Appearance: Yukio Fujioka (Kansai Phil Chief Conductor) Yuko Morita (Soprano), Yuko Tanaka (Alto), Masato Shimakage (Tenor), Yuya Tanaka (Bariton) Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra Joyo 9th Festival Choir
General release: 07/15 (Mon) 10:00 to 12/18 (Wed) 18:00
Date: Sunday, December 22, 2019
Open at 13:30/Start at 14:00
Location: Kyoto Prefecture Joyo City Terada Imabori 1
Access: 10 minutes walk from Kintetsu Kyoto Line Terada Station Exit, A 25-minute walk from JR Nara Line Joyo Station Exit
The Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra (大阪フィルハーモニー交響楽団 Ōsaka Firuhāmonī Kōkyō Gakudan) is a Japanese symphony orchestra based in Osaka, Japan. Founded in 1947 as the Kansai Symphony Orchestra, the orchestra took the name of the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra in 1960, and in 2014, formally assumed the official name of the Osaka Philharmonic Association. Its primary concert venue is the Osaka Festival Hall.
Takashi Asahina was the orchestra's founder, and served as its music director and principal conductor until 2001. Eiji Oue became the orchestra's second principal conductor, and served from 2003 to 2014. He now has the title of conductor laureate with the orchestra. Since April 2014, Michiyoshi Inoue is the orchestra's principal conductor.
The Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125, is the final complete symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven, composed between 1822 and 1824. It was first performed in Vienna on 7 May 1824. One of the best-known works in common practice music, it is regarded by many critics and musicologists as one of Beethoven's greatest works and one of the supreme achievements in the history of western music. In the 2010s, it stands as one of the most performed symphonies in the world.
The symphony was the first example of a major composer using voices in a symphony (thus making it a choral symphony). The words are sung during the final movement by four vocal soloists and a chorus. They were taken from the "Ode to Joy", a poem written by Friedrich Schiller in 1785 and revised in 1803, with text additions made by the composer.
In 2001, Beethoven's original, hand-written manuscript of the score, held by the Berlin State Library, was added to the United Nations Memory of the World Programme Heritage list, becoming the first musical score so honoured.
The Philharmonic Society of London originally commissioned the symphony in 1817. The main composition work was done between autumn 1822 and the completion of the autograph in February 1824. The symphony emerged from other pieces by Beethoven that, while completed works in their own right, are also in some sense "sketches" (rough outlines) for the future symphony. The Choral Fantasy Opus. 80 (1808), basically a piano concerto movement, brings in a choir and vocal soloists near the end for the climax. The vocal forces sing a theme first played instrumentally, and this theme is reminiscent of the corresponding theme in the Ninth Symphony (for a detailed comparison, see Choral Fantasy).
Going further back, an earlier version of the Choral Fantasy theme is found in the song "Gegenliebe" (Returned Love) for piano and high voice, which dates from before 1795. According to Robert W. Gutman, Mozart's K. 222 Offertory in D minor, "Misericordias Domini", written in 1775, contains a melody that foreshadows "Ode to Joy".
Opening a new era of Joyo, Fujioka & Kansai Phil-The Ultimate 9th As the 45th anniversary project of the Joyo City system enforcement, the "9th Joyo 9th Festival" will be held under the direction of a civic participatory choir and Yukio Fujioka. Please enjoy the concert where the stage and the audience are united.
Cast:
Fujioka Yukio(conductor)
Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra
soloists(Yoriko Morita, Yuko Tanaka, Tetsuo Ogaya, Yuya Tanaka)
Joyo 9th Festival Choir
Joyo Shonen Girl Choir
Performed song (planned)
Part 1: "Angel of Peace" concert by Joyo City Shonen Girl Choir "Sayakani star is twinkled" (O Holy Night), etc.
Part 2: Beethoven's "Symphony 9th D minor work 125" (With chorus)
Opening period: December 3, 2017-Sunday, December 3, 2017
Time: Opening: 1:30 pm/Starting: 2 pm
Venue: Culture Parc Joyo Plum Hall Joyo City Terada Imabori 1
ANAKA Yoshinari Professor of Music at Osaka College of Music / Osaka College of Music Junior College. He graduated from Osaka Music University, Graduate School of Music. He is a master of Arts. He established a program for self-opening and self-expression training as an expressor. He is an opera singing and performance interpretation. In particular, he studied the close relationship between speech and singing. He is a non-profit organization "Kansai Art Promotion Association-Kansai Opera Group" Vice-President.
There is no schedule or ticket right now.
日本、〒610-0121 京都府城陽市寺田今堀1 Map
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Osaka", "Kyoto", "Eiji Yomikai", "Sachio Fujioka", "Takashi Asahina", "Osaka Prefecture", "Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)", "Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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