviata: Brindisi “Libiamo ne’ lieti calici“ Verdi “Застольная“ из оперы Дж. Верди “Травиата“
2 months ago 01:58:20 1
The Best of Verdi
2 months ago 00:03:09 1
La Traviata: “Libiamo, ne’ lieti calici”
3 months ago 00:03:15 1
Sumi Jo & Safina - Brindisi:축배의 노래 - from La Traviata-Verdi