| Eraserhead Serenade (Crystal Method vs Geza X vs Eraserhead) |
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RIAA: "Eraserhead Serenade"
Peter Ivers: "In Heaven (Lady in the Radiator
Song)" (from Eraserhead)
Crystal Method: "I'm Ready for Action"
Geza X: "Mean Mr. Mommy Man"
David Lynch had an infection, a persistent
infection that took years to process and give
full birth to, and he spread it to several
others around him. These included Jack
Nance, the man who gave a body to the dark
spirit that is the main character in
Eraserhead. The film was the first full-term
progeny of Mr. Lynch. The Lady in the
Radiator was there, the Baby-Not-a-Baby was
there... and so were some of the worst fever
dreams ever sweated out.
This track captures the essence of
Eraserhead: its disjointedness, its fearful
happenings, its primal terror. Plus beats!
From the album Mashed in Plastic
http://www.mashedinplastic.co.uk
Mashup by RIAA http://www.m-1.us/
Video by The Reborn Identity
http://www.rebornidentity.com Tags : eraserhead serenade david lynch mashed in plastic riaa mashup crsytal method geza |
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Affichage : 1576
Durée : 298 s |
| Geza Hosszu Legocky (Rondo Capriccioso) LIVE |
 |
Camille Saint-Saens: Introduction & Rondo
Capriccioso.
Geza Hosszu Legocky and The NHK Youth
Orchestra.
Charles Dutoit, Conductor
Live from Beppu (Japan) 2002
Biography
Praised by musicians, audiences, and music
critics as a rising "tour de force" in the
classical music scene, Géza Hosszu-Legocky's
critical acclaim culminated with the
nomination of two Grammy® Awards, including
the "Best Classical Music Album 2005" and
"Best Chamber Music Recording 2005" for his
recording of the Schumann Violin Sonata in A
minor and other chamber music works with an
all-star cast including Martha Argerich,
Maxim Vengerov, Lilya Zilberstein, and
Gabriela Montero on EMI Classics recorded in
2004. In 2003, he released his first EMI
Classics recording performing traditional
Hungarian Gypsy music with his ensemble "The
5 DeVils".
Known for his passionate and fiery
interpretations of classical, jazz, and
Hungarian gypsy music, he first made his
public debut at the age of 9 on Austrian
Television "ORF". Since then, he has
performed with the National Hungarian
Orchestra of Budapest and performed in
Argentina, France, Germany, Spain, Japan,
Italy, and the USA.
As a guest soloist, he has been invited to
perform with the major orchestras and
ensembles throughout the world including the
Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France with
Myung-Whun Chung, NHK Orchestra in Tokyo with
Charles Dutoit, and the Kremerata Baltica
with Gidon Kremer. His regular chamber music
partners include Martha Argerich, Gautier
Capucon, Renaud Capucon, Nelson Freire, Ivry
Gitlis, Ida Haendel, Gabriela Montero, Vadim
Repin, and Giorgia Tomassi.
He continues to perform regularly at the top
music festivals around the world including
Aspen Festival (USA), Beppu Festival (Japan),
Buenos Aires Festival (Argentina),
Ludwigsburg Festival (Germany), Lugano
Festival (Italy), Ruhr Piano Festival
(Germany), Saratoga Festival (USA), Taipei
Festival (Taiwan), Verbier Music Festival
(Switzerland), and many others. In 1999 and
2000, he performed in sold-out concerts at
the prestigious Verbier Festival with Roby
Lakatos and Friends which also included
artists such as Ida Haendel, Vadim Repin, and
Sayaka Shoji. In 2003, he was invited by the
Violin Festival in Cassis (France) to perform
with Martha Argerich, Ruggiero Ricci, and
Ivry Gitlis. At the 2005 Saratoga Festival,
Géza made his recital debut with Martha
Argerich to thunderous standing ovations.
He continues to perform in recitals and
concerts in the world's most renowned concert
halls including Salle de Pleyel (Paris),
Teatro Color (Buenos Aires), Théâtre des
Champes Elysees (Paris), and Auditorium du
Louvre (Paris).
2001 was a year of significant attention for
Géza. He was among only the selected few
young artists from around the world invited
to participate in the prestigious Dorothy
Delay Symposium and Master Classes at the
Juilliard School of Music in the class of
violinist Robert McDuffie. Upon hearing him,
McDuffie immediately engaged him to perform
at the Aspen Music Festival in an
international concert broadcast on NPR,
reaching over three million listeners
worldwide.
Offstage, Géza has made a cameo appearance
as a gypsy violinist in Francois Girard's
1998 Academy-award winning film The Red
Violin. In 2001, he and Martha Argerich were
profiled in Georges Gachot's feature film
Conversations Nocturnes. This documentary was
exhibited at the world's major international
film festivals, including the Cannes Film
Festival and won numerous awards including
the PRIX ITALIA 2002 Documentary on "Music
and Arts".
In addition to classical music, Géza has a
passion for performing traditional Hungarian
gypsy music and created his award-winning
ensemble "The 5 DeVils" and have performed at
the major festivals in South America and
Europe.
Géza was born in 1985 and is a top honours
student at the Vienna Academy of Music. His
teachers and coaches have included Ruggiero
Ricci, Ivry Gitlis, Ida Haendel, Tibor Varga,
Dora Schwarzberg, and Marina Sokorova. He
holds a dual Swiss and American citizenship
and currently resides in Lausanne,
Switzerland.
For more information, you are welcome to
visit Geza's Official Home Page here:
http://gezahosszulegocky.com/home.html Tags : hosszu legocky dutoit charles nhk philharmonic symphony orchestra chamber violinist gitlis heifetz menuhin classical world music folk |
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Affichage : 9363
Durée : 596 s |
| Géza Anda plays Brahms Paganini Variations book II |
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Johannes Brahms (1833-1897):
Variationen in a über ein Thema von
Paganini, "Studien für Pianoforte", opus 35
Heft II
Variations on a Theme by Paganini opus 35,
second book (14 variations)
Géza Anda, piano (recorded in 1953)
Since his death in 1976 at the age of 54,
Géza Anda's considerable reputation has
faded somewhat from view. But in his heyday
he was widely regarded as a transcendent
pianist, possessed of a natural technique
that gave his performances an intimate
quality -- even when he was scaling the
Himalayan heights of his signature Brahms B
flat major concerto. It was with that work
that he made his debut in 1939 in Budapest
under Willem Mengelberg.
Anda was born in 1921 in Budapest; after
studying with Imre Stefaniai and Imre
Keeri-Szanto, he became a piano pupil of
Ernst von Dohnányi at the Royal Music
Academy. A stipend allowed him to travel to
Berlin, where he performed Franck's Symphonic
Variations under Furtwängler. Anda remained
in Berlin during the first years of World War
II, but in 1942 he fled to Switzerland, where
he encountered the great pianist and teacher
Edwin Fischer. Fischer was a proponent of
performing the Mozart piano concertos while
conducting from the keyboard, and Anda would
later adopt this practice, adding bench-led
performances of all the concertos (even the
early ones) to his repertoire. Anda was among
the first to explore the whole range of
Mozart's concertos, at a time when only the
"greatest hits" were heard in concert halls;
his outstanding 1960s recordings of the
complete cycle with the Camerata Academica of
the Salzburg Mozarteum remain a milestone in
the history of recorded music.
Anda's style was noteworthy for its
transparency of texture and its singing
qualities, which led Furtwängler to dub him
a "troubadour" of the piano. His flawless
technique allowed him to invest his
performances with considerable individuality:
his readings of Schumann, for instance, were
breathtakingly multidimensional, full of
asides and highly appropriate introspective
commentary conveyed from within Schumann's
notes. He was especially influenced by his
artistic partnership with the great Romanian
pianist Clara Haskil, with whom he played
two-piano repertoire from 1953 to 1958. Her
moral commitment to conveying music's essence
deepened Anda's own musical insight; his
subsequent performances reflected a new
harnessing of Anda's strong musical
personality to the service of the music's
meaning.
Although his repertoire was wide and ranged
across core Classical-Romantic territory, it
is likely that Anda will be most remembered
for his interpretations of the music of his
countryman Béla Bartók, whose three piano
concertos he recorded in 1959 and 1960. These
performances are masterpieces of technical
ease and artistic mastery, and remain
available in commercial release.
The Concours Géza Anda is an international
piano competition that takes place every
three years in Zürich.
Mark Satola, All Music Guide Tags : Géza Anda Johannes Brahms Paganini Variations opus 35 second book piano historic recording |
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Affichage : 2029
Durée : 660 s |
| Geza Hosszu Legocky & The Kremerata Baltica - Part 1 |
 |
J.S.Bach Concerto for violin, strings &
continuo No. 1 in A minor, BWV 1041.
1st Mouvment.Allegro
Live from the Salle Pleyel (Paris) 2007
Biography
Praised by musicians, audiences, and music
critics as a rising "tour de force" in the
classical music scene, Géza Hosszu-Legocky's
critical acclaim culminated with the
nomination of two Grammy® Awards, including
the "Best Classical Music Album 2005" and
"Best Chamber Music Recording 2005" for his
recording of the Schumann Violin Sonata in A
minor and other chamber music works with an
all-star cast including Martha Argerich,
Maxim Vengerov, Lilya Zilberstein, and
Gabriela Montero on EMI Classics recorded in
2004. In 2003, he released his first EMI
Classics recording performing traditional
Hungarian Gypsy music with his ensemble "The
5 DeVils".
Known for his passionate and fiery
interpretations of classical, jazz, and
Hungarian gypsy music, he first made his
public debut at the age of 9 on Austrian
Television "ORF". Since then, he has
performed with the National Hungarian
Orchestra of Budapest and performed in
Argentina, France, Germany, Spain, Japan,
Italy, and the USA.
As a guest soloist, he has been invited to
perform with the major orchestras and
ensembles throughout the world including the
Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France with
Myung-Whun Chung, NHK Orchestra in Tokyo with
Charles Dutoit, and the Kremerata Baltica
with Gidon Kremer. His regular chamber music
partners include Martha Argerich, Gautier
Capucon, Renaud Capucon, Nelson Freire, Ivry
Gitlis, Ida Haendel, Gabriela Montero, Vadim
Repin, and Giorgia Tomassi.
He continues to perform regularly at the top
music festivals around the world including
Aspen Festival (USA), Beppu Festival (Japan),
Buenos Aires Festival (Argentina),
Ludwigsburg Festival (Germany), Lugano
Festival (Italy), Ruhr Piano Festival
(Germany), Saratoga Festival (USA), Taipei
Festival (Taiwan), Verbier Music Festival
(Switzerland), and many others. In 1999 and
2000, he performed in sold-out concerts at
the prestigious Verbier Festival with Roby
Lakatos and Friends which also included
artists such as Ida Haendel, Vadim Repin, and
Sayaka Shoji. In 2003, he was invited by the
Violin Festival in Cassis (France) to perform
with Martha Argerich, Ruggiero Ricci, and
Ivry Gitlis. At the 2005 Saratoga Festival,
Géza made his recital debut with Martha
Argerich to thunderous standing ovations.
He continues to perform in recitals and
concerts in the world's most renowned concert
halls including Salle de Pleyel (Paris),
Teatro Color (Buenos Aires), Théâtre des
Champes Elysees (Paris), and Auditorium du
Louvre (Paris).
2001 was a year of significant attention for
Géza. He was among only the selected few
young artists from around the world invited
to participate in the prestigious Dorothy
Delay Symposium and Master Classes at the
Juilliard School of Music in the class of
violinist Robert McDuffie. Upon hearing him,
McDuffie immediately engaged him to perform
at the Aspen Music Festival in an
international concert broadcast on NPR,
reaching over three million listeners
worldwide.
Offstage, Géza has made a cameo appearance
as a gypsy violinist in Francois Girard's
1998 Academy-award winning film The Red
Violin. In 2001, he and Martha Argerich were
profiled in Georges Gachot's feature film
Conversations Nocturnes. This documentary was
exhibited at the world's major international
film festivals, including the Cannes Film
Festival and won numerous awards including
the PRIX ITALIA 2002 Documentary on "Music
and Arts".
In addition to classical music, Géza has a
passion for performing traditional Hungarian
gypsy music and created his award-winning
ensemble "The 5 DeVils" and have performed at
the major festivals in South America and
Europe.
Géza was born in 1985 and is a top honours
student at the Vienna Academy of Music. His
teachers and coaches have included Ruggiero
Ricci, Ivry Gitlis, Ida Haendel, Tibor Varga,
Dora Schwarzberg, and Marina Sokorova. He
holds a dual Swiss and American citizenship
and currently resides in Lausanne,
Switzerland.
For more information, you are welcome to
visit Geza's Official Home Page here:
http://gezahosszulegocky.com/home.html Tags : hosszu legocky kremerata baltica chamber pleyel hall bach classical blues folk world music soul alternative |
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Affichage : 6353
Durée : 234 s |
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