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The Red Violin (French: Le Violon Rouge) is a 1998 drama film directed by François Girard and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Carlo Cecchi and Sylvia Chang.It spans four centuries and five countries telling the story of a mysterious red-coloured violin and its many owners.
1968: A book about Eduard Sõrmus by Estonian musicologist Harri Kõrvits was published 1975: The film "Red Violin" (East Germany-Russia), Victor Lorenz starring as Eduard Sõrmus 1978: Post Office of the USSR – envelope "Estonian revolutionary and musician Eduard Sõrmus 1878–1940", artist Pyotr Bendel; special cancellation dated 9 July ...
Antonietta is a novel written by American Pulitzer-Prize winning author John Hersey.Published in 1991, the novel traces the history of the titular violin, a fictitious creation of Antonio Stradivari, recounting its usage under multiple owners interspersed with what Hersey describes as "intermezzi", interludes of fact.
The flute part to "The Red Back Book" ca. 1912 [3] "The Red Back Book" earned a Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music Performance of 1973. [4] [5] It spent 54 weeks on Billboard's Top 100 Albums List; 84 weeks on the Top Classical Albums List, including 6 separate appearances at #1; and 12 weeks on the Top Jazz Album List. It was the magazine's ...
Voice of the Violin, Sony Classical 1 — 2007 Corigliano The Red Violin, Sony 1 — 2007 The Essential Joshua Bell, Sony BMG Masterworks 19 — 2008 Vivaldi: The Four Seasons, Sony BMG Masterworks: 1 134 2009 Bruch, Mendelssohn, Mozart Violin Concertos (reissues), Decca 9 — 2009 The Best of Joshua Bell, Sony Masterworks 12 — 2009
the book "Red & Black" 1919. The Indifference of Juliet (1905) The Second Violin (1906) With Juliet in England (1907) Round the Corner in Gay Street (1908) On Christmas Day in the Morning (1908) A Court of Inquiry (1909) Red Pepper Burns (1910) On Christmas Day in the Evening (1910) Strawberry Acres (1911) Brotherly House (1912) Mrs. Red Pepper ...
[4] According to The Red Book catalogue of auction results, the company set over 400 international auction records in its first 10 years of business. [5] In May 2003 the firm auctioned the private collection of acclaimed violinist Isaac Stern, which grossed $2.3 million, at the time the second-highest total for a violin auction. [6]
Peter Mayer, the publisher of Overlook Press, doubted the veracity of the book and the history that it was said to contain; nevertheless, he agreed to publish it. Violin dealers and stringed instrument publications quickly refuted the existence of a musical genre called "funerary violin," as reported by The New York Times .