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Historic Recording of the Month

 
 

Thursday 14. Aug 2008, 19:00 hours
Francisco Santiago Hall, Makati, Metro Manila

Bach2Bach II

JS Bach: Concertos for Keyboard and Orchestra

Alumni/Faculty of UST Conservatory of Music
UST Strings Ensemble
ARIES CACES, guest conductor

REVIEW:
L. van BEETHOVEN: Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No.5 E flat major "Emperor" [1st movement]
Aries Caces conductor and pianist with the the U.S.T. Symphony Orchestra in a live performance on 26. October 2007.

Sonntag 5.Okt 2008 Abends
"Blauer Saal", Katholische Kirchengemeinde St. Georg, Mainz-Bretzenheim

Jubiläumskonzert der Isis Concert Group

Ausschnitte u.a. aus den Opern

  • Madame Butterfly
  • Idomeneo
  • Hochzeit des Figaro
    und Kammermusik von
  • Pablo de Sarasate und
  • Bohuslav Martinů.

    Mitwirkende:
    Katrin LE PROVOST, Soubrette (Deutschland)
    Jung-Sin LEE, jugendlich dramatischer Sopran (Korea)
    Thomas JAKOBS, Spieltenor (Deutschland)
    Seung-Jo CHA, Klavierbegleitung (Korea)
    Irina BORISEVA, Violine (Bulgarien)
    Yena LEE, Violine (Kanada)
    Christian STRAUSS, Klavier (Deutschland)

  • Samstag 18. Okt 2008, 19:00 Uhr
    Benediktinerabtei Seitenstetten, Niederösterreich

    Kammermusik-Abend mit Meisterstudierenden

    Programm:

  • Bela Bartok - Ciaccona aus der Solo Sonate
  • Johannes Brahms - Sonate Nr. 3 in d moll, Op.108
    - Pause -
  • Jenő Hubay – „Preghiera“
  • Pablo de Sarasate - „Carmen Fantasy“ Op.25
  • Franz Liszt – „Mephisto-Walzer“
  • Debussy-Heifetz - „Golliwog's Cakewalk“
  • Niccolò Paganini - „La Campanella“

    Mitwirkende:
    Agnes LANGER, Violine (Ungarn)
    Igor TSINMAN, Violine (Russland)
    Connie SHIH, Klavier (Kanada)
    Aries CACES, Klavier (Philippinen)

  • Sonntag 7. Dez 2008, 17:00 Uhr
    Kreishaus des Main-Tauns-Kreis, Hofheim

    Klavier-Recital mit Christian Strauß

    Programm:

  • Franz Liszt - „Dante“ – Sonate aus „ Années de Pèlerinage“
  • Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy - Sechs Lieder ohne Worte op. 19
  • Franz Liszt - „Mephisto-Walzer“
    - Pause -
  • Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)
    - Ballade g-Moll op. 23
    - Ballade F-Dur op. 38
    - Ballade As-Dur op. 47
    - Ballade f-Moll op. 52

    Veranstalter: Der Main-Taunus-Kreis in Kooperation mit der
    Mendelssohn-Gesellschaft Main-Taunus e.V.

  •  

    Friday 8. Aug 2008, 18:30 hours
    Philam Life Auditorium, United Nations Ave., Malate, Manila

    International Piano & Chamber Music Festival 2008

    Works by Franck, Poulenc, Saint-Saens

    Jovianney Emmanuel CRUZ, piano
    Yuan SHENG, piano
    Gila GOLDSTEIN, piano
    Jacques DESPRÉS, piano
    Robera RUST, piano
    Raul GUINGONA, narrator

    PHILIPPINE PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
    Aries CACES, guest conductor


    Exclusive Violin Franchise

    [June 2008]
    The violin maker Amador Tamayo and Isis Concert Group have signed a Franchise Agreement, according to which ICG will take exclusive responsibility for marketing his violins in the countries of the European Union.

    After having been trained in Germany, first in Hamburg with Hubert Schnorr, and subsequently at the Geigenbauschule Mittenwald in Bavaria, Tamayo has been first cellist in several orchestras including the Manila Symphony Orchestra and the Manila Chamber Orchestra. Over the past 25 years he has built up a singular reputation for building high quality handmade violins and cellis from well aged German wood.

    Jung-Sin LEE
    in ELIJA by Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy

    Aria "Was hast du an mir getan"

    A live recording with the Nordpfälzer Oratorienchor on May 17, 2008 at the "Ringkirche" in Wiesbaden / Germany.

      VIDEO: [11:08]

    Gala Concert
    Universidad di Santa Isabel, Naga City
    Thursday March 27, 2008


    Ena Maria ALDECOA, lyric coloratura soprano (Prof. Piano, UP, Quezon City)
    Randy GILONGO, lyric tenor (Prof. Voice, UST, Manila)
    Augusto ESPINO, piano (Prof. Piano, UP, Quezon City)
    Tom FRINTA, stage direction

     
    EXCERPTS FROM THE CONCERT:
    E. Grieg: Excerpts from Seks Sange op. 48 VIDEO: [07:20]
    (T) Lauf der Welt * Zur Rosenzeit * Ein Traum

    R. Hahn: VIDEO: [02:26]
    (S) "Si mes vers avaient des ailes"

    G. Puccini: Gianni Schicchi (Lauretta) VIDEO: [02:34]
    (S) "O mio babbino caro"

    W.A. Mozart: Zauberflöte (Königin der Nacht) VIDEO: [04:50]
    (S) "O zittre nicht"

    S. Rachmaninoff: VIDEO: [05:14]
    (T) "In the silent night" op.4-3 * Spring Waters op.14-11

    R. Rogers: The King and I VIDEO: [04:13]
    (S,T) "I have dreamed"

    L. Bernstein: Westside Story VIDEO: [04:19]
    (S,T) "Tonight"

    A.L. Webber: The Phantom of the Opera VIDEO: [04:31]
    (S,T) "All I ask of You"


    Maestro David KIM

    has passed away after grave suffering on 5th March 2008.

    Inspired by his involvement the Korean National Opera and the Korean Symphony Orchestra had their European debut in March, 2006 numbering some 220 participants in a singular performance of "The Wedding Day" in the "Neue Oper Frankfurt".

    A person who loved the voice that God had given to him,
    a singer who always praised the Lord has parted from us.
    The world of music and its colours which he had showed us,
    we could only share for a little while.
    His teachings will however rest with us for ever.
    I am thankful to God,
    that I was chosen to accompany him in his final concert.

    (Obituary by Seung-Jo CHA)

    Canzone di Rodolfo Falvo [recorded 25. Jan.2008]

    Themen
    27. Oct 2007
    The Philippine Star wrote:

    As a piano concertist, Caces has gained several honors. He performed Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini with the Hochschule Symphonie Orchester under Julius Kalmar in Vienna’s prestigious Golden Hall, and was later awarded the “Prix Decouverte” after a solo recital at the Festival International De Musique in Le Touquet, France. Caces has given solo recitals in Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and the US. He was featured soloist of the Hanover Kammersymphonie Orchester.

    It was in the dual role of pianist and conductor that Caces performed at the F. Santiago Hall, playing three Beethoven Concertos — Nos. 2, 1 and 4 — while also conducting the UST Symphony Orchestra. I was not present when Caces yesterday played and conducted the two other Beethoven Concertos — Nos. 3 and 5 (“The Emperor”).

    As conductor, he has collaborated with the MSO, PPO and UST Symphony Orchestra. A seasoned chamber musician and conductor, he has given recitals and concerts in Europe and America.

     

    Nevertheless, as interpreted, the three Concertos were more than enough to demonstrate the infinite depth and breadth of Beethoven as composer, encompassing his protean originality, inventiveness and imagination; in brief, his creative genius.

    Beethoven himself played the Concerto No. 2 in B Flat Major in Vienna in 1795, having purportedly composed it in two days, and established his pre-eminence with it.

    The Piano Concerto No. 1 in C Major bears slight traces of Haydn and Mozart. The listener gave special attention to the rondo which is dauntingly virtuosic in style and dual in character: the delicate and the gentle alternating with the robust and the ferocious.

    The Concerto No. 4 in G Major is regarded Beethoven’s finest although it is overshadowed by the Fifth (“The Emperor”) in popularity and in the frequency of rendition. The Fourth’s solid structure has urgent appeal and attraction, its originality including, among others, enticing and inspiring melodies and variations. The Concerto is an arsenal of challenging technical devices, and Caces rose to their demands in magnificent measure, conveying power, fire and dynamism as he breezed through the bravura passages with astonishing rapidity and agility. Further, his tonal colors and inflections evoked the emotional content and sentiment of the various movements.

    Caces wielded the baton in a magnetic, mesmerizing manner, conveying power, fire and dynamism, and leading each section of the youthful ensemble to respond to his dynamism marvelously. Indeed, the listeners felt the constant surge of overwhelming energy from pianist-conductor to orchestra.

    With absolute, masterful grasp of both the piano and orchestral scores, Caces played and conducted so rousingly that he achieved an arresting, amazing and electrifying feat which places him in the ranks of our top pianists and baton-wielders.