gerelateerde werken
D'ou viens-tu bergère : Pour choeur (ou Deux voix de femmes) et solo de Soprano / Rosy Wertheim
Genre:
Vocaal
Subgenre:
Vrouwenkoor en piano
Bezetting:
VK pf
Vijf Leopold-liederen : voor sopraan en piano, 1981, revisie 1994 / Hans Broekman
Genre:
Vocaal
Subgenre:
Zangstem en piano
Bezetting:
sopr pf
Genre:
Vocaal
Subgenre:
Zangstem en piano
Bezetting:
sopr-m pf
Three Sonnets : for voice and piano / Fergus Currie; on lyrics by Shakespeare, Rilke, Baudelaire
Genre:
Vocaal
Subgenre:
Zangstem en piano
Bezetting:
zang pf
compositie
Zes Liederen (op teksten van Nederlandse dichters) : for voice and piano / Rosy Wertheim; texts by Antonie Donker, Roel Houwink, Annie Salomos, Jules Schürmann, Nanda Sandbergen
Overige auteurs:
Wertheim, Rosy
(Componist)
Bevat:
Scherzo (Anthonie Donker, c. 2’15”)
Het Narrenschip (Roel Houwink, c. 2’)
Herfstliedje (Annie Salomons, c. 2’30”)
Zang van Salome (Annie Salomons, c. 2’30”)
De regen valt (De regen valt, c. 1’45”)
In ’t diepste ik (Nanda Sandbergen, c. 2’15”)
Toelichting:
The series 'Forbidden Music Regained' proudly presents works by composers who were persecuted during the Second World War. Performances of these works were forbidden during the war. Many composers were imprisoned, several did not survive and others went into hiding.
After the war a new generation took over. The pre-war composers were soon forgotten and their compositions remained hidden in closets and archives or fell otherwise into oblivion. In recent decades numerous works have been rediscovered through the efforts of the Leo Smit Foundation. Some scores were found in attics, others in a garden shed and a pile of music was found by young children next to a garbage can. These compositions are of a high quality and deserve to be performed again. The diversity of styles represents the entire spectrum of the first half of the Twentieth century: romanticism, impressionism, modernism, neoclassicism, jazz, and so forth. This project aims to encourage musicians, young and old, from across the globe to perform these compositions, and for concert audiences to (once again) become acquainted with this ‘unheard’ music.