得票
0
标准 MIDI 文件(SMF)属性
-
音色标准
GM1 -
文件格式
MIDI TYPE 1 -
文件大小
92.04 KB -
播放时长
17:29 -
BPM
18 - 250 -
音轨数量
5
通道与乐器编配
共使用5个通道,2种乐器
-
大钢琴
3721个音符/和弦,平均音高 #F5
乐器 ID: 0, 音轨: 1时间: 00:01 - 17:18
音高: G3 - D7
-
大钢琴
2362个音符/和弦,平均音高 C5
乐器 ID: 0, 音轨: 2时间: 00:01 - 17:18
音高: #D3 - E6
-
大钢琴
1727个音符/和弦,平均音高 #D4
乐器 ID: 0, 音轨: 3时间: 00:18 - 17:18
音高: #D3 - C6
-
大钢琴
2772个音符/和弦,平均音高 #D3
乐器 ID: 0, 音轨: 4时间: 00:01 - 17:18
音高: #A0 - G4
-
弦乐拨奏
1491个音符/和弦,平均音高 #F1
乐器 ID: 45, 音轨: 5时间: 00:01 - 17:18
音高: C1 - #C2
音轨信息
共使用100个音轨,5个音轨有音符
# | 名称 | 通道 | 乐器 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | piano 1 | 1 | 大钢琴 |
2 | piano 2 | 2 | 大钢琴 |
3 | piano 3 | 3 | 大钢琴 |
4 | piano 4 | 4 | 大钢琴 |
5 | pizz str bass | 6 | 弦乐拨奏 |
6 | * | ||
7 | Pineapple Poll Vs3 1951 MacKerras | ||
8 | Based on the Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan | ||
9 | arranged for piano solo by Sir Charles MacKerras | ||
10 | ゥ MCMLI by Chappell & Co. Ltd. | ||
11 | * | ||
12 | sequence by James Pitt-Payne, London UK | ||
13 | on Monday 05 April 2004 at 16.20 | ||
14 | in association with Doug Grierson | ||
15 | * | ||
16 | In 1950, the copyright on Sullivan's music expired. Gilbert's words | ||
17 | would still enjoy another eleven years of protection, but the music | ||
18 | was now fair game. One of the first to exploit it was Sadler's | ||
19 | Wells, who mounted a ballet called Pineapple Poll based on Gilbert's | ||
20 | Bab Ballad 'The Bumboat Woman's Story' and set exclusively to music | ||
21 | by Sullivan, arranged by a young Charles Mackerras. The ballet | ||
22 | premiered in March, 1951, to coincide with the Festival of Britain. | ||
23 | It caused an immediate sensation and remained in the Sadler's Wells | ||
24 | repertoire for years to come. | ||
25 | * | ||
26 | For those unfamiliar with Pineapple Poll, it is essentially a short | ||
27 | dance production based on a story by Gilbert and on music by | ||
28 | Sullivan. Sir Charles Mackerras wrote a delightful ballet consisting | ||
29 | of the music from most of the Gilbert & Sullivan operas (plus Cox & | ||
30 | Box and Overture Di Ballo). The music is eminently 'danceable' and | ||
31 | not only are his segues seamless (the music from the various operas | ||
32 | are all mixed together), but the music (and even many of the | ||
33 | original lyrics) exactly fit the plot of the ballet. Just listening | ||
34 | to the music of Pineapple Poll is like a trivia quiz for G&S fans. | ||
35 | * | ||
36 | Alan Charles MacLaurin Mackerras is best known in Gilbert & Sullivan | ||
37 | circles as the arranger of the ballet Pineapple Poll. It was | ||
38 | Mackerras's idea to create a ballet from the music of the Savoy | ||
39 | operas, and as the expiration of the copyright on Sullivan's music | ||
40 | approached at the end of 1950, he discussed the idea with Peggy van | ||
41 | Praagh of Sadler's Wells Ballet. Miss van Praagh was intrigued, | ||
42 | thought such a ballet would make a good item for the 1951 Festival | ||
43 | of Britain program, and recommended South African choreographer John | ||
44 | Cranko as collaborator. Cranko suggested Gilbert's Bab Ballad 'The | ||
45 | Bumboat Woman's Story' as a suitable story line, and the resulting | ||
46 | ballet, Pineapple Poll, first performed March 13, 1951, has been in | ||
47 | the Sadler's Wells repertoire ever since. It has been frequently | ||
48 | recorded, usually with Mackerras conducting. | ||
49 | * | ||
50 | Born in 1925 of Australian parents in the United States, Sir Charles | ||
51 | Mackerras studied in Sydney and Prague and made his debut as an | ||
52 | opera conductor at Sadler's Wells. He was First Conductor of the | ||
53 | Hamburg Opera (1966-69) and Musical Director of both Sadler's Wells | ||
54 | (later the English National) Opera (1970-87) and of Welsh National | ||
55 | Opera (1987-92), where his notable Janacek productions - among many | ||
56 | others - won great acclaim. | ||
57 | * | ||
58 | Mackerras, was taken to Sydney, Australia, as an infant. He studied | ||
59 | oboe, piano, and composition at the New South Wales State | ||
60 | Conservatorium of Music. Then he was principal oboist in the Sydney | ||
61 | Symphony Orchestra (1943-1946). Subsequently he went to London, | ||
62 | where he joined the orchestra at Sadler's Wells and studied | ||
63 | conducting with Michael Mudie. He won a British Council Scholarship | ||
64 | in 1947, which enabled him to study conducting with Vaclav Talich at | ||
65 | the Prague Academy of Music. | ||
66 | * | ||
67 | Returning to London in 1948, he was an assistant conductor at | ||
68 | Sadler's Wells until 1953. Then he was engaged as principal | ||
69 | conductor of the BBC Concert Orchestra (1954-1956). Subsequently he | ||
70 | appeared as a guest conductor with British orchestras, and also had | ||
71 | engagements on the Continent. In 1963 he made his debut at London's | ||
72 | Covent Garden conducting Shostakovich's Katerina Izmailova. From | ||
73 | 1966 to 1970 he held the post of 1st conductor at the Hamburg State | ||
74 | Opera. In 1970 he became music director at the Sadler's Wells Opera | ||
75 | (renamed the English National Opera in 1974), a position he held | ||
76 | until 1978. In October 1972 he made his Metropolitan Opera debut in | ||
77 | New York conducting Gluck's Orfeo et Euridice. From 1976 to 1979 he | ||
78 | was chief guest conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra in London. | ||
79 | After serving as chief conductor of the Sydney (Australia) Symphony | ||
80 | Orchestra (1982-1985), he was artistic director of the Welsh | ||
81 | National Opera in Cardiff (1987-1992). He was principal guest | ||
82 | conductor of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra in Glasgow (from 1992). | ||
83 | In February 1993, Sir Charles was appointed Principal Guest | ||
84 | Conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London and later | ||
85 | conducted its first professional performance in the UK of the | ||
86 | 'original version' of Glagolitic Mass with the Brighton Festival | ||
87 | Chorus at the Royal Festival Hall. In 1993 he was also appointed | ||
88 | Principal Guest Conductor of the San Francisco Opera. | ||
89 | * | ||
90 | Mackerras received a CBE in 1974 and was knighted for his services | ||
91 | to music in 1979. At the end of 1996 he received The Medal of Merit | ||
92 | from the Czech Republic, and recently he was made a Companion of the | ||
93 | Order of Australia. He has been awarded honorary doctorates from the | ||
94 | Universities of Hull, York, Nottingham, Brno, Griffith (in Brisbane, | ||
95 | Australia) and finally Oxford (1997). Mackerras celebrated his | ||
96 | seventieth birthday in 1995 with gala concerts with the Scottish | ||
97 | Chamber Orchestra in Edinburgh, the Welsh National Opera in Cardiff | ||
98 | and with the San Francisco Opera. | ||
99 | * |