String Quartet No. 14 In D Minor, D. 810 "Death and the Maiden": I. Allegro
The Tokyo String Quartet (東京クヮルテット?) is an international string quartet.
Read Full Bio ↴The Tokyo String Quartet (東京クヮルテット?) is an international string quartet.
The group formed in 1969 at the Juilliard School of Music. The founding members attended the Toho Gakuen School of Music[1] in Tokyo, where they studied with Professor Hideo Saito. Soon after its formation the Quartet won First Prizes at the Coleman Competition, the Munich Competition and the Young Concert Artists International Auditions. This resulted in a recording contract with Deutsche Grammophon.
The quartet has recorded over 30 albums, covering a wide range. They won the Grand Prix du Disque Montreux, "Best Chamber Music Recording of the Year" awards from both Stereo Review and Gramophone magazines, and seven Grammy nominations. They recorded exclusively for RCA Victor Red Seal for many years, and now record for Harmonia Mundi.
During their 1994 25th anniversary international tour, the quartet performed the complete Beethoven String Quartets.
On television, the quartet has appeared on "Sesame Street", "CBS Sunday Morning", PBS's "Great Performances", "National Arts", and a national broadcast from the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
The members of the quartet have served on the faculty of the Yale School of Music since 1976.
The group plays on a collection of instruments made by the famous luthier Stradivari. The collection is known as the Paganini Quartet.
Contents
[hide]
• 1 Members
o 1.1 First violin
o 1.2 Second violin
o 1.3 Viola
o 1.4 Cello
• 2 References
• 3 External links
[edit] Members
The announcement of Kazuhide Isomura and Kikuei Ikeda's retirement from the quartet in June, 2013 has been officially aired. This retirement led to the official announcement of the disbanding of the quartet following the end of the 2013 season.
[edit] First violin
• 1969 Koichiro Harada
• 1981 Peter Oundjian
• 1995 Andrew Dawes
• 1996 Mikhail Kopelman
• 2002 Martin Beaver
[edit] Second violin
• 1969 Yoshiko Nakura
• 1974 Kikuei Ikeda
[edit] Viola
• 1969 Kazuhide Isomura
Cello
• 1969 Sadao Harada
• 2000 Clive Greensmith
References
1. ^ "Full 2009-1010 Biography". http://www.tokyoquartet.com/artist.php?view=bio. Retrieved 12 August 2009.
• http://www.tokyoquartet.com/artist.php?view=bio ]External links
• Official site
• The Tokyo String Quartet Performs In-depth essay on concert performance of 6 March 2011.
Read Full Bio ↴The Tokyo String Quartet (東京クヮルテット?) is an international string quartet.
The group formed in 1969 at the Juilliard School of Music. The founding members attended the Toho Gakuen School of Music[1] in Tokyo, where they studied with Professor Hideo Saito. Soon after its formation the Quartet won First Prizes at the Coleman Competition, the Munich Competition and the Young Concert Artists International Auditions. This resulted in a recording contract with Deutsche Grammophon.
The quartet has recorded over 30 albums, covering a wide range. They won the Grand Prix du Disque Montreux, "Best Chamber Music Recording of the Year" awards from both Stereo Review and Gramophone magazines, and seven Grammy nominations. They recorded exclusively for RCA Victor Red Seal for many years, and now record for Harmonia Mundi.
During their 1994 25th anniversary international tour, the quartet performed the complete Beethoven String Quartets.
On television, the quartet has appeared on "Sesame Street", "CBS Sunday Morning", PBS's "Great Performances", "National Arts", and a national broadcast from the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
The members of the quartet have served on the faculty of the Yale School of Music since 1976.
The group plays on a collection of instruments made by the famous luthier Stradivari. The collection is known as the Paganini Quartet.
Contents
[hide]
• 1 Members
o 1.1 First violin
o 1.2 Second violin
o 1.3 Viola
o 1.4 Cello
• 2 References
• 3 External links
[edit] Members
The announcement of Kazuhide Isomura and Kikuei Ikeda's retirement from the quartet in June, 2013 has been officially aired. This retirement led to the official announcement of the disbanding of the quartet following the end of the 2013 season.
[edit] First violin
• 1969 Koichiro Harada
• 1981 Peter Oundjian
• 1995 Andrew Dawes
• 1996 Mikhail Kopelman
• 2002 Martin Beaver
[edit] Second violin
• 1969 Yoshiko Nakura
• 1974 Kikuei Ikeda
[edit] Viola
• 1969 Kazuhide Isomura
Cello
• 1969 Sadao Harada
• 2000 Clive Greensmith
References
1. ^ "Full 2009-1010 Biography". http://www.tokyoquartet.com/artist.php?view=bio. Retrieved 12 August 2009.
• http://www.tokyoquartet.com/artist.php?view=bio ]External links
• Official site
• The Tokyo String Quartet Performs In-depth essay on concert performance of 6 March 2011.
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String Quartet No. 14 In D Minor D. 810 "Death and the Maiden": I. Allegro
Tokyo String Quartet Lyrics
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The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
@erhardgeiger6199
#hmac2222
you are right, its the best video to chamber musice ever seen
and
ALBAN BERG QUARTETT - there is nothing left - so sorry they dont exist any more
thank you musicians and video artist
and by my heart: thank you Franz Peter Schubert, my love
@christinenewland386
The second violinist Gerhard Schulz in the Berg Quartet, was the first violinist of our Dûsseldorf Quartet when we were students with violinist Sandor Vegh and cellist Antonio Janigro.
We toured Europe in our quartet in a VW for two years and later went to Prussia Cove England for a BBC recorded chamber music course, with Sandor Vegh and Anonio Janigro. I recall telling Gerhard he was destined for fame! So proud of him! ❤
@zec2006
You knew Antonio Janigro? Impressive. Tell us more about him :) He founded Zagreb Soloists, the ensemble I played in for 8 years. And Sandor Vegh on the other hand was teaching my teacher - Lars Anders Tomter. Amazing connection.
@user-kz9tx9rs6d
1. Allegro (d-moll) - 00:03
2. Andante con moto (g-moll) - 11:30
3. Scherzo - allegro molto (d-moll) - 22:12
4. Presto (d-moll) - 25:45
관록의 명연주!!!!! Excellent!!!!!
@faruleva
Грандиозно! Спасибо большое ансамблю за непревзойдённое исполнение!!!
@hmac2222
Can we just pause for a moment to admire the cinematography of this recording? I've never seen anything like it.
@Carlos-ju2ok
I agree!
Bruno Monsaingeon fecit!
Magnificent and prolific filmmaker for music documentaries.
@eorrific
Very dramatic! See 8:01 haha
@Felix-vg4mv
Bruno Monsaingneon, the Stanley Kubrick of musical performance cinematography.
@kskyro5654
can you tell me what you mean with "cinematography" never heard this word, and don´t know what it means. Im german by the way ;)
@PaulO-re4xx
K Sebastian “cinematography” ist wie ein Video gefilmt ist (normalerweise auf künstlerischer Art)