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Winylowe wydanie trzeciego albumu grupy Eurythmics zatytułowanego "Touch". Album, z którego pochodzą mega hity grupy: "Who's That Girl?", "Right by Your Side" i "Here Comes the Rain Again" ukazał się w 1983 roku. Tracklista: Side A 1. Here Comes the Rain Again 2. Regrets 3. Right By Your Side 4. Cool Blue 5. Who's That Girl Side B 1. The First Cut 2. Aqua 3. No Fear, No Hate, No Pain (No Broken Hearts) [Remastered] 4. Paint a Rumour


  • Wykonawca Eurythmics
  • Data premiery 2018-04-13
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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  By the early 1780s Haydn had been in the employ of Prince Nikolaus Esterházy for some twenty years. Yet, although his duties kept him at court for much of the year, his music and his reputation had already reached right across Europe, as far as Spain and England. Since there were no copyright laws to speak of in those days, dissemination of music was often through the work of publishers who had no compunction in re-engraving pirated versions of orchestral parts (the usual form of publication) if they could lay their hands on manuscript versions by disreputable copyists. Haydn, though obviously averse to publications of his music that gave him no financial reward, was astute enough a businessman often to have his works brought out by more than one publisher. Such was the case with Symphonies 76, 77 and 78, issued in the early 1780s by no fewer than three companies: Torricella in Vienna, Boyer in Paris and Forster in London. (Mozart tried a similar ploy by selling a manuscript to one publisher and then writing the music out again from memory to sell to another.) These three symphonies, not only the first since numbers 6, 7 and 8 to be written as a set (a publishing rather than a performing practice) were also the first Haydn wrote expressly for performance outside the confines of Eszterháza. They were intended for a concert tour to London, a trip that Haydn never made (he had to wait until the prince’s death in 1790 for the impresario Johann Peter Salomon finally to lure him to London). In 1781 (the year he began his association with the publisher William Forster) Haydn appears to have been invited to introduce in person some of his operas and symphonies to the London musical public. His Symphony No 53 had been performed with great success at one of the Bach-Abel concerts (run by the ‘London Bach’, Johann Christian and Karl Friedrich Abel, both of whom had taught Mozart on his visit to London in 1764) and The Morning Herald reported in November 1781 that Haydn ‘the Shakespeare of musical composition is hourly expected.’† He had still not arrived by February 1783 when the Herald again bemoaned that ‘we have got neither him nor his music—however the music is certainly to come—the musician, most probably, will remain in Vienna’. The English music historian Dr Charles Burney also wrote in a letter at about the same time, I have stimulated a wish to get Haydn over as opera composer—but mum mum—yet—a correspondence is opened, and there is a great likelihood of it, if these cabals, and litigations ruin not the opera entirely … Two years later, when the composer was still anxiously awaited, it was even lightheartedly mooted that he might be kidnapped, as the following, from another journal, the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, suggests: This wonderful man, who is the Shakespeare of music, and the triumph ot the age in which we live, is doomed to reside in the court of a miserable German Prince, who is at once incapable of rewarding him, and unworthy of the honour … would it not be an achievement equal to a pilgrimage, for some aspiring youths to rescue him from his fortune and transplant him to Great Britain, the country for which his music seems to be made? In his letter offering the three symphonies to Boyer in Paris, Haydn describes them as ‘beautiful, elegant and by no means over-lengthy … they are all very easy, and without too much concertante’. They do indeed stand out from the surrounding Eszterháza works, lacking some of the idiosyncracies that, although suitable for his own performances at the court, might have deterred foreign performers. That is not to say, however, that they lack anything in originality or quality. Symphony No 76, like the other two, has the standard four movements and, unlike many of his other symphonies, no slow introduction to the first. Here we are launched straight into the first subject, an alternation of vigorously arpeggiated chords and a restrained, downward-moving phrase. There is no second subject as such, unless we include the brief pianissimo phrase (in the tonic key) that follows the second appearance of the falling idea. The Adagio begins with the strings alone, making the entrance of the wind on a pianissimo chord all the more effective; they return at the climax of the movement, a fortissimo tour de force of demisemiquavers and staccato semiquavers. The Minuet is followed by a lighthearted Rondo, featuring some brief woodwind solos before the final coda. The most notable thing about Symphony No 77 is its finale, one of the first examples of a sonata-rondo form, literally a combination of sonata form with the rondo in which the C section of the A–B–A–C–A comprises a development of earlier material rather than a new theme. The preceding movements are no less distinctive: an opening Vivace with, this time, a true second subject; a leisurely, often restrained Andante sostenuto with the strings muted; and a Minuet of a vigour that looks forward to the true scherzo. The first movement of Symphony No 78 has an urgency in keeping with its key, C minor. The second subject turns to the relative major, E flat, and it this key rather than the tonic that ultimately dominates the exposition. The development features some fine contrapuntal writing where fragments of both subjects are tossed between the various instruments. The Adagio returns to E flat major. Unlike the slow movements of the other two symphonies, the wind instruments are integrated lnto the texture from the start, while the stateliness of the music itself looks forward to the late ‘London’ symphonies. The C major Minuet is followed by a Presto rondo whose thinly scored B section turns to C major. When the same theme reappears later, so does the major mode, which remains to the end of the symphony. Matthew Rye © 1991  


  • Wykonawca Hanover Band
  • Data premiery 2006-03-07
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista: 1. Get Well Soon2. Heartbeat3. Softly, Softly4. Let Me Go Lover5. Happy Days and Lonely Nights6. If Anyone Finds This (I Love You) [feat. Anne Warren]7. Evermore8. I'll Come When You Call9. The Very First Christmas of All10. For Now, Forever11. You Are My First Love12. It Only Hurts for a Little While13. Ave Maria14. Knock On Any Door15. In Love16. Mr. Wonderful17. Scarlet Ribbons18. Passing Strangers19. I'll Remember Today20. Forgive Me Darling21. In My Life22. Real Love23. Who Knows?24. Goodbye, Jimmy, Goodbye25. A Message from Jimmy26. Forever27. My Little Corner of the World28. Living for the Day29. Tammy Tell Me True30. Pianissimo31. As Simple As That


  • Wykonawca Murray Ruby
  • Data premiery 2019-03-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: 1. Unfastened 2. Maddy 3. Little Darling 4. After The Love 5. Echoes Of Dreams 6. Little Bee 7. Little Sparrow 8. Mary Mary 9. My Love 10. Unfolding 11. Man In Your Eyes 12. I Miss You 13. Imagine (Feat. Mwezi) [Written By John Lennon] 14. The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face (Written By Ewan Maccoll)


  • Wykonawca Malia
  • Data premiery 2018-06-22
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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Tracklista:1. Tie Me Up (First Contact)2. When You Looked at Me (First Meeting)3. Breaking Patterns Part 1 (The Relationship)4. Breaking Patterns Part 2 (The Break Up)5. A Sudden Sickness6. A Scar a Past (Formative Years)7. Pass Pass Me By (Home Town/family Affairs)8. I Say This Twice (A New Meeting)9. Look Inside (A New Love/a New Me)


  • Wykonawca Nils Bech
  • Data premiery 2013-01-14
  • Nośnik CD
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Pochodzący z Rosji wybitny kompozytor Igor Fiodorowicz Strawinski, urodzony w 1882 roku w Oranienbaumie, zmarła w 1971 roku w Nowym Jorku. Prócz komponowaniem, był wirtuozem pianina, oraz trudnił się dyrygenturą. Komponował on muzykę poważną. Tracklista: 1. Part I: L'adoration De La Terre (The Adoration Of The Earth) 2. Part II: Le Sacrifice (The Sacrifice) 3. Premiere Donne (First Deal): Alla Breve - Moderato Assai - Tranquillo 4. Deuxieme Donne (Second Deal): Alla Breve - Marcia - Variazioni 1 - 5 - Coda - Marcia 5. Troisieme Donne (Third Deal): Alla Breve - Valse - Presto - Tempo Del Principio 6. I. Vivace 7. II. Arioso 8. III. Rondo


  • Wykonawca Rahbari Alexander
  • Data premiery 2004-01-01
  • Nośnik CD

It is typical of Gustav Mahler’s paradoxical nature that during his years of maturity as a composer he worked exclusively in two dissimilar genres, exploring the intimacy and formal compactness of the lied and the public expansiveness of the symphony. It is also characteristic that in Mahler’s output these two genres were mutually influential and that eventually they fused in a work of commanding inventiveness, subtlety and power: Das Lied von der Erde (1907–8). This recording encompasses the first half of Mahler’s career as a song-writer, and contains (with the exception of two unfinished early songs and those that have been lost) all of his songs composed up to 1890. Already during this period, many of Mahler’s songs were related to other, larger-scale works, producing a web of cross-references and allusions. As a student in Vienna during the late 1870s Mahler was already composing songs, but no complete example from this period survives. From 1878 until the early 1880s Mahler worked on two major projects: the cantata Das klagende Lied (published in a revised form in 1899) and the never-to-be finished opera Rübezahl, of which only the libretto survives. In the summer of 1879 the young composer fell in love with Josephine Poisl, the daughter of the postmaster at his home town, Iglau. This first love turned Mahler’s thoughts towards a more intimate musical form and in February 1880 he began work on a collection of five songs, settings of his own texts, dedicated to Josephine. During the spring the romance petered out and Mahler completed only three of the songs, Im Lenz, Winterlied and Maitanz im Grünen. Im Lenz is built up out of the alternation of two contrasting musical ideas, a fast, vigorous setting of the first and third stanzas, and a slower, more mysterious passage for the daydreamer’s answers in the second and fourth stanzas. The first section alludes to material from Das klagende Lied but the second goes further and quotes directly from the cantata. Winterlied begins in relaxed mood with a gently lilting accompaniment that eventually incorporates trills and semiquaver decoration to suggest the spinning wheel, but the song culminates in the despairing outburst of the last three lines. There follows an extended coda for the piano which draws on Waldmärchen (the first part of Das klagende Lied) for its consolatory closing bars. These two songs are quite different in style to the third: they both aspire to the sophistication of lieder, while Maitanz im Grünen is a Gesang, a simpler song in a style influenced by popular and folk music. Maitanz was eventually published, slightly altered, as the third of the Lieder und Gesänge under the title Hans und Grete. Here it is followed by Winterlied and Im Lenz, the two other songs completed in 1880. For all its apparent simplicity, Hans und Grete is an important work in Mahler’s oeuvre. He used some of its text (and presumably its music) in Rübezahl. But the song is most significant because it is the earliest manifestation of Mahler’s fascination for the Ländler (a type of rustic waltz), which is portrayed in the song with robust simplicity. The idiom and some of the music from this song were re-used in the scherzo of Mahler’s Symphony No 1, and in his later works the dance was subjected to increasingly imaginative transformation. Having previously supported himself chiefly by teaching, Mahler entered (as he called it) ‘the hell of theatrical life’ during the summer of 1880 when he obtained a temporary appointment as conductor (and odd-job man) at a tiny summer theatre at Bad Hall. Four years later he had made considerable progress up the ladder of success – he was a conductor at the theatre in Kassel – and was in love again. And for a second time love generated the creative momentum that resulted in the composition of songs, in this case Mahler’s first large-scale masterpiece, the song-cycle Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen. The cycle looks backwards and forwards. At the end a passage from Waldmärchen is quoted for poetic reasons: on both occasions the music accompanies the passage into sleep of a character who will never wake. However, Mahler recognized that some of the music of the cycle had the potential for symphonic expansion, and material from the second and fourth songs appears in the first and third movements of the Symphony No 1, completed four years later. The Gesellen songs began life in December 1884 as a group of six poems addressed to Johanna Richter, an opera-singer at Kassel, but its subsequent history is far from simple and accounts for the significance of Colin Matthews’s new edition, recorded here for the first time. Mahler set four of the poems in the mid-1880s but the earliest score to survive is a neat copy of a version for voice and piano dating from around 1891. The cycle was orchestrated and extensively revised during the 1890s. The first performance, conducted by Mahler, was given in 1896, and the orchestral score and a new version for voice and piano were published the following year. However, through some oversight these two publications differ in significant details; the version with piano accompaniment represents an intermediate stage in the work’s evolution, somewhere between the 1891 copy and the composer’s final thoughts embodied in the published full score. Colin Matthews has therefore prepared a new edition for voice and piano which corresponds to Mahler’s orchestral version. Mahler’s verses are not great poetry. The vocabulary is conventional and the image of a grief-stricken wanderer striving for forgetfulness was a Romantic commonplace. The first poem even borrows heavily from two folk texts included in Des Knaben Wunderhorn. But Mahler’s music transcends the texts’ limitations, and possesses both originality and universality. The work is the first of Mahler’s large-scale compositions to project a spiritual journey in music which is constantly evolving, developing and moving onwards. The poet may achieve peace in death beneath the linden tree, but the music is as much concerned with mirroring the eternal regeneration of Nature. The Lieder und Gesänge, published in 1892, are not a song-cycle, but simply collect together songs composed over a period of ten years. (The designation ‘aus der Jugendzeit’ was added by the publisher after Mahler’s death.) Hans und Grete is the third of the Poisl songs of 1880 and Frühlingsmorgen and Erinnerung were probably written shortly after its completion. Frühlingsmorgen uses a melodic phrase from Waldmärchen – the common poetic idea is again that of sleep – while Erinnerung is the first of Mahler’s songs about artistic creation. By 1887 Mahler was a conductor at the Leipzig Stadttheater, and it is likely that the two Molina settings were composed for the Leipzig premiere of Molina’s Don Juan in October 1887. Both songs are brief and uncomplicated, Serenade having the subtitle ‘with the accompaniment of wind instruments’ and Phantasie a footnote recommending the use of a harp for the accompaniment. In 1806 Achim von Arnim and Clemens Brentano published the first volume of a collection of folk poetry entitled Des Knaben Wunderhorn. Some of the poems included were accurate transcriptions of folk texts, while others were original poems by the editors. The majority, though, fell between these two extremes; based on popular sources they presented a highly romanticized vision of folk poetry. Exactly when Mahler became acquainted with the collection is uncertain. His own early texts are all written in a pseudo-folk idiom, and Wenn mein Schatz Hochzeit macht is obviously based on a poem included in the Wunderhorn. Mahler’s own comments are contradictory, but the songs in Books II and III of the Lieder und Gesänge are his first acknowledged Wunderhorn settings. Mahler met Weber’s grandson in 1887. Captain von Weber owned his grandfather’s sketches for a comic opera entitled Die drei Pintos and, impressed by the young conductor’s enthusiasm for Weber’s music, asked Mahler to complete the work. Mahler’s version of the opera had some success on German stages, but the project also brought Mahler into contact with the Captain’s family. The result was an affair with von Weber’s wife, Marion, and the composition of some Wunderhorn songs for his children. Between 1887 and 1890 further Wunderhorn settings followed to complete the last two books of the Lieder und Gesänge. The music of Mahler’s Wunderhorn songs matches perfectly the fusion of folk-like simplicity and artistic sophistication in Arnim and Brentano’s texts. Some of the songs take popular music as their starting point, for example, the Ländler (Selbstgefühl) or the military march (Aus! Aus!). Others use melodic shapes typical of German folk-song (Um schlimme Kinder artig zu machen), or allude to folk melodies associated with the original text (Zu Strassburg auf der Schanz’). The result is a musical language of extraordinary flexibility which can reflect the humour of Starke Einbildungskraft, the irony in the girl’s responses in Aus! Aus!, and the despair and desolation of Nicht wiedersehen! Mahler never orchestrated the Lieder und Gesänge, though he began an orchestral version of Zu Strassburg auf der Schanz’. One song did achieve a purely instrumental form: Ablösung im Sommer is the basis of the third movement of Mahler’s Symphony No 3. Looking back at his student songs, Mahler said in 1896: ‘The songs I wrote at that time were inadequately worked out, as my imagination was still too wild and undisciplined. For it’s the hardest of tasks, and requires the highest art and skill, to achieve something great in a small space.’ The songs of the 1880s show how well he had mastered the miniaturist’s art. Paul Banks © 1983


  • Wykonawca Baker Janet
  • Data premiery 2004-01-01
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:1. 7th Ray2. Tokyo's Dancing3. Little Radio5. Julian4. First Light of Winter6. Colours So Fine7. It Was Given8. Already Fine


  • Wykonawca Miranda Lee Richards
  • Data premiery 1900-01-01
  • Nośnik Vinyl / 12" Album
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