У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно J.S. Bach - Sonata for cello and organ, BWV 1027 (Aldulescu / Gehann) (mvmts 1&2) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Recorded in the Saint Margaret Cathedral in Medias (Medwesch). rec. mid-1960's LP transfer Sonata in G Major, BWV 1027 0:00 I. Adagio 5:40 II. Allegro Ma Non Tanto For movements III and IV, please see: • J.S. Bach - Sonata for cello and organ, BW... Radu Aldulescu (17 September, 1922 - 19 March, 2006) was born in Piteasca, Ilfov County, and started to study the cello at the age of six with his grandfather Dimitrie Dinicu. When he was twelve, he entered the Royal Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in Bucharest, graduating after five years. He made his musical debut in 1941 with the National Radio Orchestra of Romania. Between 1950 and 1964 he was a soloist with the Bucharest Philharmonic Orchestra. Together with violinist Ștefan Gheorghiu and pianist Valentin Gheorghiu he formed a trio. He studied with Gaspar Cassadó and was the assistant of his teacher for 3 years in Santiago de Compostella. In 1969, Aldulescu left Romania, settling down in Italy, where he founded, in 1972, the "Trio d’Archi di Roma" together with violinist Salvatore Accardo and violist Luigi Alberto Bianchi. He completed a well received tour of Southern Africa with them, and followed this with three acclaimed tours as a soloist. He had teaching assignments at the Music Academy in Rome, the Conservatoire de Paris, the City of Basel Music Academy, the Maastricht Conservatoire and the Pescara Music Academy. His students included Paulo Gaio Lima, Ulf Tischbirck, Gemma Serpenti, Mariet van Dijk, Șerban Nichifor, Mirel Iancovici, Marin Cazacu, Eduardo Vassallo, Luigi Piovano, Oliver Parr and Claudia Weertman. Beside his career as a soloist and teacher, he also participated regularly to chamber music concerts, pairing with Yehudi Menuhin, R. Ricci, Sandor Vegh, W. Schneiderhan, Alberto Lysy, Salvatore Accardo, Bruno Giuranna, Mstislav Rostropovici, Enrico Mainardi, Yo Yo Ma, Franco Petracchi, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Carlo Zecchi, etc ----- Horst Gehann ( November 27, 1928 in Frankfurt am Main – June 21, 2007 in Kludenbach ) was a German conductor , composer , concert organist , harpsichordist and music publisher. Due to the origin of his parents (Transylvanian Saxons), who returned to Romania in 1937 , Horst Gehann spent most of his childhood and youth in Transylvania. He received his musical education at the music school in Reichenberg (Czechoslovakia), then with FX Dressler (a student of the Thomaskantor Karl Straube) in Hermannstadt , V. Bickerich (a student of F. Heitmann) in Kronstadt, composition in Bucharest with M. Jora (a student of Max Reger). He passed the soloist examination for organ in Bucharest in 1955. He preferred to play on the baroque organs in Transylvania, most of which were originally preserved. In addition to his concert activities, he taught church music at the Orthodox Theological Seminary in Bucharest. During the Ceauşescu dictatorship, he faced a variety of political discrimination. He couldn't work in his profession for a few years, so he thought about emigrating. In 1972, with the help of Federal President Gustav Heinemann , Gehann was able to move to the Federal Republic of Germany. In Darmstadt he took over a teaching post for church music at the Adventist Theological Seminary Marienhöhe in Darmstadt [1] , in which his daughter joined in 1984Angela Gehann-Dernbach followed. As part of his international work as a concert organist and conductor, numerous radio and disc recordings were made. He was a member of the German Composers' Association and GEMA . In 1980 Horst Gehann founded the chamber orchestra Pro Musica, Darmstadt, and in 1981 the Bach Choir Darmstadt, with which he regularly gave oratorio performances in collaboration with various symphony orchestras, especially from Eastern Europe, in addition to the Bach works cycle (until 2005: 107 concerts). In 1987 he founded the Gehann-Musik-Verlag, which focuses on the music of German composers from Southeast Europe. In 2006, for health reasons, he handed over the direction of the Bach Choir and the Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra to his daughter Angela Gehann-Dernbach. He was chairman of the Baußnern Society and deputy chairman of the Society for German Music Culture in Southeastern Europe, and was also chairman of various other musical institutions. Gehann composed chamber music, works for choir a cappella, organ, piano and voice. His works were published by Breitkopf & Härtel, by Hänssler, as well as by Saatkorn- and Advent-Verlag and by his own Gehann Musik Verlag.