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Posts Tagged ‘Salzburg’

Ex-Croat PM denies money laundering

Former Croatian PM Ivo Sanader denied on Thursday money laundering charges, in connection to which he was being held. Sanader has been detained in Salzburg, Austria, and was questioned by Austrian anti-corruption prosecutors.

IM meets with Austrian police official

Interior Minister Ivica Dačić met with Austrian Federal Criminal Police Director Franz Lang in Salzburg on the Hypo Alpe-Adria Bank scandal.

He expressed the readiness of the Serbian police to take part in the investigation.

Police cooperation conference in Austria

Serbian Interior Minister Ivica Dačić will attend the Salzburg Forum ministerial conference today. The gathering will discuss police partnership in Eastern Europe on Friday and Saturday.

Arrest of Kosovo people smugglers

Austrian police said on Thursday they disbanded a gang smuggling illegal migrants from Kosovo. Since September 2009, police of the Lower Austria province, special unit Cobra and Salzburg police arrested 13 gang members, mainly Kosovo Albanians.

“Project Runway” Season 7; “Models Of The Runway” Contestants Revealed

The cast of designers competing on the seventh season of Project Runway have been revealed!
The fashion competition, hosted by German catwalk maven Heidi Klum, will see the judges and designers returning to New York City, the home of the show for the first five seasons. Heidi will be joined by judges Nina Garcia and Michael [...]

Missing link

By Bethany Bell
BBC News, Salzburg

The BBC listens as two "crazy" pieces of music written by the young Mozart are played for the first time in nearly 250 years. Experts say the works show a youthful composer "running riot" to show what he could do.

Florian Birsak playing the harpsichord

With its polished parquet floor, the Tanzmeistersaal in the Mozart Residence Museum was full.

After all, it is not every day you get to go to a premiere of pieces by Mozart – played on his own piano and in his own house.

Posthumous discoveries of works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are rare but not unknown.

And the short two pieces unveiled in Salzburg appear to be a "missing link" in the young composer’s development, according to Dr Ulrich Leisinger, from the International Mozarteum Foundation.

The first piece to be performed was the Concerto in G molto allegro – probably the first movement of a harpsichord concerto written in 1763 or 1764, when the composer was around eight years old.

Only the solo part of the harpsichord was written down.

‘Studendous technique’

Researchers at the Mozarteum believe it forms an important link between the miniatures Mozart wrote as a very young child and the larger instrumental pieces he went on to compose later.

"This was a young composer running riot to show what he was capable of"

Dr Ulrich Leisinger

Dr Ulrich Leisinger

The Harvard professor, Robert Levin, says: "What the composer expects of the player in racing passagework, crossed hands and wild leaps is more than a bit crazy.

"I consider it quite credible that the movement was composed by the young Mozart who wished to show in it everything he could do."

There are anecdotes which suggest that Mozart began to compose concertos long before his "first" official piano concerto, K 175, in 1773.

The Salzburg court trumpeter and close friend of the Mozart family, Johann Andreas Schachtner, described being shown an inkblot-stained score of a part of concerto written by the young Mozart.

Mozart’s father, Leopold, had first dismissed the piece – but then looked at it a little more closely.

"Look here Mr Schachtner," he said. "See how everything is correct and regularly set – it is only useless because it is too difficult for anyone to play."

Technically demanding

The young Wolfgang was not abashed. "That’s why it is a concerto," he said. "You have to practise a long time before you can play the notes. Here’s how to do it."

The second piece, the Prelude in G major, is also technically demanding, but described by researchers as slightly more "refined".

It was the "crazy" and virtuosic nature of the pieces that helped the researchers at the Mozarteum identify them as being by the young Mozart.

Sheet music

The works were part of "Nannerl’s Music Book", a collection of music compiled by Leopold Mozart in in the archive of the International Mozarteum Foundation since 1864.

They are written in Leopold’s handwriting – but Dr Leisinger believes he transcribed pieces his son played on the piano.

"This was a young composer running riot to show what he was capable of," Dr Leisinger said.

"The piece does contain real technical mistakes and clumsy moments that an old hand like Leopold Mozart would never have made."

The Austrian musician Florian Birsak played both pieces on Mozart’s fortepiano – and then a short orchestral version of the concerto was performed.

The missing orchestral accompaniment was written by Robert Levin, who specializes in historical performance.

There will be another performance of the pieces during Mozart Week 2010 in Salzburg. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Two newly discovered Mozart pieces performed for the first time

Mozart

Two newly discovered pieces of piano music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are to be performed in the Austrian city of his birth, Salzburg.

The pieces had long been in the archive of the International Mozarteum Foundation but only recently were they identified as compositions by Mozart.

The foundation has released very few details about the music.

It is to be played at a house where the composer lived from 1773-1780, which is now the Mozart’s Residence museum.

Posthumous discoveries of Mozart works are rare but not unknown, the BBC’s Bethany Bell reports from Salzburg.

In January, a piece by Mozart that had lain undiscovered in a French library for years had its first performance.

Mozart wrote more than 600 known pieces of music before his death in 1791 at the age of 35.

He began composing at the age of five and his works include operas, chamber music, choral pieces and piano concertos.

An official at the International Mozarteum Foundation told the Associated Press news agency that the compositions to be played on Sunday were "substantial pieces" composed before Mozart’s 10th birthday.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Maria Rodale: Top 10 Places I Want to Travel to Before I Die

I am going to share my list of the top 10 places I want to go to before I die (in no particular order, although I hope dying comes last).

Siemens Festival Nights 2009: Live worldwide webcasts from Bayreuth and Salzburg

The Bayreuth and Salzburg Festivals will begin on July 25. At both festivals, the Siemens Festival Nights will present operas live on large outdoor screens in perfect HD video quality and 3-D sound. At the same time, a worldwide audience will be able to watch Tristan und Isolde (Bayreuth, August 9) and Cosi fan tutte [...]

New piano music penned by Mozart is discovered

Mozart

Two piano pieces have been identified as the work of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, experts in the Austrian city of Salzburg say.

The compositions have long been in the possession of the International Mozarteum Foundation in the city, the organisation said.

Few details are being released until an official presentation in a week’s time.

In January, a piece by Mozart which had lain undiscovered in a French library for years, had its first performance.

Prolific

A spokeswoman for the Mozarteum Foundation said full details of the most recently identified works would only be made public on 2 August.

She said the music would be performed on Mozart’s original fortepiano.

Mozart left more than 600 known pieces of music before his death in 1791 at the age of 35.

He had begun composing at the age of five and his works include operas, chamber music, choral pieces and piano concertos.

The two-minute-long piece performed in public in January for the first time was played by violinist Daniel Cuiller before a small audience in Nantes, western France.

The sheet music had been found by staff at the city’s library, and authenticated as the work of Mozart in September 2008.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.