Showing 2 items
matching Mozart
-
Dame Nellie Melba
... Mozart...L’amerò, sarò constante by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Performed by Dame Nellie Melba (soprano), J. Kubelik, (violin), Prof. Lapierre (piano), and S.Roper (organ). A recording made around 1913 and released by His Master's Voice, 78rpm ...“...the voice, pure and limpid, with an adorable timbre and perfect accuracy, emerges with the greatest ease.” Arthur Pougin, in Le Ménestral (Paris), May 12, 1889.
Dame Nellie Melba (1861 – 1931), was Australia’s opera superstar, performing in the great opera houses of the world - the Paris Opera, La Scala, the Metropolitan Opera House, and the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where she became prima donna, returning season after season.
The extensive Melba Collection at the Victorian Arts Centre includes costumes, records, accessories, letters, programs, photographs, opera scores and other personal effects. Other holdings of interest include 78rpm disks at the State Library of Victoria.
-
Sound in Space
... orchestra performed pieces by Hildegard von Bingen, Mauricio Kagel, Dieter Schnebel, Franz Liszt, Helen Gifford, Robert Schuman, Keith Humble and WA Mozart. No audio is available for this concert. Scots Church, Collins Street Baptist Church, and St Michaels...Listen to Excerpt 1: W.A. Mozart, Dixit Dominus (1780), choir & string orchestra from Vespers of the Confessor K.339, and Excerpt 2: Helen Gifford, Phantasma (1963) string orchestra. From the concert at North Melbourne Town Hall, North Melbourne ...Music always interacts with the architecture in which it is heard.
Melbourne has some wonderful acoustic environments. Often, these spaces were built for other purposes – for example the splendid public and ecclesiastical buildings from the first 100 years of the city’s history, and more recent industrial constructions.
Exploiting ‘non-customized’ spaces for musical performance celebrates and explores our architectural heritage.
For 30 years, the concerts of Astra Chamber Music Society have ranged around Melbourne’s architectural environment. Each concert has had a site-specific design that takes advantage of the marvellous visual qualities, spatial possibilities, and acoustic personality of each building.
The music, in turn, contributes a new quality to the perception of the buildings, now experienced by audiences as a sounding space - an area where cultural issues from music’s history are traversed, and new ideas in Australian composition are explored.
In this story take a tour of some of Melbourne’s intimate, hidden spaces and listen to the music that has filled their walls.
For further information about Astra Chamber Music Society click here.