User Login
Forgot your password? Click Here.
Playlist
What are playlists? Click Here.



How is the outward life of Alban Berg, a doyen of Viennese respectability, to be reconciled with the composer’s inner life that fueled his nightmarish operas? This vintage program explores the dark world beneath Berg’s polished public image, revealing the facts of his dual existence. Soprano Kristine Ciesinki—who sings selections from Wozzeck, Lulu, and Seven Early Songs—travels to Vienna, Prague, Germany, and the U.S. to track down crucial archival documents and to speak with people who knew the composer, highlighting the way in which Berg’s passionate attachments and his interest in astrology find encoded expression in his music. Performances are by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Elgar Howarth, and the McCapra String Quartet. Baritone Norman Bailey takes the parts of the animal tamer and Dr. Schön in Lulu. (50 minutes)



 
        

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1991




     


Only available in the US and Canada.




John Adams: Minimalism and Beyond

This extraordinarily lucid portrait of John Adams focuses on the composer and on a performance of Harmonium, the massive setting for chorus and orchestra of three poems on aspects of love: John Donne's "Negative Love" and Emily Dickinson's "Because I...(more details)
 
Olivier Messiaen: The Music of Faith
View Video Clip
Olivier Messiaen played a leading role in the evolution of 20th-century music. In this classic interview, the late composer talks on topics such as his love of nature and his fervent Christian faith, two themes that profoundly shaped his work; his vi...(more details)
 
Voices from Heaven: The Religious Music of Europe in the Middle Ages
View Video Clip
Filmed in several of northern Italy's most magnificent churches and beautiful villages, this documentary illuminates the medieval origins of Christian music through vocal and instrumental performances by the Gothic Voices of London, the Ensemble Vena...(more details)
 
After the Storm: The American Exile of Bela Bartok

When Bela Bartok fled to New York in 1940, he carried his love of folk melodies to Columbia University, where he became a research fellow studying Serbo-Croatian music. In this timeless program, friends and associates-including Yehudi Menuhin and the...(more details)
 
Richard Strauss: Between Romanticism and Resignation

"It is a sad time when an artist of my standing has to ask a minister's lackey what he may compose or have performed," said Richard Strauss. An anti-Nazi at heart, he dared to collaborate with a Jewish composer and librettist, yet still composed the ...(more details)
 


See additional titles in Music History