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In the summer of 2016 musician Joanna Wallfisch released her third
album, but was feeling jaded about the prospect of a conventional
tour to promote it. Seeking to reconnect with her most adventurous
and fearless self, she decided to do something radically different:
a solo tour down the West Coast of America - by bicycle. Across six
weeks and 1,850 kilometres, she would pedal from Portland to Los
Angeles, performing concerts in every town along the way. It would
be The Great Song Cycle, an experience unlike any other. Filled
with humour, wonder and joy, The Great Song Cycle is a beautifully
narrated story of adventure, a journey of discovery and, above all,
a celebration of the artist's spirit.
Often considered Romania's greatest musical force and a significant
mind of the 20th century, composer George Enescu (1881-1955)
achieved international fame and succeeded in incorporating Romanian
spirituality into worldwide culture. Masterworks of George Enescu
provides a profound and very detailed analysis of more than 25 of
this important composer's most representative works. Translated
from musicologist Pascal Bentoiu's Romanian publication, Lory
Wallfisch presents this vital work for the first time to
English-speaking audiences, providing the worldwide public with the
tools to understand and enjoy Enescu's music. Bentoiu presents a
kind of travel diary through Enescu's creative legacy, offering a
comprehensive, well-documented, knowledgeable, and generously
illustrated analytical study of the composer's greatest
masterpieces. Works such as the Romanian Rhapsodies, the Second
Suite for Orchestra, Vox Maris, Impressions d'Enfance, his opera
Oedipe, and several sonatas and quartets are carefully examined and
admired for their substance and their ability to add dignity to the
musical world. The works are presented chronologically, considering
their conceptual realization as well as their inception and
completion. Illustrated with more than 400 musical examples, this
impressive study is a perfect guide toward the thorough enjoyment
of Enescu's masterpieces.
This is the story of the destruction of a talented Jewish family,
and of the survival against all the odds of two young sisters. It
is one of the most moving stories to emerge from the Second World
War. Anita and her elder sister Renate defied death at the hands of
the Gestapo and the SS over a period of two and a half years when
they were sucked into the whirlpool of Nazi mass extermination,
being first imprisoned as 'criminals' and then being transferred,
separately, to Auschwitz, and finally to Belsen when the Russians
approached. They were saved by their exceptional courage,
determination and ingenuity, and by several improbable strokes of
luck. At Auschwitz, Anita escaped annihilation through her talents
as a cellist when she was co-opted into the camp orchestra directed
by Alma Rose, niece of Gustav Mahler. Her book is especially
remarkable because of the many documents she has managed to
preserve, most of them now lodged in the archives of the Imperial
War Museum in London. In a sequence of family letters to her sister
Marianne, who was marooned in England, from just before the war to
1942 when her parents were deported and liquidated, an atmosphere
of happy normality gradually gives way to latent terror and
foreboding. The appalling predicament of the Lasker family, and of
Anita and Renate in particular when the rest of their relations had
been deported and they were left totally alone in Breslau, could
not be more poignantly conveyed. They were caught by the Gestapo
trying to flee to Paris, and sent to prison: another piece of
'luck', as it turned out, since they were spared the worse horrors
of Auschwitz for a crucial year. After the liberation of Belsen in
April 1945, the correspondence with Marianne in England resumed.
Anita was seconded to the British Army, and she quotes first-hand
material about the early days of the occupation, including a
transcript of part of the Luneburg trial in late 1945 when she gave
evidence about Nazi atrocities at Auschwitz and Belsen, and was
confronted in court by her tormentors. In 1946 she and Renate were
both finally permitted to emigrate to England. Three years later,
Anita became a founder member of the English Chamber Orchestra, in
which she continued to play the cello until recently. Anita's book
featured in BBC Radio 4's 'Desert Island Discs' programme on 25th
August 1996. She had also told her story in a series of five BBC
Radio 4 programmes in 1994; and a BBC 2 TV film about her
experiences, Playing to Survive, was screened in October 1996.
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Lights Out (DVD)
Teresa Palmer, Gabriel Bateman, Emily Alyn Lind, Alicia Vela-Bailey, Maria Russell, …
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R53
Discovery Miles 530
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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David F. Sandberg directs this horror, based on his own short,
starring Teresa Palmer, Gabriel Bateman and Maria Bello. After her
husband is killed in a mysterious accident at work, Sophie (Bello)
becomes mentally unstable and disturbed and spends much of her time
communicating with an imaginary friend that lurks in the darkness.
When her behaviour begins to affect her son Martin (Bateman), his
older sister Rebecca (Palmer), who remembers their awful home life
all too well, offers to shelter him in her apartment to keep him
out of harm's way. With the reluctant help of her boyfriend Bret
(Alexander DiPersia), Rebecca tries to uncover the mystery behind
the entity her mother calls Diana as she researches her mother's
past in a mental institution. But it seems Diana has now made
Rebecca a target of her attacks when the lights go out...
Director Tony Britten's drama documentary examines the acclaimed
composer's lifelong commitment to pacifism. Using a dramatic
narrative to explore the development of Britten's pacifist beliefs
during the time he spent at the liberally progressive Gresham's
School in Norfolk between the years of 1928-1930, the film charts a
time which marked a crucial period of the composer's personal and
musical development. Interwoven throughout are contemporary
performances of the composer's works and contributions from,
amongst others, conductor and composer Joseph Horovitz, cellists
Anita Lasker Wallfisch and Raphael Wallfisch, and Britten's agent
for many years, Sue Phipps. John Hurt narrates.
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