Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Matthias Goerne (born 31 March 1967 [1]) is a German baritone.He has performed and recorded extensively, both on the opera stage and in Lieder settings. Goerne has been referred to as "Today's leading interpreter of German art songs" by the Chicago Tribune, [2] while the Boston Globe describes him as "one of the greatest singers performing today".
"Who by Fire" is a song written by Canadian poet and musician Leonard Cohen in the 1970s. It explicitly relates to Cohen's Jewish roots, echoing the words of the Unetanneh Tokef prayer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In synagogues, the prayer is recited during the High Holy Days . [ 3 ]
Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy’s Magic Horn) is a series of songs with music by Gustav Mahler, set either for voice and piano, or for voice and orchestra, based on texts of German folk poems chosen from a collection of the same name assembled by Achim von Arnim and Clemens Brentano and published by them, in heavily redacted form, between 1805 and 1808.
Matthias Goerne: Adschib (‘the Wayward’), another son, a good-for-nothing: countertenor: Axel Köhler Gharib (‘the Untrustworthy’), another son, a sly fox: bass Anton Scharinger: Gardeners, flowers, guards, Nubian soldiers, henchmen and three gnomes
Dmitri Shostakovich in 1974, around the period he composed the Suite on Verses by Michelangelo Buonarotti (photograph by Yuri Shcherbinin). The Suite on Verses of Michelangelo Buonarroti (Сюита на слова Микеланджело Буонарроти, Op.145, 1974) is a cycle of song settings by Dmitri Shostakovich of eleven poems by Michelangelo Buonarroti, translated into the ...
Roberto Alagna; Ada Alsop; Elly Ameling; Arleen Auger; Janet Baker; Cecilia Bartoli; Teresa Berganza; Carlo Bergonzi; Jussi Björling; Barbara Bonney; Olga Borodina
The video was first posted on X—with a Hebrew transcription of the soldiers’ chant—by Yinon Magal, who also served in the Knesset as a member of the right-wing Jewish Home party in 2015.
Melanie Diener, Annette Markert, James Taylor, Matthias Goerne, Chorus of La Chapelle Royale, Chorus of the Collegium Vocale and the Orchestre des Champs-Élysées conducted by Philippe Herreweghe — live in Montreux on October 30 and November 1, 1995 — Harmonia Mundi