Search This Blog

Powered By Blogger

Saturday, May 14, 2011

TOMASO ALBINONI's "Adagio" with Sissel, Il Divo, The Eroica Trio, Dominic Miller, Mostar Sinfonie





Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni was born in Venice in 1671, eldest son of a wealthy paper merchant. At an early age he became proficient as a singer and, more notably, as a violinist, though not being a member of the performers' guild he was unable to play publicly so he turned his hand to composition. His first opera, Zenobia, regina de Palmireni, was produced in Venice in 1694, coinciding with his first collection of instrumental music, the 12 Sonate a tre, Op.1. Thereafter he divided his attention almost equally between vocal composition (operas, serenatas and cantatas) and instrumental composition (sonatas and concertos).

Until his father's death in 1709, he was able to cultivate music more for pleasure than for profit, referring to himself as "Dilettante Veneto" - a term which in 18th century Italy was totally devoid of unfavorable connotations. Under the terms of his father's will he was relieved of the duty (which he would normally have assumed as eldest son) to take charge of the family business, this task being given to his younger brothers. Henceforth he was to be a full-time musician, a prolific composer who according to one report, also ran a successful academy of singing.

A lifelong resident of Venice, Albnoni married an opera singer, Margherita Raimondi (d 1721), and composed as many as 81 operas several of which were performed in northern Europe from the 1720s onwards. In 1722 he traveled to Munich at the invitation of the Elector of Bavaria to supervise performances of I veri amici and Il trionfo d'amore as part of the wedding celebrations for the Prince-Elector and the daughter of the late Emperor Joseph I.

Most of his operatic works have been lost, having not been published during his lifetime. Nine collections of instrumental works were however published, meeting with considerable success and consequent reprints; thus it is as a composer of instrumental music (99 sonatas, 59 concertos and 9 sinfonias) that he is known today. In his lifetime these works were favorably compared with those of Corelli and Vivaldi, and his nine collections published in Italy, Amsterdam and London were either dedicated to or sponsored by an impressive list of southern European nobility.

Albinoni was particularly fond of the oboe, a relatively new introduction in Italy, and is credited with being the first Italian to compose oboe concertos (Op. 7, 1715). Prior to Op.7, Albinoni had not published any compositions with parts for wind instruments.

The concerto, in particular, had been regarded as the province of stringed instruments. It is likely that the first concertos featuring a solo oboe appeared from German composers such as Telemann or Handel. Nevertheless, the four concertos with one oboe (Nos. 3, 6, 9 and 12) and the four with two oboes (Nos. 2, 5, 8 and 11) in Albinoni's Op.7 were the first of their kind to be published, and proved so successful that the composer repeated the formula in Op.9 (1722).

Though Albinoni resided in Venice all his life, he traveled frequently throughout southern Europe; the European nobility would also have made his acquaintance in Venice, now a popular destination city. With its commercial fortunes in the Adriatic and Mediterranean in decline, the enterprising City-State turned to tourism as its new source of wealth, taking advantage of its fabled water setting and ornate buildings, and putting on elongated and elaborate carnivals which regularly attracted the European courts and nobility.

Apart from some further instrumental works circulating in manuscript in 1735, little is known of Albinoni's life and musical activity after the mid-1720s. However, so much of his output has been lost, one can surely not put our lack of knowledge down to musical or composition inactivity. Much of his work was lost during the latter years of World War II with the bombing of Dresden and the Dresden State library -- which brings us to the celebrated Adagio.

Albinoni died in 1751, in the city of his birth.
For a comprehensive biography on Tomaso Albinoni, please go to:
http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Lib/Albinoni-Tomaso.htm
http://www.baroquemusic.org/bqxalb.html

For more information on Il Divo, please go to"
http://www.ildivo.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Il_Divo

For more information on Sissel Kyrkjebø (Soprano), please go to:
http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Sissel.htm
http://www.sissel.cc/Sisselbio.html

For more information on Dominic Miller, please go to:
http://www.dominicmiller.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominic_Miller

For more information on The Eroica Trio, please go to:
http://m.eroicatrio.com/biography.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eroica_Trio

Classical Series: Rachmaninoff's 2nd Piano Concerto - Eric Carmen, "All By Myself".






The Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18, is a concerto for piano and orchestra composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff between the autumn of 1900 and April 1901. The second and third movements were first performed with the composer as soloist on 2 December 1900.[2] The complete work was premiered, again with the composer as soloist, on 27 October 1901, with his cousin Alexander Siloti conducting. This piece is one of Rachmaninoff's most enduringly popular pieces, and established his fame as a concerto composer

At its 1897 premiere, Rachmaninoff's first symphony, though now considered a significant achievement, was derided by contemporary critics. Compounded by problems in his personal life, Rachmaninoff fell into a depression that lasted for several years. His second piano concerto confirmed his recovery from clinical depression and writer's block. The concerto was dedicated to Nikolai Dahl, a physician who had done much to restore Rachmaninoff's self-confidence.

For more information, please visit - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Concerto_No._2_(Rachmaninoff)

"All by Myself" is a power ballad written and performed by Eric Carmen in 1975.

The verse borrows heavily from the second movement (Adagio Sostenuto) of Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Opus 18, which Carmen believed was in the public domain. Having found it was not only after the record had been issued, Carmen had to come to an agreement with the Rachmaninoff estate. Early versions, therefore, only give writing credit to Carmen while later versions also credit Rachmaninoff. The chorus borrows from a song "Let's Pretend" that Carmen had written for the Raspberries in 1973. Carmen's full version has an extended piano solo and lasts over seven minutes. There is also an edited version of 4 minutes 22 seconds.

The song was the first release from Carmen's first solo LP after leaving the power pop group the Raspberries and was originally recorded by the author and released in December 1975 to great success. It reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 1 on Cash Box Top 100 Singles and number 12 in the UK. The single sold more than one million copies in the United States and was certified gold by the RIAA in April 1976. In a 2006 poll for UK's Five programme Britain's Favourite Break-up Songs Eric Carmen's version of this song was voted seventeenth.

For more information, please visit - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_by_Myself


Tuesday, May 3, 2011

David Meece - Brokenness!





I made this video after I was badly betrayed by a "friend" in a group I was part of on YouTube. The woman was so brazen, that she did not even notice the two fleeting shots of snarling wolves in this video and she wrote a glowing comment in the comment section, which I subsequently removed. Today, this poor lady is deeply into heresy and the thriving ministry she once had on YouTube in now of nought. I cannot forget how much I loved this woman once - as if she was my own daughter. Nonetheless, God has helped me to forgive and move on.

This is the song written and sung by David Meece from his album "Once in a Lifetime"

LYRICS:
In my Brokenness, In my hour of Darkness,
I will lift my hands and Worship You.
In my Brokenness, In my Time of Sadness
I will lift my voice in Praise to You.

Time stand still, as I kneel down before you;
Light draws near
Like waves upon the Shore, You touch me.

In my Brokenness, In these Whispering Shadows,
I will lift the pieces of my heart to You.

Time Stands still, as I kneel down before you,
Light is here,
Your waves of Power and Glory, touch me.

In my Brokenness, In my hour of Darkness;
I will lift my hands and worship You.
I will lift my hands and Worship You!

Hillarious Parody of Michael Fokine's Choreography of THE DYING SWAN. Dancer - Ida Nevaseyneva.




IDA NEVASEYNEVA - real name - Paul Ghiselin
Birthplace: Norfolk, VA
Training: Tidewater Academy, Joffrey Ballet School
Joined Trockadero: May 1995
Other Companies: Ohio Ballet, Festival Ballet of Rhode Island

IDA NEVASAYNEVA. Socialist real ballerina of the working peoples everywhere, comes flushed from her triumphs at the Varna Festival, where she was awarded a specially created plastic medal for Bad Taste.

Comrade Ida became known as a heroine of the Revolution when, after effortlessly boureeing through a mine field, she lobbed a loaded toe shoe into a capitalist bank.

To read more on this talented man, please to to http://www.trockadero.org/paul-ghisel...

THE DYING SWAN
The Dying Swan (originally The Swan) is a ballet choreographed by Mikhail Fokine in 1905 to Camille Saint-Saëns's cello solo Le Cygne from Le Carnaval des Animaux as a pièce d'occasion for the ballerina Anna Pavlova. The short ballet follows the last moments in the life of a swan, and was first presented in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1905. Pavlova performed the dance about 4,000 times. The ballet has since influenced modern interpretations of Odette in Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake and has inspired non-traditional interpretations and various adaptations.
Inspired by swans that she had seen in public parks and Alfred, Lord Tennyson's poem "The Dying Swan", Anna Pavlova (who had just become a ballerina at the Mariinsky Theatre) asked Michel Fokine, who had also read the poem, to create a solo ballet for her for a 1905 concert being given by artists from the chorus of the Imperial Mariinsky Opera. Fokine suggested Saint-Saëns's cello solo, Le Cygne (which Fokine had been playing at home on a mandolin to a friend's piano accompaniment) as the work's musical basis and Pavlova agreed. A rehearsal was arranged and the short dance completed very quickly. Fokine remarked in Dance Magazine (August 1931):
It was almost an improvisation. I danced in front of her, she directly behind me. Then she danced and I walked alongside her, curving her arms and correcting details of poses. Prior to this composition, I was accused of barefooted tendencies and of rejecting toe dancing in general. The Dying Swan was my answer to such criticism. This dance became the symbol of the New Russian Ballet. It was a combination of masterful technique with expressiveness. It was like a proof that the dance could and should satisfy not only the eye, but through the medium of the eye should penetrate the soul.
In 1934, Fokine told Arnold Haskell, author of Balletomania :
Small work as it is, [...] it was 'revolutionary' then, and illustrated admirably the transition between the old and the new, for here I make use of the technique of the old dance and the traditional costume, and a highly developed technique is necessary, but the purpose of the dance is not to display that technique but to create the symbol of the everlasting struggle in this life and all that is mortal. It is a dance of the whole body and not of the limbs only; it appeals not merely to the eye but to the emotions and the imagination.

The Dying Swan was first performed at a gala in the Noblemen's Hall, St. Petersburg, Russia on Friday, 22 December 1905, and first performed in the United States at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York on 18 March 1910, with Pavlova in the role. American dance critic and photographer Carl Van Vechten noted that the ballet was "the most exquisite specimen of [Pavlova's] art which she has yet given to the public." Pavlova performed the role some 4,000 times and, on her deathbed in The Hague, reportedly cried, "Prepare my swan costume."

Fokine's granddaughter Isabelle notes that the ballet does not make "enormous technical demands" on the dancer but it does make "enormous artistic ones because every movement and every gesture should signify a different experience" which is "emerging from someone who is attempting to escape death". She notes that modern performances are significantly different from her grandfather's original conception and that the solo today is often made to appear to be a variation of Swan Lake—"Odette at death's door". The ballet is not about a ballerina being able to transform herself into a swan, she states, but about death, with the swan simply being a metaphor for that.

Please go to the following website for more information on this music and the ballet - http://wapedia.mobi/en/The_Dying_Swan

LOVE NEVER FAILS - Jim Brickman, featuring Amy Sky




If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor, and if I surrender my body to be burned, but do not have love, it profits me nothing. Love is patient, love is kind and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered, does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.......

LOVE NEVER FAILS!

1 Corinthians 13:1-8
Artist - Jim Brickman
Album - Jim Brickman Love Songs
LYRICS:LOVE NEVER FAILS

Love - love is patient love is kind
Love does not worry does not boast
It is not proud it is not rude
It is not easily angered
Love keeps no record of wrongs

Love never fails, never fails
I promise you
My love will never fail
And I will give to you
Faith hope and love

Love does not delight in evil
Love - will always protect
Always trust and always hope
And it will perservere
Love rejoices in truth

Love never fails, never fails
I promise you
My love will never fail
And I will give to you
Faith hope and love

Love never fails, never fails
I promise you
My love will never fail
And I will give to you
Faith hope and love
But the greatest of these is LOVE

HOUTKRUIS - Koos van der Merwe (Prophet)




LYRIEKE van HoutKruis.

OOOOOOOOOOO, daar was ‘n houtkruis,
'n Redder aan 'n houtkruis vasgeslaan
Ja daar was ‘n houtkruis
En daarom sal ek sing

Ek onthou vir Dawid,
Voor die ark het hy gedans en juig
Na die kruis van Jesus,
Hoe sal ons kan hande vou en swyg

Want daar was 'n Houtkruis
Ja,'n Redder aan 'n Houtkruis vasgeslaan
Ja, daar was 'n houtkruis
En daarom sal ek sing

Wie sal my kan stilmaak
Wie sal my kitaar se snaar afbreek
Wie sal my kan doodmaak
As my voete in dans wil, los wil breek

Want daar was 'n Houtkruis
Ja,'n Redder aan 'n Houtkruis vasgeslaan
Ja, daar was 'n houtkruis
En daarom sal ek sing

Ek vra nie hoe jy voel nie
As gevoelens hoegenaamd besluite raak
Dan was daar nooit die pyn nie
Toe die spykers deur die bloed daardie Houtkruis kraak

Want daar was 'n Houtkruis
Ja,'n Redder aan 'n Houtkruis vasgeslaan
Ja, daar was 'n houtkruis
En daarom sal ek sing

OOOOOOOOOOO,daar was 'n Houtkruis
Ja,'n Redder aan 'n Houtkruis vasgeslaan
Ja, daar was 'n houtkruis
En daarom sal ek sing

Scott Wesley Brown - Can you hear the Echoes




Can You Hear The Echoes
Written by Scott Wesley Brown
Saturday, 18 September 2004

Can you hear the echoes
Of the hammer falling on the wooden cross
Can you hear them as the blood flows
The echoes of the cross

Can you hear Him weeping
As the Father turns His face
Forsaken by earth and heaven
With the nails and thorns of grace

And with every hammer blow
god's work was made complete
Our sin exchanged for His righteousness
Through willing hands and feet.

Can you fell the crushing weight
Of our sin upon His back
As He hangs in pain and nakedness
While the Roman soldiers laugh

Can we ever comprehend
It pleased God to crush His Son
That through this just injustice
Could such a mercy come

But can you dare imagine
How this wrong could be so right
Through the echoes of the cross
His death has brought us life

Oh I cannot be silent
I cannot be still
What Crhist has done for you and me
Still echoes from Calvary's hill

Can you hear the echoes
Of the hammer falling on the wooden cross
Can you hear them as His love flows
The echoes of the cross

Scott Wesley Brown
Koos van der Merwe

South Africa - MARANATHA Music.

c.Song Ward Music (ASCAP) /
MAR Gospel Music Publishers

The Law/Gospel Distinction 1 - Monty Lloyd Collier.





On August 9, 2009, Mr. Collier began a sermon series on the Law/Gospel Distinction.
In this first sermon, the subject is introduced, definitions are given, and a demonstration of the Law/Gospel Distinction is made. If you have not studied Law/Gospel Distinction, then you have probably never studied Calvinism.

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Law Gospel Distinction 2 - Monty Lloyd Collier.




Here is the second sermon in Mr. Collier's series on The Law \ Gospel Distinction.
Mr. Collier examines how the Law and the Gospel identify, then Mr. Collier shows how they differ.

The Law / Gospel Distinction 3 - Monty Lloyd Collier.




This is Mr. Collier's third sermon on Law / Gospel Distinction. The sermon was preached to Geneva Dutch Calvinist Church, Kingsport, Tennessee.

Visit our myspace page at:
http://www.myspace.com/geneva_dutch_calvinist
You can also read Mr. Collier's sermons on our MySpace page, or obtain contact information about Geneva Dutch Calvinist Church.

In this sermon, Mr. Collier examines two common methods of mixing Law and Gospel. These methods are used by false teachers to this very day. After examining the two false methods, Mr. Collier presents the proper distinction between Law and Gospel. You will also hear how Martin Luther was converted in this sermon. Finally, Mr. Collier gives some common examples of how false teachers mix Law and Gospel.

The Law / Gospel Distinction 4 - Monty Lloyd Collier.




This series on the Law / Gospel Distinction continues with an examination of James 2:14-26.

Does this passage teach Law or Gospel?
Watch the video and find out how to answer Roman Catholics, proponents of Lordship Salvation, and Federal Vision.

The Law / Gospel Distinction - Monty Lloyd Collier.




One insidious method of denying Justification By Faith Alone is to simply deny the Covenant of Works.
Some of the individuals who are guilty of mixing the Law and the Gospel in this manner actually profess to be Reformed in their theology. For example, those who follow John Murray (Presbyterian), John Piper (Baptist), and those that follow Douglas Wilson (Federal Vision) deny the Covenant of Works and contradict the Bible, while actually professing to be Reformed.

In this sermon, Mr. Collier demonstrates the Covenant of Works from Scripture Alone. In the next sermon, we will see how a denial of the Covenant of Works necessarily leads to mixing the Law and the Gospel and denying Justification By Faith Alone.