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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Barrie_GavinBarrie Gavin - Wikipedia

    Collaboration with Gerard McBurney In 1989 he worked for the first time with the composer and writer Gerard McBurney . They have produced some ten films, many of them on Russian music, including Think Today, Speak Tomorrow and Giving Voice (two films on dissident composers in the Soviet Union ) 1990 The Fire and the Rose ( Sofia Gubaidulina ) 1990 The Face behind the Face ( Shostakovich ).

  2. 10 de dic. de 2015 · Composer and Shostakovich expert Gerard McBurney explains. Gerard McBurney. Thu 10 Dec 2015 04.00 EST Last modified on Tue 18 Apr 2017 11.17 EDT. Share. R ecently, ...

  3. 5 de dic. de 2020 · Stephen Fry has returned in partnership with conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, the Philharmonia Orchestra and, funnily enough, Beethoven’s music, to narrate Gerard McBurney’s version of The Creatures of Prometheus. During his introduction he seems, unsurprisingly, very comfortable in his virtual host role.

  4. Paige Satter, Director of Operations Administration. Diane Littlejohn, Venue Operations Manager. Jose Lopez, Chief Mechanical Engineer. Robert Saucedo, Senior Technician. Peter Perez, Lead Facilities Technician. David Russell, Lead Facilities Technician. Lorenzo Peay, Facilities Technician. Roberto Castro, Director of Guest Experience. Drew ...

  5. 12 de ago. de 2005 · Gerard McBurney meets her. Gerard McBurney. Thu 11 Aug 2005 20.20 EDT. Share. In the early 1990s, BBC2 broadcast three groundbreaking documentaries about modern Soviet music, including a one-hour ...

  6. Gerard McBurney is a composer, writer and deviser, in theatre, radio, television, concert hall and on the internet. Recent projects include collaborations with the Southbank and Barbican Centres, Hallé Orchestra, BBC Proms, Lincoln Center (New York), Lucerne and Aix Festivals, and orchestras across the USA. Between 2006 and 2016 he was Artistic Programming Advisor at …

  7. 24 de nov. de 2023 · Sir Simon Rattle and the LSO give an orchestral performance to remember, with a fine singing cast, but Simon McBurney's staging dials the bleakness to maximum too early. ***11 Read more