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Its great features include the ability to download your favorite tracks and play them offline, lyrics in real time, listening across all your favorite devices, new music personalized just for you, curated playlists from our editors, and many more. On November 6 1893, the composer died of cholera. Apple Music is a streaming service that allows you to listen to over 90 million songs. He created the ballets “Swan Lake” (1876), “The Sleeping Beauty” (1889), “The Nutcracker” (1892). The composer became an innovator in the field of ballet, where music became the main component of ballet drama. In Moscow in 1866, Tchaikovsky composed his first symphony entitled “Winter Dreams” and the first opera “Voevoda”. In 1865, Tchaikovsky graduated with honors from the Conservatory – he received diploma and a silver medal.
Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.ĭear friends, don't forget to read the full text so you don't miss anything: Sondheim was theater’s most revered and influential composer-lyricist of the last half of the 20th century, and he was the driving force behind some of Broadway’s most beloved and celebrated shows.įor more information on today’s episode, visit /thedaily. * With a childlike sense of discovery, Stephen Sondheim found the language to convey the beauty in harsh complexity. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. Guest: Jesse Green, the chief theater critic for The New York Times.
“And there really is no one who says that as strongly in his life and in his work as Sondheim does.” “For me, the loss that we see pouring out of Twitter right now and everywhere you look as people write about their memories of Sondheim is for that person who says yes, devoting yourself to writing or to dancing or to singing or to composing - or whatever it is - is a worthwhile life,” Jesse Green, The Times’s chief theater critic, said in today’s episode. Sondheim, a composer-lyricist whose works include “Sweeney Todd” and “Into the Woods,” transformed musical theater into an art form as rich, complex and contradictory as life itself. Stephen Sondheim died last week at his home in Roxbury, Conn.