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Around the World

Fridays in August

As COVID19 affects another cultural summer season, Stingray Classica continues to deliver music from around the world to your living room. On four Friday nights in June, Stingray Classica takes viewers on a musical journey to four different continents: South America, North America, Europe, and Asia. The special commences on Friday, August 6, with the premiere of Heitor Villa-Lobos: From Bach to Brazil. This documentary examines the enduring cultural impact of legendary Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, whose compositions put Brazil on the world map of classical music. Later that same night, Stingray Classica visits another Latin American country in Tango: Café de los Maestros and Friends, a splendid concert performance recorded at El Palacio in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The following Friday, on August 13, we explore the classical music of North America with a broadcast of Three Places in New England by Charles Ives, and with works of the American composer George Gershwin performed at Berlin's Waldbühne in 2003. On Friday, August 20, Stingray Classica travels to the heart of Europe with The Philharmonics: Strauss Waltzes, and delves deeper into Austrian music with A Night in Vienna featuring soprano Lesley Garrett. As a final stop on Stingray Classica’s journey 'Around the World', we shine a light on Asia with two North and South Korea-themed broadcasts. First up on August 27 is the documentary In Between: The Composer Isang Yun, which tells the moving story of a composer caught between two nations. Later that evening, the New York Philharmonic is welcomed with open arms in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang, in this broadcast of a historic concert.


Villa-Lobos: from Bach to Brazil

Friday, August 6 | 21:00

Composer Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959) is to Brazil what Giuseppe Verdi and Jean Sibelius are to Italy and Finland: his compositions have come to embody the very soul of his native country. In Villa-Lobos: from Bach to Brazil, narrator Carlos de Andrade guides us through young Tuhu's journey through life, from his humble beginnings as the cello-playing son of a demanding librarian serenading performing in Rio de Janeiro's many cafés, to the bigger-than-life maestro Heitor Villa-Lobos whose quintessentially Brazilian music is recognized and respected the world over. Interspersed with numerous contemporary music performances and rare footage of the composer at work and at home, the documentary also sheds invaluable light on Villa-Lobos' estimable role in the development of Brazil's new-found national identity.


Fiesta del Tango

Friday, August 6 | 21:00

For the audience in the famous ballroom El Palacio in Buenos Aires, the year 2012 began with tango rhythms and Argentinean folk music. This festive broadcast opens with a tango performance by dance partners Eduardo and Gloria, accompanied by the renowned ensemble Café de los Maestros. Another highlights is a performance by bandoneon player Rodolfo Mederos and his trio. In addition, the concert features a performance by Teresa Parodi, former lead singer of the Astor Piazzolla Band, accompanied by the Fernando Suárez Paz Quintet. Also on the bill is the contemporary electronic tango formation Otros Aires. Founded by Miguel Di Genova in 2003, Otros Aires combines electronic rhythms and traditional tango instruments, such as the bandoneon, piano, and guitar. On the program are compositions by Astor Piazzolla, Pedro Maffia, Pedro Laurenz, Gustavo Mozzi, and many others. Enjoy this concert of music and dance, featuring some of Argentine's tango scene's finest artists!


Ives - Three Places in New England

Friday, August 13 | 21:00

André de Ridder conducts the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Charles Ives's 'Three Places in New England'. This three-movement composition for orchestra was written between 1911 and 1914. To ease the listener into his avant-garde chromaticism, Ives paraphrases various American folk tunes as familiar reference points. The three movements (slow, fast, slow) refer to places in the northeast of the United States. Ives attempts to paint a picture of American lifestyle and patriotism as it was at the turn of the 20th century. With a duration of around 20 minutes, the work has become one of Ives's most performed works. It exhibits signature traits of his style: layered textures with multiple melodies, references to recognizable hymns and marching tunes, and the use of tone clusters and sharp textual contrasts. This concert was recorded at the Gothenburg Concert Hall in Sweden on April 11, 2018.


Waldbühne 2003 - A Gershwin Night

Friday, August 13 | 21:20

The Waldbühne in Berlin is one of the most attractive outdoor amphitheatres in Europe and home to the Berliner Philharmoniker's summer concerts. With a 20, 000-seat capacity, these events are some of the most popular classical music concerts in the world. In 2003, Seiji Ozawa and the Berliner Philharmoniker perform works by George Gershwin with the jazz pianist Marcus Roberts and his Trio as special guests. Their album “Gershwin For Lovers” stayed in the Top 10 on Billboard’s jazz chart for half a year. Together they created a magical fusion of classical music and jazz bringing an imaginative mix of styles into the swing of Gershwin’s music.


A Tribute to Vienna

Friday, August 20 | 21:00

Chamber music ensemble The Philharmonics pays tribute to the music of Vienna in this March 9, 2011 concert from Vienna's Café Sperl. The ensemble, which consists of musicians from the Vienna Philharmonic and the Berlin Philharmonic, performs arrangements of five popular waltzes by Johann Straus II. Among them are Kaiser-Walzer, Op. 437, and Schatz-Walzer, Op. 418, from the operetta The Gypsy Baron. In May 1921, the likes of Arnold Schönberg, Alban Berg, and Anton Webern wrote these chamber music arrangements to raise funds for their Society for Private Musical Performances. Although both the concert and the auction of the scores were very successful, the Society eventually went under. In addition to these pieces by Strauss, The Philharmonics perform works by Fritz Kreisler, Leopold Godowsky, as well as The Philharmonics's first violinist, Tibor Kováč. The program comes to an end with Godowsky’s tribute to the city: Alt Wien.


A Night in Vienna

Friday, August 20 | 22:05

A Night in Vienna recreates the magical atmosphere of 19th century Viennese ballrooms. In the breathtaking surroundings of Vienna's Hofburg Palace, the Wiener Akademie period orchestra, conducted by Alfred Eschwe, plays some of the Strauss family's and Joseph Lanner's favorite pieces, including "The Beautiful Blue Danube", "Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka", and the "Radetzky March". Former residence of the Habsburg dynasty, the Hofburg contained the apartments of Emperor Franz Joseph and Empress Elizabeth. A Night in Vienna features soloist Lesley Garrett, the most popular soprano from the UK. The spirit of the Strauss era is perfectly recreated by the addition of waltz dancers adorned with historical costumes. This concert was presented in 2004, under the direction of David Amphlett.


In Between: Isang Yun in North and South Korea

Friday, August 27 | 21:00

This documentary by Maria Stodtmeier, filmed in North and South Korea, explores whether music can overcome the boundaries of a divided country. There is one figure of the two Koreas, whose outstanding biography in itself forms a bridge between both worlds: The Korean composer Isang Yun, one of the very few people acknowledged on both sides. The film traces the course of a life that has been interpreted in different ways. It examins the worlds of North and South Korean music and in this way taking the viewer on an exciting journey through two political systems that Isang Yun spent his life trying to reconcile.


Americans in Pyongyang

Friday, August 27 | 22:00

In summer 2007 the New York Philharmonic received an invitation that was unprecedented in the orchestra's history. North Korea, the world's most isolated and secluded country and technically at war with the United States, invited the orchestra to play in the capital of Pyongyang. Just a few months later, two hundred orchestra members and more than one hundred journalists disembarked from a chartered plane at Pyongyang's deserted airport. They were about to experience a historic moment, the first-ever performance by an American orchestra in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. The film 'Americans in Pyongyang' accompanies the orchestra members on their historic trip to Pyongyang in February 2008.

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