Abendblätter, Walzer (1863) - Jacques Offenbach

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @antares7880
    @antares7880 2 года назад +11

    This recording is a rare opportunity to listen to Offenbach's twin-brother of Johann's "Morgenblatter". Both waltzes, which had their premiere at Concordia Ball, are excellent, and the audience of that time must have been really lucky to participate in the premiere of such great dances by two leading composers of popular music.

  • @mariowiwaPL
    @mariowiwaPL 2 года назад +6

    Amazing record

  • @JuxBrüder
    @JuxBrüder Год назад +5

    This video is an extremely rare sound
    source . I am unbelievable to be able
    to listen to the full orchestral version of
    the elegant Evening Papers waltz by Jaques Offenbach !
    It's a miracle to be able to listen to this by a real sound !!! 😃 
    Where did you find out this orchestral parts set scores ?
    Is it available now ?
    Anyway nice orchestral performance 👍

    • @Musicaprima75
      @Musicaprima75 11 месяцев назад +2

      Published by Jean-Christophe Keck OEK Boosey & Hawkes Berlin.

  • @fraustrauss
    @fraustrauss 8 месяцев назад

    i need this on spotify😞😞

  • @richardduployen6429
    @richardduployen6429 2 года назад +2

    Thank you. Enchanting! Who's playing? The main theme (there are several others) is similar to Fantasio's (1872) (Finale Act 2). O. did re-use themes occasionally. For instance two dances from the piano collection (Décameron Dramatique) (1854) are used in the ballets of the expanded "Orphée" (1874). the Jacques Offenbach Society

    • @Adamov1
      @Adamov1  2 года назад

      Thank you for your comment. Unfortunately, I don't have any information regarding what orchestra performs this wonderful piece or who conducted it. If I had known, I would have included that information in the description. There is also a very good piano recording of this piece by Marco Sollini: /watch?v=_WbD2poX-w8

    • @revivalharpsichord5078
      @revivalharpsichord5078 Год назад

      @@Adamov1 Can you at least tell us the title of the album from which you took this? I'd love to buy it, but all my searches on Amazon come up empty.

    • @Adamov1
      @Adamov1  Год назад +1

      @@revivalharpsichord5078 I don't have any information about the album, I found this standalone recording online several years ago.

    • @PerCPH2200
      @PerCPH2200 Год назад

      There are many, many old cassette - and reel-tapes (now decaying fast) with dances and marches (etc) recorded from radio-broadcasts floating around with old music lovers - in 99+% without identification of orchestra and/or conductor. Some of them surface here on YT from time to time. Broadcasting orchestras in Austria, Germany and Holland dominate, but for a given archive recording it is down to speculation. Broadcasting-conductors of those days were almost exclusively men, such as Max Schönherr in Wien, Benedict Silbermann with Radio Hilversum, Wilhelm Stephan in Hamburg, etc, etc. As far as I know, Grethe Kolbe in Copenhagen was the only female conductor of this music and era.
      The sad thing is, that among those old tape-recordings are instances of such archive recordings being the only known full orchestra recording - and no copy of the complete orchestra sheet music has been traced to this day.

  • @fraustrauss
    @fraustrauss 8 месяцев назад

    6:23 love this part lol

  • @christophesingio9801
    @christophesingio9801 Год назад

    C'est joli. Mais sans surprise. Offenbach a beaucoup composé "au kilomètre"..