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To bring the best, most trustworthy information to every internet reader. The Great Library for all. The Internet Archive is a bargain, but we need your help. If you find our site useful, please chip in.
Thank you.— Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive. Dear Internet Archive Supporter,I ask only once a year: please help the Internet Archive today. Right now, we have a 2-to-1 Matching Gift Campaign, so you can triple your impact! The average donation is $45. If everyone reading this chips in just $5, we can end this fundraiser today.
All we need is the price of a paperback book to sustain a non-profit website the whole world depends on. We’re dedicated to reader privacy so we never track you. We never accept ads. But we still need to pay for servers and staff. I know we could charge money, but then we couldn’t achieve our mission.
To bring the best, most trustworthy information to every internet reader. The Great Library for all. The Internet Archive is a bargain, but we need your help. If you find our site useful, please chip in. Thank you.— Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive.
Dear Internet Archive Supporter,I ask only once a year: please help the Internet Archive today. Right now, we have a 2-to-1 Matching Gift Campaign, so you can triple your impact! The average donation is $45.
If everyone chips in just $5, we can end this fundraiser today. All we need is the price of a paperback book to sustain a non-profit library the whole world depends on.
Tchaikovsky Nutcracker Score
We’re dedicated to reader privacy. We never accept ads.
But we still need to pay for servers and staff. I know we could charge money, but then we couldn’t achieve our mission. To bring the best, most trustworthy information to every internet reader. The Great Library for all. We need your help. If you find our site useful, please chip in.— Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive. TCHAIKOVSKY: Nutcracker Ballet (complete)Royal Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra of LondonArtur Rodzinski, conductorACT I, sc.
Lighting of the Christmas Tree3. Children's Galop and Dance of the Parents5.
Dance Scene: Presents for the Children6. Scene and Grandfather's Dance7. Scene: Departure of Guests; Bedtime; Magic Spell Begins8. Scene: Battle and Transformation of NutcrackerACT I, sc. Scene: Journey through the Snow10. Waltz of the SnowflakesACT II11.
Scene: The Magic Castle12. Scene: Festival13. Chocolate (Spanish Dance)14.
Coffee (Arabian Dance)15. Tea (Chinese Dance)16. Trepak (Russian Dance)17. Danse des Mirlitons18.
Mere Gigogne and the Clowns19. Waltz of the Flowers20. Pas de Deux21. Prince Charming's Solo22 Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairies23. Waltz Finale and ApotheosisWestminster WGS 8147-2 (stereo Lp)Recorded in 1955Digital transfer by F.
About Pyotr Ilyich TchaikovskyThough Tchaikovsky's name conjures the dancing sugar plum fairies of The Nutcracker, pirouetting ballerinas of Swan Lake or strident themes of his violin concerto, it's the Russian composer's bitterly pessimistic final symphony that lends insight into the distressed emotional state which plagued him throughout his life and led to his rumored suicide.Born in 1840, he was a prodigiously talented child performer and taught music as a young man. Due to the fervent nationalism popular with his early peers, his compositions took longer to catch on, though his First Symphony was well received in Moscow in 1868. By incorporating Ukrainian folk tunes, his Second Symphony faired better, and, bolstered by its success, he wrote a daring piano concerto. In 1875 he produced the careful Third Symphony and Swan Lake, before battling mid-life depression stemming from his sexual identity. He produced the monumental violin concerto in the late 1870s and two important ballets, Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, a decade later. He died nine days after the performance of his Sixth Symphony in 1893.
Nate Cavalieri. Though Tchaikovsky's name conjures the dancing sugar plum fairies of The Nutcracker, pirouetting ballerinas of Swan Lake or strident themes of his violin concerto, it's the Russian composer's bitterly pessimistic final symphony that lends insight into the distressed emotional state which plagued him throughout his life and led to his rumored suicide.Born in 1840, he was a prodigiously talented child performer and taught music as a young man. Due to the fervent nationalism popular with his early peers, his compositions took longer to catch on, though his First Symphony was well received in Moscow in 1868. By incorporating Ukrainian folk tunes, his Second Symphony faired better, and, bolstered by its success, he wrote a daring piano concerto. In 1875 he produced the careful Third Symphony and Swan Lake, before battling mid-life depression stemming from his sexual identity. He produced the monumental violin concerto in the late 1870s and two important ballets, Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, a decade later. He died nine days after the performance of his Sixth Symphony in 1893.
Though Tchaikovsky's name conjures the dancing sugar plum fairies of The Nutcracker, pirouetting ballerinas of Swan Lake or strident themes of his violin concerto, it's the Russian composer's bitterly pessimistic final symphony that lends insight into the distressed emotional state which plagued him throughout his life and led to his rumored suicide.Born in 1840, he was a prodigiously talented child performer and taught music as a young man. Due to the fervent nationalism popular with his early peers, his compositions took longer to catch on, though his First Symphony was well received in Moscow in 1868.
By incorporating Ukrainian folk tunes, his Second Symphony faired better, and, bolstered by its success, he wrote a daring piano concerto. In 1875 he produced the careful Third Symphony and Swan Lake, before battling mid-life depression stemming from his sexual identity. He produced the monumental violin concerto in the late 1870s and two important ballets, Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, a decade later. He died nine days after the performance of his Sixth Symphony in 1893.
About Pyotr Ilyich TchaikovskyThough Tchaikovsky's name conjures the dancing sugar plum fairies of The Nutcracker, pirouetting ballerinas of Swan Lake or strident themes of his violin concerto, it's the Russian composer's bitterly pessimistic final symphony that lends insight into the distressed emotional state which plagued him throughout his life and led to his rumored suicide.Born in 1840, he was a prodigiously talented child performer and taught music as a young man. Due to the fervent nationalism popular with his early peers, his compositions took longer to catch on, though his First Symphony was well received in Moscow in 1868. By incorporating Ukrainian folk tunes, his Second Symphony faired better, and, bolstered by its success, he wrote a daring piano concerto. In 1875 he produced the careful Third Symphony and Swan Lake, before battling mid-life depression stemming from his sexual identity. He produced the monumental violin concerto in the late 1870s and two important ballets, Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, a decade later.
He died nine days after the performance of his Sixth Symphony in 1893. Nate Cavalieri.