Thursday, January 8, 2015

THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015

QUOTE:
"Nothing right can be accomplished
  in art without enthusiasm."
AUTHOR: Robert Schumann
MEANING OF THE QUOTE:
"Art starts out in the artists soul inwardly.
 The art can not be expressed outwardly
 without the willingness of the artist
 to work hard."






COMPOSER
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Sheherazade Op.35
http://www.momh.org.uk/exhibitions-detail-photo.php?cat_id=1&prod_id=75&type=main&id=75
Leon Bakst: Scheherazade
Scheherazade Op. 35
Valery Gergiev, Conductor
Vienna Phiharmonic
Salzburg Festival, 2005

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQNymNaTr-Y

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheherazade_(Rimsky-Korsakov)
Leon Bakst: Set Design for Scheherazade, 1910
Scheherazade is in four separate sections:
Scheherazade Op. 35
1: "The Sea and Sinbad's Ship"
Fritz Reiner, Conductor
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Scheherazade Op. 35
2: "The Kalendar Prince"
Fritz Reiner, Conductor
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Scheherazade Op. 35
3: "The Young Prince and Young Princess"
Fritz Reiner, Conductor
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Scheherazade Op. 35
4: "Festival At Baghdad"
"The Sea"
"The Ship Breaks Against A Cliff
Surmounted By A Bronze Horseman"
Fritz Reiner, Conductor
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Rimsky-Korsakov was very sparse in his
explanation of the movements and the
tales depicted. In later editions of the 
work he did away with even the titles of
the movements, expressing his hope
that the listener would hear the music
as Oriental-themed work that evoked
the sense of a fairy tale adventure.
Dulac: Princess Scheherazade
Chanson Arabe
Fritz Kreisler, Violin
(Arranged for Violin from
Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade)


Sheerazade Calyph , Concubine Art Deco by Erte
Erte: Calyph's Concubine
Scheherazade
Peter Cetera
Featuring Madonna
SONG LYRICS
He was the sultan of Samarcand
He had a harem of dancing girls at his command
He owned all the eye could see
Something was wrong, he wasn't happy

And then it happened much to his surprise
The loveliest woman he'd ever seen
He asked her name and she replied
She was the daughter of the grand vizier 
A real beauty with a heart of gold, she was so sincere 
She made a date with destiny 
Marry the king, make him happy

He was enchanted on their wedding night 
Just a captive under her spell 
Spending a thousand and one Arabian nights
Scheherazade
Erte: Scheherazade Suite I
One Thousand and Second Night
All of his body tingled with delight 
Hearing the stories she loved to tell 
She was a vision, such a lovely sight
Scheherazade
He made a promise on the morning star 
He would change, throw away his scimitar 
So she came to stay 
And that's the way the story goes 
Until this very day
Scheherazade
He was enchanted on their wedding night 
Just a captive under her spell 
Spending a thousand and one Arabian nights
Scheherazade
Erte: Scheherazade Suite II
Beauty of Bahgdad
All of his body tingled with delight 
Hearing the stories she loved to tell 
She was a vision, such a lovely sight
Rene Magritte: Sheherazade
The story of Scheherazade was
also placed into music as a song
cycle (and later as an orchestral
version) by the famous French
composer Maurice Ravel:
Maurice Ravel

Shéhérazade,
Ouverture de Féerie
By Maurice Ravel 
(1 of 2)
Chagall: Scheherazade
Shéhérazade,
Ouverture de Féerie
By Maurice Ravel
(2 of 2)
Ravel's 'Shéhérazade, ouverture de féerie,'
written in 1898 but unpublished, is a work
for orchestra intended as the overture for
an opera of the same name. It was first
performed at a concert of the Société
Nationale on 27 May 1899.
Scheherazade
Virginia Frances Sterrett: Painting of Scheherazade, 1928
Scheherazade is the young bride of the Sultan.
After one of his wives cheats on him, he
decides to take a new wife every day and
have her executed the next morning. But it all
stops with Scheherazade. She marries the
Sultan in order to save all future young women
from this fate. She tells the Sultan fascinating
stories, leaving him in such suspense each
night that he can't execute her the next morning
for fear of not hearing the end of the story. After
1,001 of these well-told tales, the Sultan relents.

(This story is based on tales taken from
One Thousand and One Nights, an
Arabian compilation of ancient Middle-
Eastern, Asian, and African folk stories.)
Alberto Vargas: Scheherazade
LINKS