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alexwill Heavyweight Member
Joined: 08 Dec 2009 Posts: 6806 Location: Decatur, Georgia
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Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 7:20 pm Post subject: LIVE(arch)VID MN Orch Brass Gabrieli Fri Jan.15, 9pm 8CT |
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Brass section is first. They'll play for +/- 11 minutes.
Absolutely LIVE and archived VIDEO TODAY Friday January 15, 9pm Eastern, 8pm CT, 6pm Pacific. On Saturday 10am Beijing, 11am Tokyo, 1pm Sydney, 3pm NZ HERE: https://mnorch.vhx.tv/videos/symphonies-and-surprises
Giovanni Gabrieli
Music for Brass Ensemble
Canzon No. XIV (arr. Eric Crees)
Sonata No. XIII (ed. Paul Winter)
Canzon No. VI (arr. John Sheppard)
Osmo Vänskä, conductor
Manny Laureano, trumpet
Robert Dorer, trumpet
Douglas C. Carlsen, trumpet
Charles Lazarus, trumpet
Ellen Dinwiddie Smith, horn
Brian Jensen, horn
R. Douglas Wright, trombone
Kari Sundström, trombone
Andrew Chappell, bass trombone
Steven Campbell, tuba
ca. 10’
Minnesota Orchestra
Osmo Vänskä
Fei Xie, bassoon
GABRIELI/Crees
Canzon No. XIV for Ten Instruments / 3 min
GABRIELI/Winter
Sonata No. XIII for Double Brass Quartet / 3 min
GABRIELI/Sheppard
Canzon No. VI from Canzoni et Sonate / 4 min
FRANÇAIX
Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet and Bassoon / 11 min
Julie Gramolini Williams oboe. Chris Marshall Bassoon
IBERT/Holcombe
The Little White Donkey / 2 min
MOZART
Bassoon Concerto / 13 min Fei Xie
SAINT-GEORGES Ob. Marni Hougham, John Snow
Symphony No. 1 / 18 min |
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alexwill Heavyweight Member
Joined: 08 Dec 2009 Posts: 6806 Location: Decatur, Georgia
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Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2021 5:53 pm Post subject: |
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TODAY Friday Jan 15, 9pm ET....archived same place.... |
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MannyLaureano Veteran Member
Joined: 11 Oct 2003 Posts: 405 Location: Plymouth, Minnesota
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Posted: Sun Mar 20, 2022 5:07 am Post subject: |
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I listened to this for the first time in a long while and discovered something I hadn't noticed earlier.
One of the pleasures of playing with professional ensembles and superior amateur groups is the attention to intonation. Resultant tones and such really matter. If you listen to the second piece, you'll notice something very special. The very last note of the second Gabrieli work produces a resultant tone that fools the ear into believing there is a phantom 4th player playing a high Bb!
The first time my ear got fooled like that was as a young man listening to the "Ride of the Valkyries" excerpt as played by the low brass of the Chicago Symphony which was put out by the then-section of the CSO for educational purposes. The last chord of that set has you believe that Jay plays a high B where none exists, a wonderful demonstration of proper and effective intonation. _________________ Liviu Librescu-1930-2007- Holocaust survivor and hero during VA Tech massacre |
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