Winterthur
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auf dem Weg in den 4. Klass Unti
Author: gengeli
Keywords: MVI 0001
Added: November 22, 2008
el intro de slayer cuando iban a empezar a tocar ... es hora de destruir Winterthur.SLAYER ES MUSICA LO DEMAS SOLO SUENA BIEN !!!
Author: slayermen
Keywords: slayermen slayer intro
Added: November 21, 2008
================================Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Op.35Peter Rybar, violin.Vienna Festival Orchestra/Victor Desarzens================================Related information:Part2-2Peter RybarViolinist who lived to see his mid-century recordings return on CDTully Potter guardian.co.uk, Friday October 25 2002Article historyAfter a bizarre audition at a party (he played the Canary Song on Röntgen's violin), Rybar insisted on a proper hearing and was hired as leader of the orchestra and quartet, and teacher at the conservatoire. In Winterthur he had ideal working conditions, and his teaching skills attracted many students. The quartet prospered, and as orchestra leader he worked with all the great conductors of the postwar era.Rybar married pianist Marcelle Daeppen in 1952 and they formed a duo; but he also performed with Edwin Fischer and Wilhelm Backhaus. With Clara Haskil, he made music both in concert and in the recording studio - a famous photo shows them playing each other's instruments (she had been a violinist as a child). Having retired to Caslano, near Lake Lugano, Rybar was persuaded by Wolfgang Sawallisch to take the leader's post with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande in Geneva - violinist and conductor lasted a decade there and left together, in 1980. Rybar also took the Classe de virtuosité at the Geneva Conservatoire. He gave his last public performances in 1986 and then retired fully, saddened by the death of his wife but buoyed up by the interest in his recordings. He was also the subject of two television documentaries. Peter Rybar's records were mostly made for the cheap American labels that proliferated after the war; but because he had a distinctive tone, a fine technique and a meticulous sense of style, many have worn well. He was the first to record such staples as the Viotti A minor and Goldmark concertos and the Fantasy by his teacher Suk; one of his LPs with Haskil now commands a four-figure sum. Among his own favourites were the Busoni Second Sonata with Haskil and the Bach Double Concerto with fellow Flesch pupil Henryk Szeryng. · Peter Rybar, violinist, born August 29 1913; died October 4 2002http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2002/oct/25/guardianobituaries.arts================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music.
Author: tHEnOOSEsWING
Keywords: Peter+Rybar Allegro+moderato
Added: November 21, 2008
================================Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Op.35Peter Rybar, violin.Vienna Festival Orchestra/Victor Desarzens================================Related information:Part1-2Peter RybarViolinist who lived to see his mid-century recordings return on CDTully Potter guardian.co.uk, Friday October 25 2002Article historyThe legendary solo violinist, quartet leader, orchestra leader and teacher Peter Rybar, who has died aged 89, was one of the last links with the musical riches of the old Europe. He lived long enough to find himself a cult figure, with a dozen CDs available and more on the way. He was born in Vienna, to two Czech violinists. In 1914 his mother brought him to England, but their temporary stay was made permanent by the outbreak of war, and his father was killed in 1915, fighting in the Austro-Hungarian Army. "I was 11 months old when I came to London, so English was my first language," said Rybar - he eventually spoke seven fluently. After spells in Geneva and Leipzig, he arrived at the Prague Conservatoire, where the famed Czech Quartet (whose second violin was the composer Josef Suk) were his teachers, and among his friends were the pianist Rudolf Firkusny, and conductors Walter Susskind and Rafael Kubelik. Rybar made his name by giving the Stravinsky concerto its first performances in Prague and (with the composer present) in Paris. In the French capital he was a pupil of Carl Flesch and began a lifelong friendship with the Czech composer Bohuslav Martinu. In the late 1930s, Rybar spent 18 months in Portugal, polishing his solo Bach, but kept up his British connections. Through the poet Robert Trevelyan he got to know the violinist Adolf Busch, his conductor brother Fritz, the teacher and composer Donald Tovey - who accompanied him by heart in the Beethoven concerto and set him a fugue to write "before you go to bed" - and the Dutch composer Julius Röntgen. Urged to visit Julius's son Joachim, who led the Winterthur City Orchestra and its quartet, Rybar arrived in Switzerland in 1938, only for Joachim Röntgen to be offered a teaching job back in The Hague. After a bizarre audition at a party (he played the Canary Song on Röntgen's violin), Rybar insisted on a proper hearing and was hired as leader of the orchestra and quartet, and teacher at the conservatoire. In Winterthur he had ideal working conditions, and his teaching skills attracted many students. The quartet prospered, and as orchestra leader he worked with all the great conductors of the postwar era. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2002/oct/25/guardianobituaries.arts================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music.
Author: tHEnOOSEsWING
Keywords: Peter+Rybar Allegro+moderato
Added: November 21, 2008
================================Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Op.35Peter Rybar, violin.Vienna Festival Orchestra/Victor Desarzens================================Related information:Part1-2Peter RybarViolinist who lived to see his mid-century recordings return on CDTully Potter guardian.co.uk, Friday October 25 2002Article historyThe legendary solo violinist, quartet leader, orchestra leader and teacher Peter Rybar, who has died aged 89, was one of the last links with the musical riches of the old Europe. He lived long enough to find himself a cult figure, with a dozen CDs available and more on the way. He was born in Vienna, to two Czech violinists. In 1914 his mother brought him to England, but their temporary stay was made permanent by the outbreak of war, and his father was killed in 1915, fighting in the Austro-Hungarian Army. "I was 11 months old when I came to London, so English was my first language," said Rybar - he eventually spoke seven fluently. After spells in Geneva and Leipzig, he arrived at the Prague Conservatoire, where the famed Czech Quartet (whose second violin was the composer Josef Suk) were his teachers, and among his friends were the pianist Rudolf Firkusny, and conductors Walter Susskind and Rafael Kubelik. Rybar made his name by giving the Stravinsky concerto its first performances in Prague and (with the composer present) in Paris. In the French capital he was a pupil of Carl Flesch and began a lifelong friendship with the Czech composer Bohuslav Martinu. In the late 1930s, Rybar spent 18 months in Portugal, polishing his solo Bach, but kept up his British connections. Through the poet Robert Trevelyan he got to know the violinist Adolf Busch, his conductor brother Fritz, the teacher and composer Donald Tovey - who accompanied him by heart in the Beethoven concerto and set him a fugue to write "before you go to bed" - and the Dutch composer Julius Röntgen. Urged to visit Julius's son Joachim, who led the Winterthur City Orchestra and its quartet, Rybar arrived in Switzerland in 1938, only for Joachim Röntgen to be offered a teaching job back in The Hague. After a bizarre audition at a party (he played the Canary Song on Röntgen's violin), Rybar insisted on a proper hearing and was hired as leader of the orchestra and quartet, and teacher at the conservatoire. In Winterthur he had ideal working conditions, and his teaching skills attracted many students. The quartet prospered, and as orchestra leader he worked with all the great conductors of the postwar era. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2002/oct/25/guardianobituaries.arts================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music.
Author: tHEnOOSEsWING
Keywords: Peter+Rybar Allegro+moderato
Added: November 21, 2008
================================Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Op.35Peter Rybar, violin.Vienna Festival Orchestra/Victor Desarzens================================Related information:Part1-2Peter RybarViolinist who lived to see his mid-century recordings return on CDTully Potter guardian.co.uk, Friday October 25 2002Article historyThe legendary solo violinist, quartet leader, orchestra leader and teacher Peter Rybar, who has died aged 89, was one of the last links with the musical riches of the old Europe. He lived long enough to find himself a cult figure, with a dozen CDs available and more on the way. He was born in Vienna, to two Czech violinists. In 1914 his mother brought him to England, but their temporary stay was made permanent by the outbreak of war, and his father was killed in 1915, fighting in the Austro-Hungarian Army. "I was 11 months old when I came to London, so English was my first language," said Rybar - he eventually spoke seven fluently. After spells in Geneva and Leipzig, he arrived at the Prague Conservatoire, where the famed Czech Quartet (whose second violin was the composer Josef Suk) were his teachers, and among his friends were the pianist Rudolf Firkusny, and conductors Walter Susskind and Rafael Kubelik. Rybar made his name by giving the Stravinsky concerto its first performances in Prague and (with the composer present) in Paris. In the French capital he was a pupil of Carl Flesch and began a lifelong friendship with the Czech composer Bohuslav Martinu. In the late 1930s, Rybar spent 18 months in Portugal, polishing his solo Bach, but kept up his British connections. Through the poet Robert Trevelyan he got to know the violinist Adolf Busch, his conductor brother Fritz, the teacher and composer Donald Tovey - who accompanied him by heart in the Beethoven concerto and set him a fugue to write "before you go to bed" - and the Dutch composer Julius Röntgen. Urged to visit Julius's son Joachim, who led the Winterthur City Orchestra and its quartet, Rybar arrived in Switzerland in 1938, only for Joachim Röntgen to be offered a teaching job back in The Hague. After a bizarre audition at a party (he played the Canary Song on Röntgen's violin), Rybar insisted on a proper hearing and was hired as leader of the orchestra and quartet, and teacher at the conservatoire. In Winterthur he had ideal working conditions, and his teaching skills attracted many students. The quartet prospered, and as orchestra leader he worked with all the great conductors of the postwar era. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2002/oct/25/guardianobituaries.arts================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music.
Author: tHEnOOSEsWING
Keywords: Peter+Rybar Allegro+moderato
Added: November 21, 2008
================================Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Op.35Peter Rybar, violin.Vienna Festival Orchestra/Victor Desarzens================================Related information:Part1-2Peter RybarViolinist who lived to see his mid-century recordings return on CDTully Potter guardian.co.uk, Friday October 25 2002Article historyThe legendary solo violinist, quartet leader, orchestra leader and teacher Peter Rybar, who has died aged 89, was one of the last links with the musical riches of the old Europe. He lived long enough to find himself a cult figure, with a dozen CDs available and more on the way. He was born in Vienna, to two Czech violinists. In 1914 his mother brought him to England, but their temporary stay was made permanent by the outbreak of war, and his father was killed in 1915, fighting in the Austro-Hungarian Army. "I was 11 months old when I came to London, so English was my first language," said Rybar - he eventually spoke seven fluently. After spells in Geneva and Leipzig, he arrived at the Prague Conservatoire, where the famed Czech Quartet (whose second violin was the composer Josef Suk) were his teachers, and among his friends were the pianist Rudolf Firkusny, and conductors Walter Susskind and Rafael Kubelik. Rybar made his name by giving the Stravinsky concerto its first performances in Prague and (with the composer present) in Paris. In the French capital he was a pupil of Carl Flesch and began a lifelong friendship with the Czech composer Bohuslav Martinu. In the late 1930s, Rybar spent 18 months in Portugal, polishing his solo Bach, but kept up his British connections. Through the poet Robert Trevelyan he got to know the violinist Adolf Busch, his conductor brother Fritz, the teacher and composer Donald Tovey - who accompanied him by heart in the Beethoven concerto and set him a fugue to write "before you go to bed" - and the Dutch composer Julius Röntgen. Urged to visit Julius's son Joachim, who led the Winterthur City Orchestra and its quartet, Rybar arrived in Switzerland in 1938, only for Joachim Röntgen to be offered a teaching job back in The Hague. After a bizarre audition at a party (he played the Canary Song on Röntgen's violin), Rybar insisted on a proper hearing and was hired as leader of the orchestra and quartet, and teacher at the conservatoire. In Winterthur he had ideal working conditions, and his teaching skills attracted many students. The quartet prospered, and as orchestra leader he worked with all the great conductors of the postwar era. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2002/oct/25/guardianobituaries.arts================================ *Note:Support the artist, their families and their legacy by purchasing their music.
Author: tHEnOOSEsWING
Keywords: Peter+Rybar Allegro+moderato
Added: November 21, 2008
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Die indyaner media Gmbh in Winterthur entwickelt professionelle Internet-Lösungen für kleine und mittlere Unternehmen, soziale Institutionen und Hilfsprojekte. Attraktiv und benutzerfreundlich - auch barrierefrei.
http://digg.com/business_finance/Barrierefreies_Webdesign_aus_Winterthur
More than half a century ago, Aemelius Müller, professor at the academy of Winterthur, Switzerland, came up with a formula that could predict the appreciation of a color-combination
http://digg.com/design/The_Muller_Formula_or_Predictable_Color_Preferences_2
Antiques and collectibles are at lower prices than in recent years and now is the time to buy. A discussion of collecting during hard economic times as witnessed by the du Pont collection at Winterthur.
http://digg.com/arts_culture/Falling_Prices_Mean_More_Bang
As you drive onto the grounds of Winterthur Museum and Country Estate, the former home of Henry Francis du Pont in Winterthur, Del., you are amazed at the spaciousness of the land. The beautiful green lawn seems to go on forever.
http://digg.com/travel_places/Take_the_Yuletide_Tour_at_Winterthur
More than half a century ago, Aemelius Müller, professor at the academy of Winterthur,
http://digg.com/design/The_Muller_Formula_or_Predictable_Color_Preferences
After seeing "An Inconvenient Truth” , it was clear for Daniel Lüscher, the 38-year old pilot, that it was high time to start taking action. Back in Winterthur, Switzerland, he and a few friends got together to think about how to make his city to an international model for responsible action against the climate crisis. The first success was a...
http://digg.com/environment/myblueplanet_An_Open_Source_Citizens_Initiative_against_Climate_Change
Yesterday sales and management staff at Winterthur Life headquarters in Basingstoke topped the company's fundraising target in a sponsored cricket match for Naomi House, local children's hospice
http://digg.com/business_finance/Winterthur_Life_Help_Local_Childrens_Charity_Basingstoke_Business_News























