Product > B0000057M5 > Byron Janis byron janis Prokofiev; Rachmaninov (Recorded By Mercury On Location In Moscow janisdelivers recording must be the rhythmic drive of both the pianist and the http://ilectric.com/shop/info.cgi/B0000057M5
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Extractions: This photo-enriched book written by his daughter, Maria Cooper Janis, gives fans a glimpse into the man himself - in his roles of friend, husband and father. Gary Cooper's wife, socialite Veronica Balfe, known as Rocky, was a dedicated photographer and snapped some wonderful shots - particularly of Cooper with pals like Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., John Wayne, Averell Harriman, Darryl Zanuck and many others, not to mention his highly-publicized romantic dalliances with leading ladies like Lupe Velez, Ingrid Bergman and Patricia Neal.
Pianist James Giles To Perform A pianist rapidly on the rise, Giles is a native of North Carolina. He is currentlycompleting a doctorate with byron janis at the Manhattan School of Music. http://www.huntington.edu/hcnews/oldnews/giles.html
Extractions: Award-winning and highly regarded musician will play the Longaker Recital Hall HUNTINGTON, IN APRIL 2, 1997 -James Giles, one of three 1995 Fellows of the American Pianists Association, will bring his award-winning style to the Longaker Recital Hall in the Merillat Centre for the Arts on Thursday, April 24 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $7. A pianist rapidly on the rise, Giles is a native of North Carolina. He was awarded first prize winner of both the 1991 Frinna Awerbach and 1994 New Orleans International Piano Competitions. He has been heard as a recitalist, chamber musician, and orchestral soloist across North America and England. Hailed in the press as an artist with "formidable octave technique" and "extraordinarily sensitive playing," Giles is establishing himself as a truly Romantic virtuoso. He is on the faculties of the Manhattan School of Music and the Eastern Music Festival in Greensboro, North Carolina, and was named as a Fulbright Scholar for the 95-96 year to study privately with Lazar Berman in Florence, Italy, focusing on the piano music of Franz Listz. Giles graduated from Oberlin College, received a masters degree from the Eastman School of Music with Nelita True, and for two years attended the Juilliard School as a student of Jerome Lowenthal. He is currently completing a doctorate with Byron Janis at the Manhattan School of Music.
Janis, SR90300 byron janis (b. 1928) was one of the most brilliant of his generation of Then janisembarked on a successful career as a concert pianist, including a http://www.theanalogdept.com/Janis_SR90300.htm
Extractions: Home Systems Gallery User Manuals Thorens Dept. ... Misc. Photo I found this one at a local GoodWill for 99 cents. Condition is NM/NM. Performance is inspired. Sonics offer a great concert hall ambience with explosive dynamics. In short, I liked it. An excerpt taken from http://www.allclassical.com/ "Biography: Byron Janis (b. 1928) was one of the most brilliant of his generation of American pianists before his career was cut short by illness. At the age of seven he was taken to New York, becoming a pupil of Adele Marcus, then with Joseph and Rosina Lhévinne. In 1943 he made his professional debut playing Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No 2 with the NBC Symphony Orchestra in New York, with Frank Black conducting. In 1944 he repeated the same concerto in Pittsburgh with thirteen- year-old Lorin Maazel conducting the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Vladimir Horowitz was in the audience, and subsequently invited Janis to study with him. Then Janis embarked on a successful career as a concert pianist, including a 1948 tour to South America, and a 1952 tour of Europe. In 1960 Janis was chosen as the first American artist to be sent to the Soviet Union, opening a newly formed Cultural Exchange between the USSR and the United States. The result was a brilliant Mercury Living Presence LP that is an all-time classic, pairing the Rachmaninov First and Prokofiev Third Concertos. Aided by exemplary sound recording, the Prokofiev in particular is still regarded by many connoisseurs as the work's finest recorded interpretation. In 1995 the CD version won the Cannes Award for Best Reissue. He interrupted his career in the late 1960s at the onset of an illness, and temporarily resumed it in 1972. Soon however, his concert appearances became more rare....."
Prokofiev.org - Toccata In D Minor Op.11 Artist(s) byron janis (piano) Conductor Kiril Kondrashin Orchestra/Ensemble SergeiProkofiev pianist Composer(s) Sergei Prokofiev, Nikolai Miaskovsky http://www.prokofiev.org/catalog/workessential.cfm?WorkID=158
Musical Autographs: Catalog 53 FIRKUSNY, Rudolph SP 5 x 7 photo of the popular Czech pianist studying a scored/s janis, byron ..$35 *133. http://www.rgrossmusicautograph.com/instrumental53.html
DVD Video Reviews I, FEB03 - AUDIOPHILE AUDITION Great pianists on The Bell Telephone Hour Claudio Arrau/byron janis/Robert, Gabyand Chilean pianist Claudio Arrau (19021991) opens with the last movement of http://www.audaud.com/audaud/FEB03/DVD-V/dvd1FEB03.html
Extractions: Culled from various TV appearances 1959-1964, this assemblage of Great pianists makes fascinating viewing, a visual and auditory delight that bring back cherished memories of keyboard idols and giants in repertory in which they flourish. They video mixes solo and collaborative performances by the artists. Chilean pianist Claudio Arrau (1902-1991) opens with the last movement of Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto in solid, Prussian style, befitting Arrau's German pedagogy. Jorge Bolet changes the mood considerably, rending up a suave interpretation of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue under one of the composer's acolytes, Paul Whiteman. The most beguiling moment comes when actor Burgess Meredith introduces the fifteen-year-old Lorin Hollander (b. 1944) to play Chopin's popular waltz in C-sharp Minor, then the piece that had got the New York critics agog, the last movement from Saint-Saens' "Egyptian" Concerto. More Saint-Saens from Philippe Entremont (b. 1934) in the familiar C Minor Concerto, the finale, with its durable cross between folk tune and church hymn. The last two American pianists, Byron Janis (b. 1928) and Grant Johannesen (b. 1921), each get two concertos: Johannesen has the last movement of the Gershwin Concerto in F and a silky opening movement from the ultimate charmer, the Grieg Concerto in A Minor. Janis plays the last movement of the Rachmaninov Third Concerto, and the most "risky" piece in this conservative environment, the finale from the Prokofiev Third Concerto, Op. 26.
ABC Classic FM Music Details: Monday 11 January 1999 3.08 7.05 ADVENTURES IN GOOD MUSIC with Karl Haas A Tribute to byron janis Karlpays homage to the musical prowess and intelligence of the famous pianist. http://www.abc.net.au/classic/daily/stories/s630926.htm
Highfidelity.net Translate this page Fritz Reiner Distinguished pianist byron janis joins Fritz Reiner and the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra in a bracing performance of Richard Strauss' Burleske. http://www.highfidelity.net/rcarecords/lsc2127.html
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New York Times Trivia Quiz #168 live television also holds the distinction of being the first pianist to performa solo piano recital on the World Wide Web. Who is he? byron janis Van Cliburn http://www.nytimes.com/ref/crosswords/trivia/quiz168.html
Extractions: Welcome to The New York Times Trivia Quiz. Our "trivia master" is Ray Hamel , a member of the Trivia Bowl Hall of Fame and editor of Trivia Quotient magazine. And don't forget to try our past quizzes If you like our free quiz, be sure to check out our Premium Diversions Service Good luck, and enjoy! What classical pianist, who often opened his concerts with ''The Star-Spangled Banner,'' took a ''sabbatical'' in 1978 that lasted 9 years? Vladimir Horowitz
ChristianGlobe.com :: Home It happened to byron janis. Within a short time this concert pianist saw arthritisquickly spread to all his fingers, and the joints of nine of them fused. http://www.christianglobe.com/Illustrations/theDetails.asp?whichOne=c&whichFile=
ABCNEWS: 20/20: Inspiring Pianist Plays Again In Cuba CALLABC. Search for more on SUMMARY byron janis traveled to Cubalast March to perform in concert again after a 42-year absence. http://abcnews.go.com/onair/2020/transcripts/2020_990604_janis_trans.html
CBC Radio | In Performance | Schedule Connection presents baritone Gerald Finley and pianist Stephen Ralls in a Schumann,Settings of byron. Music Festival presents chamber music of janis Kalnins and http://cbc.ca/inperformance/02_sept.html
Extractions: Kevin Norbury True North Joseph Turrin Festival Fanfare Dudley Bright Excelsior Eric Alexander Lord,Lord you sure been good to me Allen Vizzuti The Rising Sun Bruce Boughton Concert Piece for Eight Trumpets Donald Osgood Motondo Lecuona, arr. Freeh Maleguena Trad, arr Bulla Joshua Swings the Battle Tuesday, Sept 3
The Seattle Times: Arts & Entertainment: The High Notes Of Year In Music with not enough audience interest in the concerts despite a promising lineup ofperformers Kathleen Battle, pianist Jon Nakamatsu, pianist byron janis. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/artsentertainment/134384252_unforgettable3
Extractions: Seattle Times music critic E-mail this article Print this article Search web archive It's time for our annual year-end list, which we've checked twice to discover who's naughty and nice. Stay tuned for the highs and lows of classical music in 2001. Artistic achievement: There was the "Ring," and then there was everything else. Seattle Opera's earth-shaking production of Wagner's four-opera epic, "Der Ring des Nibelungen," was on a level all its own. The production thrilled worldwide audiences and critics to the marrow with its star-studded cast (headed by mega-diva Jane Eaglen) and its brilliant staging (courtesy of Stephen Wadsworth). All 12 shows sold out an entire year in advance, surely a record in the entire history of Seattle performing-arts companies. Toughest break: Opera singers, stay away from those treadmills! After rehearsing for four months for the leading role of Siegfried in that same "Ring," English tenor Alan Woodrow took an unwise step backward in the gym and tripped over a treadmill, tearing a quadriceps muscle and sidelining himself for his long-awaited debut. The show did go on, with Woodrow singing the role from the side of the stage and his understudy (Richard Berkeley-Steele) doing the acting. Most promising appointment: The Northwest Chamber Orchestra's appointment of the distinctive Finnish conductor/pianist Ralf Gothoni to a three-year term as music director, beginning in September 2002. The NWCO wasn't looking for a music director, but Gothoni's performances here excited everyone so much that they booked him anyway.
Acoustic Sounds Online Store Now for the first time byron janis powerful interpretation of The release of janisPicture is likely to capture wizardry of this great American pianist and the http://store.acousticsounds.com/store.cfm?Title_ID=7024&do=detail
Classic Records Catalog / LSC-2541 byron janis, one of America's foremost young pianists, has become indelibly associatedwith Sergei achieve fame both as a composer and pianist, and survived http://www.classicrecs.com/lsc-2541.htm
Extractions: Catalog #LSC-2541 Two stirring performances by Janis, who is particularly memorable in the Todtentanz on Side 1. A powerful and dynamic recording. LINER NOTES PRODUCTION NOTES Byron Janis, one of America's foremost young pianists, has become indelibly associated with the concertos of Rachmaninoff. He has performed them with all the major orchestras of the United States, and his interpretations have the penetrating discernment and virtuosity that stamp him as one of the truly great among the aristocracy of the keyboard. Rachmaninoff's First Piano Concerto was written in 1890-91 and dedicated to Alexander Siloti, who was the composer's teacher at the Moscow Conservatory and, incidentally, his first cousin. Ten years senior to his pupil, Siloti was himself an outstanding virtuoso of the day. He lived to see his cousin Sergei achieve fame both as a composer and pianist, and survived the younger man by two years. Although there are ten years between the F-Sharp Minor Concerto and the famed Concerto No. 2, the former work is not as early a composition as its opus number suggests; it is not Rachmaninoff's first composition, but the first he allowed to survive. He recast the work completely in 1917, with the sure hand of the mature composer of forty-three setting right any failings of the youth of eighteen.
High-Tech Environment High-Touch Care By Jeff Yip and research areas. Renowned classical pianist byron janis is oneof thousands who have turned to the hospital. The musician, who http://www.orthopedictechreview.com/issues/nov00/pg20.htm
Extractions: From left are President and CEO John N. Kastanis and Surgeon-in-Chief Joseph D. Zuckerman, MD, of New Yorks Hospital for Joint Diseases Orthopaedic Institute. The brothers Frauenthal would be amazed. When Henry and Herman opened their tiny, seven-bed clinic in New York in 1905, the physicians mission was bringing relief through care to the orthopedic problems of children. Nearly a century later, and along the way having helped pioneer arthroscopy as well as procedures for polio and congenital deformities, the Frauenthals Jewish Hospital for Deformities and Joint Diseases carries a shorter, more secular nameHospital for Joint Diseases (HJD) Orthopaedic Institute, a part of Mount Sinai NYU Healthbut it has outgrown its original upper Manhattan brownstone many times over. HJD became a teaching hospital of NYU School of Medicine in 1986, a member organization of NYU Medical Center in 1994, and a part of Mount Sinai NYU Health in 1998 as part of the merger between Mount Sinai Medical Center and NYU Medical Center. HJD today has 220 beds, 21 specialty clinics, and 500-plus attending medical staffers. One thing, however, that has not changed is the founders focus on helping youth. Children with complex and simple physical disabilities will receive care that is even more kinder-friendly in late 2001 when HJDs Center for Children is finished. Todays services, including orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, physiatry, and physical, occupational, and speech therapy, are spread throughout the hospital. The new center, under the direction of David S. Feldman, MD, will bring surgeons, nurses, pediatricians, geneticists, developmental specialists, psychologists, social workers, and speech therapists under one roof on the second, third, and fourth floors. The center will be designed to be inviting to young patients and minimize any anxieties.
SUBJECT Janis To Make Historic Return To Cuba /SUBJECT 26 (UPI) byron janis, famed pianist and composer, has been invited by the CulturalAffairs Department of the Cuban government to perform and give master http://cgl.bu.edu/GC/lsigal/Paper/clari.living.music.CNML/Uny-janisURUD1_9FQ.cnm
Raja Rahman, Pianist Lowenthal. Other principal teachers have included Russian virtuosoLev Vlassenko and the American pianist, byron janis. At Juilliard http://www.classicalmagic.com/raja.html