Event class: orchestra, piano, concerto, performed, music, symphony, works, recorded, premiered, work
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Events with high posterior probability
Frederick Septimus Kelly | Kelly's'' Serenade for Flute'' with accompaniment of Harp, Horn, and String Orchestra (opus 7), written in 1911 has received its first recording 100 years after he composed it. |
Elmar Oliveira | He was a Grammy nominee for his 1990 CD of the Barber Concerto with Leonard Slatkin and the Saint Louis Symphony. |
Leopold Stokowski | He also made many splendid recordings with the NYPO for Columbia, including the world premiere recordings of Vaughan Williams's 6th Symphony and Olivier Messiaen's L'Ascension also in 1949. |
Robert Soetens | Prokofiev was so pleased with the performance of the Sonata that, because Dushkin had just received a Violin Concerto from Igor Stravinsky, he immediately wrote his Second Violin Concerto for Soetens, which was premiered in Madrid on 1 December 1935, under Enrique Fernández Arbós. |
Robert Parris | His first international recognition came in 1958 with his Concerto for Five Kettledrums and Orchestra, premiered by Fred Begun, and the National Symphony in Washington, under Howard Mitchell. |
Leopold Stokowski | Stokowski conducted the first orchestral electrical recording to be made in America (Saint-Saëns's Danse Macabre) in April 1925. |
Tina Davidson | Her second solo disc'' It is My Heart Singing,'' was released on Albany Records (2006) and includes three works for string quartet performed by the Cassatt Quartet. |
Robert William Witt | Also in 1964, the Hughes Quartet of Ohio State University premiered Witt's String Quartet # 1 at the Tri-State Composers of Chamber Music Symposium in Cleveland. |
Valentina Igoshina | Igoshina has also competed in four other worldwide piano competitions : Igoshina has been invited to play with many notable orchestras, among them : In 2006 Warner Classics International produced an album entitled Valentina Igoshina, wherein Igoshina played works by Modest Mussorgsky and Robert Schumann. |
Glen Hansard | On 22 April 2006, he released his first album without The Frames, The Swell Season, on Overcoat Recordings in collaboration with Czech singer and multi-instrumentalist Markéta Irglová, Marja Tuhkanen from Finland on violin and viola, and Bertrand Galen from France on cello. |
Augusta Read Thomas | In 1997 the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich and the Boston Symphony Orchestra presented an unusual concert in which new works by both Rands and Thomas were premiered. |
Alexander Glazunov | In 1929, he conducted an orchestra of Parisian musicians in the first complete electrical recording of The Seasons. |
Emanuel Leplin | 4,6,7 of May 1960, SFS performed Leplin's first orchestral works written with three fingers and pencil, Landscapes and Skyscrapers. |
Havergal Brian | The first commercial recording of Havergal Brian's music was made by the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra in 1972, when Symphonies Nos. 10 and 21, conducted by James Loughran and Eric Pinkett respectively, were recorded at the De Montfort Hall, Leicester. |
Tal Rosner | His video for In Seven Days, Piano Concerto with Moving Image, composed by Thomas Adès, was premiered by the London Sinfonietta at the Royal Festival Hall in London on 28 April 2008. |
Kevin Waters | 1998 A Divine Image, Song with text by William Blake, with Erik Oland, S. J., Canadian Baritone, and Kevin Waters, S. J., pianist, on Belvedere College, S. J. |
Adrian Adlam | On 6 August 2005, he played in the world premiere of Christian Jost's eingefroren (Trio for violin, clarinet, and piano) at the Freden Festival. |
Hugh Maguire (violinist) | In that capacity he recorded Mozart's flute quartets with Richard Adeney, Cecil Aronowitz and Terence Weil in 1981. |
Bejun Mehta | His first Harmonia Mundi CD, an aria recital entitled Ombra Cara, with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra conducted by René Jacobs, was released in November 2010. |
Colin Matthews | In the spring of 2001 the Philharmonia orchestra gave the first performance of Matthews' Horn Concerto, with Richard Watkins and Esa-Pekka Salonen. |
Kevin Waters | December 9, 2006 See Amid the Winter Snow, a choral carol by Kevin Waters, was performed at St. Cecilia Catholic Church, Bainbridge Island, Washington, by the Bainbridge Chorale, Anthony Spain, Music Director. |
Harold Shapero | His major work was the Symphony for Classical Orchestra, 45-minute work in four movements (Tommasini 2013). |
Jason Barry-Smith | As a concert soloist, Barry-Smith has performed in Fauré's Requiem (Melbourne Symphony Orchestra), Haydn's Paukenmesse (Queensland Philharmonic Orchestra), Bach's St John Passion (Brisbane Chorale), Nigel Butterley's Lawrence Hargrave Flying Alone (Sydney Symphony), Bach's St Matthew Passion, Christmas Oratorio and Purcell's Ode to St Cecilia's Day (Bach Society of Queensland), and as the baritone soloist in the Australian composer's Richard Mills 2001 work, Symphonic Poems. |
Owen Pallett | Pallett collaborated with John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats in 2012 when several songs from the Transcendental Youth album were performed in concert with the all-female vocal quartet Anonymous 4 and featured Pallett's arrangements for piano, guitar and voices. |
Jonathan May | The Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra (OPO) also dedicated the first number of its `` Myth and Poetry'' program on November 1, 2010 to May ; The Phoenix Rising, composed by May's friend and OPO's composer-in-residence Stella Sung, was originally commissioned by May for his youth orchestra. |
Colin Lawson | Lawson's Cambridge Handbook to Mozart's Clarinet Concerto (1996) examines the work's genesis, composition and construction, as well as the career of the dedicatee Anton Stadler and his innovative basset clarinet. |
Alexander Romanovsky (pianist) | In 1999, at the age of 15, Romanovsky was awarded the title of Honorary Academician by the Accademica Filarmonica di Bologna following a performance of Johann Sebastian Bach's Goldberg Variations ; before this, only Gioachino Rossini and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had been accorded such an honor at that age. |
Andor Gomme | Gomme's reconstruction was recorded in 1998 for ASV Records by the Choir of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and the Cambridge Baroque Camerata, directed by Geoffrey Webber. |
Robert Matthew-Walker | Robert Matthew-Walker has produced over 130 albums, and won the Grand Prix du Disque of the Academie Charles Cros in 1980 for his recording of Brian Ferneyhough's Sonatas for String Quartet by the Berne String Quartet (the first recording of any of Ferneyhough's works), amongst several other recording awards for his work as a producer. |
Emery Reves | In 1991, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra commissioned a piece called Anatomy of Peace in Reves's memory ; it was composed by Marvin Hamlisch and orchestrated by Richard Danielpour. |
Anton Torello | Notable students include : Torello performed solo recials, chamber works and also appeared as a soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra (27 -- 28 February 1920, performing Lorenziti's concerto for viola d'amore and double bass with Thaddeus Rich). |
Kasia Glowicka | A few of the many commissions Glowicka received for her works have come from the Society of Promotion of New Music in London for the BBC Scottish Ensemble to perform the piece Perpetuity for the ` Sounds New' Festival in Aberdeen and the piece was later featured in the 18th International Review of Composers in Belgrade in 2009. |
Bernard Herrmann | Charles Gerhardt conducted a 1974 RCA recording entitled'' The Classic Film Scores of Bernard Herrmann'' with the National Philharmonic Orchestra. |
Matthew Hindson | In 2002 he was the featured composer with Musica Viva Australia for which he has written a number of new commissions for Kristjan Järvi's Absolute Ensemble, baroque violinist Andrew Manze, the Australian oboist Diana Doherty and the Belcea String Quartet, and Duo Sol. |
Daniel Hensel | His string sixtet'' Klaerchen ´ s Song'' op. 20 had its W. P. by the Ensemble Modern under Jonathan Stockhammer and was played again by the Austrian ensemble lux in the Arnold Schönberg Center Vienna in December 2010. |
Astor Piazzolla | On 4 November 1989 he gave a concert in Lausanne, Switzerland at the Moulin a Danses and later that month he recorded his composition Five Tango Sensations, with the Kronos Quartet in the US on an album of the same name. |
Thomas Wilson (composer) | A Cappella Masses Works which have been recorded include : A biography of Thomas Wilson written by his widow, Margaret Wilson, and David Griffith was published by Queensgate Music in August 2011. |
Vic Schoen | In 1987 he wrote an arrangement for the org Seattle Philharmonic combining the famous Claude Debussy piano piece Clair de Lune with Jerome Kern's Smoke Gets in Your Eyes. |
John Serry | In 1987, he coached the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater wind ensemble on his' Concerto for Marimba and Wind Ensemble' and also gave a lecture on that composition. |
Riccardo Piacentini | With this internationally acclaimed ensemble, founded in 1997 together with his wife soprano Tiziana Scandaletti, he has performed all over the world, keeping concerts and masterclasses on the Italian vocal contemporary repertoire (recently at Berkeley University, Stanford University, Portland State University, University of New Mexico, ArtLink Festival in Belgrade, Shenyang Conservatory, Moscow Conservatory, Nuova Consonanza Festival of Rome, etc.). |
Philip Glass | Two months after the premiere of this opera, in November 2005, Glass's Symphony No. 8, commissioned by the Bruckner Orchester Linz, was premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York City. |
Ahmad Pejman | In 1992, Pejman was commissioned to write a cantata for choir and orchestra for the liberation of Khorramshahr Beh Yade Khorramshahr, 1992. |
Claudio Arrau | He recorded almost all of them once again after 1984 along with Mozart complete piano sonatas. |
David Wynne (composer) | His gentler and more lyrical side, however, emerged in his Fantasia for Piano and Orchestra, which Martin Jones premiered with the Cardiff University Orchestra in 1972. |
Daniell Revenaugh | In 1967 Revenaugh conducted the Busoni Piano Concerto, with John Ogdon, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and the John Alldis Choir at Abbey Road studios for EMI. |
Paavo Berglund | 1968 Sibelius, Symphony no. 4 Shostakovich, Symphony no. 6 - Paavo Berglund, conductor - Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra 23. |
Robert William Witt | Several of his pieces have been performed posthumously, notably Abstracts in Motion, Music for Dance ; Four Lyrics of Carl Sandburg, which was performed by Anthony Hopkins in recital at Dana ; the Three Etudes for Piano, performed by Dolores Fitzer ; and the Ave Maria from his Four Motets to the Blessed Virgin Mary was performed in a lecture concert of American choral music at the Dana School of Music by guest conductor and lecturer Greg Smith in 1988. |
Ethel Carnie Holdsworth | The composer Ethel Smyth set two of Holdsworth's poems in the song cycle Three Songs (1913). |
Kurt Atterberg | In 1902, Atterberg began learning the cello, having been inspired by a concert by the Brussels String Quartet, featuring a performance of Beethoven's String Quartet No. 8. |
Maureen May | The MAYS celebrated Mr. May Day 2011 with its inaugural season finale concert that attracted hundreds and featured the world Premiere of Robert Kerr's `` Elegy,'' dedicated to Susan Goldman and inspired by Jonathan May, on which Maureen May played solo cello. |
Jorge Grundman | In April 2011 Grundman is commissioned by the XVII Festival Internacional de Música of Toledo and writes his sonata for flute and piano called Warhol in Springtime. |
Felicitas Kukuck | Founded in 2006,'' Singkreis Felicitas Kukuck'' is an ensemble conducted by Christoph Leis-Bendorff and dedicated to the vocal works of Felicitas Kukuck. |
Sarah Brightman | In response to persistent calls for a global release of the Symphony : Live in Vienna concert, EMI Music launched worldwide the PBS special which features Brightman's landmark performance at Vienna's St. Stephen's Cathedral on 16 January 2008, in both audio and visual formats. |
Yuri Honing | Memory Lane is recorded by Honing in 2002, together with members of the Amsterdam based Concertgebouw Orchestra. |
Gerard Schwarz | In 2003 he recorded two concertos by Philip Glass : the Cello Concerto (with Julian Lloyd Webber) and the Concerto for Two Timpanists (with Evelyn Glennie and Jonathan Haas with the RLPO). |
Robert Parris | When Mr. Begun, in 1958, performed the Parris Concerto for Five Kettledrums and Orchestra, it was presumably the first performance of this landmark concerto. |
Benjamin Britten | In May 1944 he conducted the Boyd Neel string orchestra, Dennis Brain and Pears in the first recording of the Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings, which has frequently been reissued, most recently on CD. |
Erlend Tvinnereim | He recited famous arias from operas, operettas and musicals, together with the award winning Norwegian soprano Ann-Helen Moen at the Trondheim Chamber Music Festival 2013. |
Frederic Austin | 1916 also saw the first performance of his most lasting orchestral composition, Danish Sketches, Palsgaard, conducted by Thomas Beecham on 11 December for the Royal Philharmonic Society. |
Marie Luise Neunecker | György Ligeti dedicated to her his Hamburg Concerto, which she premiered on 20 January 2001 in Hamburg with the Asko Ensemble. |
Roger Zare | Also in 2007, Zare was invited to the USC Thornton Wind Ensemble's performance of Lift-Off, a work that has been performed in various instrumental configurations, conducted by the legendary H. Robert Reynolds. |
Libby Larsen | She composed her first symphony, `` Water Music,'' for the Minnesota Orchestra, which was premiered in 1985 under Sir Neville Marriner. |
Anthony Galla-Rini | This concerto was recorded by Swedish accordionist and Galla-Rini protégé Jörgen Sundeqvist with organist Håkan Dahlen and released in 2005 on a CD by Courthourse Music of Sweden. |
Stafford James | In 1986, he composed an Ethiopian Suite for two basses, string ensemble, drums and dancers for the Celebrate Brooklyn Festival Dance. |
Ernesto Acher | Some of his works are : a cycle of jazz pieces with single-vowel titles (a joint idea with Carlos Núñez Cortés), Miss Lilly Higgins, Bob Gordon, Papa Garland, Pepper Clemens and Truthful Lulu ; his folk pieces La yegua mía, Añoralgias and Epopeya de los quince jinetes ; Teresa y el Oso (Theresa and the Bear), a symphonic poem for narrator and the informal-instruments ensemble, parodying Prokofiev ´ s Peter and the Wolf, and transcribed in 1976 for narrator, informal instruments and symphonic orchestra ; Quartet Op. 44 for five players, and the Cantata de Don Rodrigo, in cooperation with Jorge Maronna and Carlos López Puccio. |
Arthur Benjamin | The work was first performed in 1914, and ends with an heraldic march movement entitled'' Benjee'', saluting Arthur Benjamin, who the previous year had given the premiere of Howells' Piano Concerto No. 1. |
Shlomo (beatboxing artist) | In 2008, he was commissioned to create a piece called'' One Voice'', bringing together four community choirs from diverse backgrounds including a Gospel Choir, a Brazilian Choir, a children's choir and a contemporary choir. |
Carlo Pedini | In September 1990 the RAI National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Vittorio Parisi took part in the 42nd Prix Italia in Palermo, playing Pedini's Predica agli Uccelli ('' Sermon to the Birds'') for soprano, piano, synthesised voice, tape and orchestra on a text by Lucio Lironi and Claudio Novelli. |
Walter Piston | Leonard Slatkin and the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra included the suite in a 1991 RCA Victor CD recording that also featured Piston's Three New England Sketches and Symphony No. 6. |
Bryce Dessner | In 2011, Bryce was commissioned by Kronos Quartet to compose a piece for the Barbican Centre's `` Reverberations : The Influence of Steve Reich'' festival in London. |
William Primrose | In 1944 he had commissioned a viola concerto from Béla Bartók. |
Philip Glass | In the early 2000s, Glass started a series of five concerti with the Tirol Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (2000, premiered by Dennis Russell Davies as conductor and soloist), and the Concerto Fantasy for Two Timpanists and Orchestra (2000, for the timpanist Jonathan Haas). |
Bill Douglas (musician) | In March, 1999, his Concerto for African Percussion Ensemble and Orchestra was premiered by Nexus and the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. |
Sergei Rachmaninoff | His last recital, given on 17 February 1943 at the Alumni Gymnasium of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, included Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2, which contains the famous Marche funèbre (Funeral March). |
Jean-Pierre Rampal | In 1978, the Armenian-American composer Alan Hovhaness wrote his Symphony No. 36, which contained a melodic flute part tailored especially for Rampal, who gave the premiere performance of the work in concert with the National Symphony Orchestra. |
Gareth Glyn | In 2011, to coincide with his 60th birthday, a double CD of a selection of his orchestral works was released by Sain, including the substantial Enduring City celebrating the 300th anniversary of the founding of the city of New Bern. |
Howard Shore | During 2007 he also composed the scores for The Last Mimzy and Eastern Promises, the latter of which includes a section that has been performed in concert as Shore's Concertino for violin solo and chamber orchestra. |
Eugen d'Albert | His successful orchestral works included his cello concerto (1899), a symphony, two string quartet s and two piano concerto s. |
David Earl | In June 2012 his setting of Rupert Brooke's' The Old Vicarage, Grantchester' for baritone chorus and orchestra, commissioned by Dame Mary Archer to mark the poem's centenary, was given its first performance at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, with the Cambridge University Chamber Orchestra, members of the choirs of Clare and Gonville and Caius College, and Nicholas Mogg as baritone soloist. |
Ingolf Dahl | Among his compositions, the most frequently performed is the Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Wind Orchestra commissioned and premiered by Sigurd Raschèr in 1949. |
Patrick Greene (composer) | His orchestral thesis at the Conservatory, Night of the Four Zoas, was premiered by Yoichi Udagawa in Boston in the spring of 2010. |
Juli?n Carrillo | In 1964 Robert Gendre premiered Carrillo's First Violin Concerto in quarter - tones. |
Mike Block | Mike Block's Cello Concerto, Movement 1 was completed in 2009. |
Marin Alsop | In 2010, her recording of Jennifer Higdon's Percussion Concerto with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and soloist Colin Currie won a Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition. |
Dong-Hyek Lim | His second recording for EMI, featuring Chopin's B minor Sonata and other minor works, released in 2004, was awarded the Choc Prize by Le Monde de la Musique. |
Lee Hoiby | His three-movement Summer Suite for Wind Ensemble was premiered on February 25, 2008 by the Austin Peay State University Wind Ensemble under the direction of Dr. Gregory Wolynec. |
Susie Ibarra | Also in 2007, her solo CD, Drum Sketches, was commissioned by The Brecht Forum and American Composers Forum on Innova Recordings. |
Michael Daugherty | As an Assistant Professor of Composition at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music (1986 -- 91), Daugherty organized guest residencies of composers with performances of their music ; these included Luciano Berio, John Harbison, Christopher Rouse, Roger Reynolds, Kenneth Gaburo, Morton Subotnick, Herbert Brun, and Salvatore Martirano. |
Fabian Del Priore | The'' Merregnon Soundtrack - Volume 2 - Suite'' (as performed at the GC Games Convention Concert 2003) with 4 minutes of music composed by Fabian was played at all four concerts. |
Dennis Brain | To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of his death, a new work, Fanfare : a salute to Dennis Brain was commissioned from Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, and premiered in Nottingham on 15 March 2007 by Michael Thompson. |
Dorothy Howell | In 2010 Cameo Classics recorded Howell's Piano Concerto with Valentina Seferinova as soloist at Cadogan Hall. |
Rob Hyman | In 1998, Hyman again collaborated with Chertoff to create the concept album Largo, which was based on the largo movement of Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, in E Minor From the New World. |
Edison Denisov | The cycle for soprano and chamber ensemble Le soleil des Incas (1964), setting the poems by Gabriela Mistral and dedicated to Pierre Boulez, gave him an international recognition. |
Michael Flanders | Façade poems Edith Sitwell : Flanders was fascinated by her Façade poems For EMI Flanders recorded the narration of Peter and the Wolf with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Efrem Kurtz (1959). |
Jay Greenberg | The Sony BMG Masterworks label released his first CD on August 15, 2006 ; it includes his Symphony No. 5 and String Quintet as performed by the London Symphony Orchestra under the direction of José Serebrier and by the Juilliard String Quartet with cellist Darrett Adkins respectively. |
Mariss Jansons | Jansons' recording of Shostakovich's Symphony No. 13 with Sergey Aleksashkin (bass) and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus won the Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance at the 2006 Grammy Awards. |
James Lavino | Lavino's piece'' Nativity,'' commissioned by Choir & Organ magazine, was featured in the 2007 Classic FM Christmas Concert, and has been recorded by the choir of Westminster Abbey (James O'Donnell, cond.) |
Joan Tower | In 2004 Carnegie Hall's'' Making Music'' series featured a retrospective of Tower's body of work, performed by artists including the Tokyo String Quartet and pianists Melvin Chen and Ursula Oppens. |
Alice Mary Smith | These included Ode to the North-East Wind for chorus and orchestra, Ode to The Passions (1882), her longest work, performed at the Hereford Festival in that year, and two cantatas for male voices in the last two years of her life. |
Boris Berezovsky (pianist) | His album Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 and Khachaturian Piano Сoncerto (Ural Philharmonic Orchestra / Dmitry Liss) was released on April 2006 in the UK. |