Claude Debussy: Trois Nocturnes. 1. Nuages

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    Titel Claude Debussy: Trois Nocturnes. 1. Nuages
    Spieldauer 00:04:23
    Mitwirkende Debussy, Claude [Komponist/in] [GND]
    World's Greatest Music [Label]
    Datum 1938 [Jahr des Copyright]
    Ort Wien, Festsaal des Kaufmännischen Vereins [Ortsbezug]
    Schlagworte Musik ; E-Musik ; Instrumentalmusik - Nocturne ; Besetzung - Orchester ; Publizierte und vervielfältigte Aufnahme
    Örtliche Einordnung USA - Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
    20. Jahrhundert - 30er Jahre
    Typ audio
    Format SCS [Schallplatte, Schellack]
    Sprache Englisch
    Signatur Österreichische Mediathek, e11-00695_b01_k02
    Medienart Mp3-Audiodatei
    Festsaal des Kaufmännischen Vereins, Arnold Schönberg Center, CC BY-SA 3.0 AT

    Festsaal des Kaufmännischen Vereins, Arnold Schönberg Center, CC BY-SA 3.0 AT

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    In 1918 the Society for Private Musical Performances was founded in Vienna on the initiative of Arnold Schönberg. The purpose of the society was “to provide artists and art lovers with a genuine and accurate acquaintance with modern music”. Besides the performance of chamber music works, orchestral compositions were performed as arrangements for piano or chamber ensembles in order to introduce members of the society to more recent orchestral works that could only be rarely performed for financial reasons. After Max Reger, works by Claude Debussy were performed most frequently at the society. #‍13#‍13 A “World’s Greatest Music” box set from Schönberg’s Estate contains two works by Debussy: “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un Faune” (“Afternoon of a Faun”) and the „Nocturnes“. Recordings of the New York Philharmonic (Fritz Reiner) and the Philadelphia Orchestra (Leopold Stokowski) that had already been released at an earlier date on RCA Victor Red Seal were published in the “Philharmonic Transcription” series, without the performers being named. Schönberg owned sets from this series with works by composers such as Schubert, Beethoven, Mozart and Wagner. The liner notes were authored by Samuel Chotzinoff, who was a fellow member of the “Musicians’ Committee of Mailamm” (The American-Palestine Music Association) to which Schönberg belonged and which sought finances in the late 1930s to open a music conservatoire in Jerusalem. (Text: Arnold Schönberg Center)

    Sammlungsgeschichte

    Sammlung Schönberg