GMT/ZULU/UNIVERSAL TIME (UTC):

CLASSICALmanac to dates of births, deaths and significant events in classical music history

Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!
Entries by Topic
All topics
2008 Anniversaries
ABOUT US
AmazonMP3
BARNES & NOBLE
Bell Telephone Hour
BIOS New
BIOS videos
CLASSICAL VIDEOs
CLASSICALmanac.com
COMPOSERS index
DIRECTORIES
DOWNLOADS
DVDs  «
ELGAR@150
INSTRUMENTSales
MILESTONES 2008
MILESTONESJan-May07
MILESTONESJun-Dec07
MUSIC Halloween
MUSIC Thanksgiving
MUSIClassical CONCERT
NEW BOOKS
NEW CDs
NEW MOVIES
NEWS composers
NEWS Industry
NEWS performers
OBITS LINK
PERFORMERS index
PLAYLIST archives
RADIOnline
RANDOM LINKS
SITEseeing
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
CONTACT US
e mail
postal
You are not logged in. Log in
MUSIClassical.com?

Topic: DVDs
A splendid DVD from Deutsche Grammophon, Rafael Kubelík: A Portrait, reminds us that multiple tyrannies can govern a conductor’s life. Kubelík (1914 –1996) was a mightily gifted Bohemian-born conductor, scion of a legendary musical family (his father was the superstar violinist Jan Kubelík). Rafael Kubelík was music director of the Brno Opera when the Nazis shut the company down in 1941. A year later they executed the Opera’s administrative director, Václav Ji?íkovský (1891-1942), who had smuggled Jews out of Occupied Prague. Small wonder that Kubelík states in a 1970’s documentary (which is reprinted along with brilliant performances of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bruckner on the new DVD), “A conductor should be a guide, not a dictator. I could never stomach dictatorships.” When he was named wartime conductor of the Czech Philharmonic, he declined to perform Wagner, and would not give German notables the Nazi salute as required, nearly causing him to be arrested. A stunning interpreter of Mozart, Beethoven, Smetana, and Dvo?ák, Kubelík helped establish the Prague Spring Festival in 1946, but finally was driven from his homeland by the 1948 Communist coup.
  • Google Links
  • SHOP Rafael Kubelík


  • Topic: DVDs
    "Kent Nagano Conducts Classical Masterpieces: Mozart's 'Jupiter' Sym phony" (Arthaus DVD)

    Originally produced by German TV in 2006, the six-part Arthaus "Classical Masterpieces" DVD se ries centers on core Austro-German symphonic repertoire, starting with Mozart's Symphony No. 41, "Jupiter." The programs feature a 52-minute documentary plus a full live performance, with the California-born Kent Nagano conducting the Deutsches Symphonie-Orches ter Berlin. The performance of this symphony balances richness and crispness in the modern Mozart style, attractive if not particularly charismatic. The sound is full- blooded, but the filming, while de tailed, is edited in such a ridiculously busy way that it leaves a viewer with vertigo.



    Topic: DVDs
    "Discovering Masterpieces of Classical Music: Dvorák's 'New World' Sym phony" (EuroArts DVD)

    This DVD features a half-hour film tracing the context and content of Dvorák's ever-popular Sym phony No. 9 (nicknamed "From the New World"), as the preface to a full live performance. And what a performance it is -- Claudio Ab bado conducting the Berlin Philharmonic, recorded in true sur round sound. Beyond the exalted playing -- the conductor yielding sounds like a conjurer of spirits in the symphony's Largo -- the musicians were beautifully shot in Palermo, Italy's Teatro Massimo. (This performance, plus Brahms' Violin Concerto with Gil Shaham, is also available on a DVD with the full 2002 Palermo concert.)



    Topic: DVDs

    PLANET EARTH

    ... now available in various DVD formats.

    Soundtrack available on CD



    Topic: DVDs
    Performing Arts DVDs

    Newer | Latest | Older

    Click here to join MUSICLASSICAList
    Click to join MUSICLASSICAList