「stravinsky」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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While composing The Rite of Spring, | Stravinsky acknowledged that Schmitt's ballet gave him |
and only rediscovered and published in 1933; | Stravinsky alerted Balanchine to the existence of the s |
Adorno had included | Stravinsky among the targets of his anti-Gebrauchsmusik |
In his book | Stravinsky and the Russian Traditions, Richard Taruskin |
ra is a one-act opera buffa composed by Igor | Stravinsky, and one of the earliest works of Stravinsky |
n students included Alexander Scriabin, Igor | Stravinsky, and Heino Eller. |
e also includes works by Maurice Ravel, Igor | Stravinsky, and Giuseppe Verdi, among others. |
Benois was a stage designer who worked with | Stravinsky and Diaghilev. |
allet for twelve dancers, with music by Igor | Stravinsky and choreography by George Balanchine. |
amm, Byrnell Figler, Roy McAllister, Soulima | Stravinsky and Sophia Rosoff. |
lly suggestive or savage, such as Hindemith, | Stravinsky and the like, were denounced as "degenerate" |
Works by young composers like Igor | Stravinsky and Gustav Mahler were performed here, but a |
rnational musicians, amongst them Hindemith, | Stravinsky, and Tippett. |
was built in 1962, hosting the likes of Igor | Stravinsky and Aaron Copland, although the school of mu |
at times, Gustav Mahler, Maurice Ravel, Igor | Stravinsky and Sergei Rachmaninoff to conduct their own |
rgei Prokofiev, Sergei Rachmaninoff and Igor | Stravinsky and conductors such as Arturo Toscanini and |
chamber music, courses on the music of Igor | Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg, conducting. |
sburg (1915-2003) (who had studied with Igor | Stravinsky and Paul Hindemith) and the theater organist |
lists his early classical influences as Igor | Stravinsky, Anton Webern, Pierre Boulez and the America |
he 1911 Version) originally composed by Igor | Stravinsky, arranged for 5 pianos; performed by the 5 B |
off, Vladimir Horowitz, Jascha Heifetz, Igor | Stravinsky, Artur Schnabel, Isaac Stern and Marian Ande |
group and was its main composer, citing Igor | Stravinsky as his main influence. |
mskaya-Korsakova (Fyokla Ivanovna), and Gury | Stravinsky as Stepan. |
with Hans Keller): ' | Stravinsky at Rehearsal' (1962; published in Germany as |
including Mahler, Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky, | Stravinsky, Beethoven, and Strauss, as well as contempo |
he studied under Nadia Boulanger and Soulima | Stravinsky before emigrating to Canada in 1949. |
artet, Nadia Boulanger, Paul Hindemith, Igor | Stravinsky, Boris Blacher and Georges Enescu. |
opher Jacques Maritain and was introduced to | Stravinsky by Vera Sudeykina. |
Stravinsky: Circus Polka | |
Stravinsky: Complete Music for Violin and Piano (Hyperi | |
Stravinsky completed the work in 1966, and it received | |
Igor | Stravinsky composed his Mass between 1944 and 1948. |
Stravinsky composed Feu d'artifice as a wedding present | |
George Balanchine to eponymous music by Igor | Stravinsky composed in honor of the 400th birthday of D |
ard Game) is a ballet in three deals by Igor | Stravinsky, composed in 1936-37, with the story by the |
to a catalogue of breadwinning pieces which | Stravinsky composed to support himself after fleeing th |
It is somewhat modified on the | Stravinsky conducts Stravinsky recording; a more though |
gration to Los Angeles, California, in 1939, | Stravinsky continued to work within the neo-classical f |
sed by critics, nonetheless many years later | Stravinsky could still pride himself in never having be |
Stravinsky dedicated a transcription for violin and pia | |
Stravinsky described the opera as "lamentably provincia | |
Stravinsky designed the Capriccio to be a virtuosic veh | |
Stravinsky drew his inspiration from J.S. Bach's Brande | |
r, Op. 1, is the first work composed by Igor | Stravinsky during his apprenticeship with Nikolai Rimsk |
In 1983 Sacher acquired the | Stravinsky estate. |
ly exponent of the role of Mykola was Fyodor | Stravinsky, father of the composer Igor Stravinsky. |
is a ballet made for New York City Ballet's | Stravinsky Festival by balletmaster Jerome Robbins to e |
23, 1972, as part of New York City Ballet's | Stravinsky Festival at the New York State Theater, Linc |
June 22, 1972, as part of the City Ballet's | Stravinsky Festival at the New York State Theater, Linc |
23, 1972, as part of New York City Ballet's | Stravinsky Festival at the New York State Theater, Linc |
r George Balanchine for opening night of its | Stravinsky Festival to the composers's eponymous sympho |
premiere took place as part of City Ballet's | Stravinsky Festival, June 20th, 1972, at the New York S |
Stravinsky first conceived of writing the ballet in 191 | |
1971 Epitaph, Canon in Memory of Igor | Stravinsky for flute, clarinet & harp |
Canticles is a 15 minute composition by Igor | Stravinsky, for contralto and bass soli, chorus, and or |
's Progress (conducted by the composer, Igor | Stravinsky, for Columbia, 1953), and Beethoven's Missa |
g on to do completely different things (Igor | Stravinsky, for example, became involved with primitivi |
The | Stravinsky Fountain is a shallow basin of 580 square me |
of Samuel L. Clemens, Johannes Brahms, Igor | Stravinsky, George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, and Admiral B |
Stravinsky got the commission from Serge Diaghilev to w | |
rnstein, Brahms, Schumann, Beethoven, Liszt, | Stravinsky, Grieg and Rachmaninoff (7CD Set) (NI 1748) |
Material is drawn from projects that | Stravinsky had abandoned or reorganized. |
Igor | Stravinsky had an estate in Ustyluh and visited it freq |
Stravinsky himself conducted the premiere of the Octet | |
Stravinsky himself regarded this ostinato as "the root | |
dow, is from London 1964 and is conducted by | Stravinsky himself. |
a solo created for Lukas Foss' A Festival of | Stravinsky: His Heritage and His Legacy, which also inc |
master, to eponymous music from 1947 by Igor | Stravinsky, his frequent collaborator, with sets and co |
pour piano et orchestre) was written by Igor | Stravinsky in Nice between 1926 and 1929. |
material is based on a rhythm identified by | Stravinsky in earlier works (such as The Firebird and T |
As in the second movement, | Stravinsky includes a popular song (Tchitcher-Yatcher). |
The score reveals the influence of Igor | Stravinsky, including a quotation of a motif from Petru |
Stravinsky incorporates elements from his Russian perio | |
Compositionally, | Stravinsky interprets the ragtime in a cubist way rathe |
Coco Chanel & Igor | Stravinsky is a 2009 French film directed by Jan Kounen |
dding; Russian: Свадебка (Svadebka)) by Igor | Stravinsky, is a dance cantata, or ballet with vocalist |
Stravinsky is perhaps not the best example of a non-Ger | |
or presenting such a chamber-music work, but | Stravinsky later expressed satisfaction with the balanc |
ubinstein, who attended the performance with | Stravinsky, laughter broke out during the bassoon segme |
Stravinsky made a recording of Les cinq doigts for the | |
soon attracted other composers such as Igor | Stravinsky, Max Reger, Maurice Ravel, and Paul Hindemit |
eachers Leonardo Balada and George Rochberg, | Stravinsky, medieval music, Tudor church music, bebop, |
many contemporary works by composers such as | Stravinsky, Milhaud, Britten, and took part in the prem |
aks 8-v-1938,” is a chamber concerto by Igor | Stravinsky, named for the Dumbarton Oaks estate of Robe |
Stravinsky's misfortunes apart, the Symphony in C had b | |
Tavener's early music was influenced by Igor | Stravinsky, often invoking the sound world of the Requi |
ered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under | Stravinsky on November 7, 1940. |
She recorded songs of Igor | Stravinsky, Pastorale for soprano, oboe, English horn, |
dom, inspired by avant-gardists such as Igor | Stravinsky, Paul Hindemith, Bela Bartok, and composers |
Weburn, Kurt Weill, Duke Ellington and Igor | Stravinsky performed by Douglas, Mark Feldman, Erik Fri |
Hortense Lyon, La Fontaine | Stravinsky, pg. 12 |
Stravinsky: Piano Concerto; Capriccio; Movements for Pi | |
"Walking Song" is a short Igor | Stravinsky piece that Stearns transcribed for the synth |
well as some of those listed, these include | Stravinsky, Rachmaninoff, Frank Martin and less interna |
the Old Slavonic words "Gospedi Pamili", and | Stravinsky regarded this as his personal prayer to the |
gglers Diaghilev had borrowed from a circus" | Stravinsky regretted Chagall's refusal of a commission |
Stravinsky returned to Paris to conduct the French prem | |
Asked by Robert Craft about this, | Stravinsky said "The voices are not always in rhythmic |
ho like Shapero was a member of the "Harvard | Stravinsky school, and considered the latter to be "arg |
Stravinsky scored the opera for a classical-sized orche | |
Vol.7:- | Stravinsky, Scriabin, Ravel, etc. (433 657-2 DH) |
(with Hans Keller): | Stravinsky Seen and Heard (Toccata Press, 1982; ISBN 0- |
ly parted company over a feud with Vera, and | Stravinsky seldom afterwards mentioned his existence. |
ty was Venice, so much so that Diaghilev and | Stravinsky selected it as the place of their burial. |
Contemporary Music in Rotterdam in 1973, the | Stravinsky Seminar for young conductors, organized by t |
ntly had a concerto written for him, by Igor | Stravinsky, so Prokofiev did the same for Soetens. |
ill towards the composer", and subsided when | Stravinsky stood up at the end of the performance to bo |
Marius | Stravinsky studied conducting with Vladimir Ponkin in M |
er, Schnittke, Schubert, Schumann, Scriabin, | Stravinsky, Taktakishvili, Tchaikovsky and many other c |
ts one of only a handful of extant pieces by | Stravinsky that was not commissioned. |
White, Eric Walter, | Stravinsky: The Man and His Works (Berkeley and Los Ang |
they play unheard-of interpretations of Igor | Stravinsky, the German electronic pioneers Kraftwerk or |
He starred in the world premiere of | Stravinsky's "Rake's Progress" in Europe, before Caldwe |
o Brahms and Schumann, from Ravel, Elgar and | Stravinsky, to Messiaen, Takemitsu and Maxwell Davies. |
d music from Beethoven, Chopin, Schubert and | Stravinsky to Earle Brown and Morton Feldman. |
the works of Rachmaninoff, Shostakovich, and | Stravinsky) to him. |
English translations are sometimes used, and | Stravinsky used one himself in both the 1934 and 1959 r |
In the title of this piece, | Stravinsky used the word "symphonies" (note the plural |
s Cantata on Old English Texts of 1952, Igor | Stravinsky uses individual verses as interludes between |
ra which earned a grammy nomination, and the | Stravinsky Violin Concerto with the Philharmonia Orches |
Stravinsky was considered for this project but it was l | |
Stravinsky was inducted into the National Museum of Dan | |
ecording of Symphony of Psalms, conducted by | Stravinsky, was nominated in 1965 for a Grammy Award. |
Stravinsky was still mourning the deaths of his family | |
In 1950, Soulima | Stravinsky was appointed to the piano faculty of the Sc |
limate dominated by emotion, drama, and ego, | Stravinsky was moving towards a musical philosophy that |
he musical comments shared between Spies and | Stravinsky were reflected in articles written by Spies |
of 80 major works by composers such as Igor | Stravinsky, William Walton, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Dmi |
orth, a programme of Schumann, Piazzolla and | Stravinsky with Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg, Shostako |
Stravinsky wrote the libretto himself using Russian wed | |
Stravinsky wrote the third movement in Cambridge, Massa | |
oice (amongst these are: Schoenberg, Webern, | Stravinsky, Zappa). |
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