Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
1908...
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8 APRIL 1708 First Performance of G. F. Handel´s oratorio La Resurrezione "The Resurrection", with Arcangelo Corelli conducting at the Bonelli Palace in Rome. La Resurrezione (HWV 47) is a sacred oratorio by George Frideric Handel, set to a libretto by Carlo Sigismondo Capece (1652-1728). Capece was court poet to Queen Maria Casimira of Poland, who was living in exile in Rome. It was first performed on the Easter Sunday of 1708 at Rome, with the backing of the Marchese Francesco Ruspoli, Handel's patron at this time.
WITH a global audience, it should have been the climax of Luciano Pavarotti’s career. However, when the star tenor made his last public appearance, at the Turin Winter Olympics in 2006, disease and a failing voice led him to fake a live performance of his trademark aria Nessun Dorma. The disclosure comes in an affectionate but candid memoir published last week by Leone Magiera, a conductor and pianist who performed at Pavarotti’s side in more than 1,000 concerts. It paints a warts-and-all portrait of the singer’s passions for food and women, his triumphs and blunders.
Herbert von Karajan (April 5, 1908 – July 16, 1989)This story | WEB LINKS | IMAGES | NEWS | SHOP Herbert von Karajan
March 27, 1808 Franz Joseph Haydn gives his last public appearance at a performance of his oratorio The Creation to mark the composer's upcomming 76th birthday. Beethoven and Salieri also attend the performance and meet Haydn, in Vienna.
French conductor Serge Baudo was awarded honorary citizenship of the Czech capital of Prague for his great contribution to the development of Prague culture and the promotion of Czech music abroad, at a ceremony at Prague's Old-Town Hall Tuesday. Baudo, 80, said he really appreciates the honour and he would do his utmost to deserve it. Baudo performed in Prague for the first time in 1959. NEWS | WEB LINKS | IMAGES | SHOP Serge Baudo
The Academy of St. Martin in the Fields had plenty before Tuesday's downbeat in Jones Hall. First, Murray Perahia, the announced conductor and piano soloist, withdrew from the 11-city tour after his doctors recommended extended rest to recover from a skin infection. Then his replacement, Sir Neville Marriner, who founded the Academy in 1959, stabbed his left hand with his baton during Tuesday's rehearsal onstage. NEWS | WEB LINKS | IMAGES | SHOP Sir Neville Marriner

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