• Mezzo Live HD

    • Mezzo Live HD od do

      • InterMezzo

        (85 min)

      • Hommage á Jerome Robbins - Opéra national de Paris

        Tribute to Jerome Robbins; Les Etoiles, les Premiers Danseurs and the Corps de Ballet of the Opéra national de Paris; Opéra national de Paris orchestra; Valery Ovsyanikov, conductor; With the kind collaboration of Jean-Pierre Fröhlich; Fancy Free; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Leonard Bernstein; Sets, Oliver Stmith; Costume, Kermit Love; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; Eleonora Abbagnato (Danseuse Etoile), Alice Renavand (Danseuse Etoile), Stéphane Bullion (Danseur Etoile), Karl Paquette (Danseur Etoile), François Alu (Premier Danseur), Aurélia Bellet, Alexandre Carniato; A suite of Dances; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Johann Sebastian Bach; Costume, Santo Loquasto; Light, Jennifer Tipton; Cello, Artist invited; Sonia Wieder-Atherton; Afternoon of a Faun; Choreographiy, Jerome Robbins; Music, Claude Debussy; Prélude á l'aprés-midi d'un faune (1894); Sets, Jean Rosenthal; Costume, Irene Sharaff; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; The Nymph, Amandine Albisson (Danseuse Etoile); The Faun, Hugo Marchand (Danseur Etoile); Glass Pieces; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Philip Glass [Façades / Rubric extraits de Glassworks (1981) - Marche funébre extraite de l'opéra Aknaten (1983)]; Sets, Jerome Robbins et Ronal Bates; Costume, Ben Benson; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; Sae Eun Park (Premiére Danseuse) - Florian Magnenet (Premier Danseur); and le Corps de Ballet de l'Opéra national de Paris; Recorded on November 6 & 8, 2018 at the Opéra national de Paris, Palais Garnier; TV director, Vincent Bataillon (92 min)

      • The Bronze Horseman, Mariinsky Theater Ballet

        The Bronze Horseman; Ballet in three acts; Choreography by Rostislav Zakharov and Yuri Smekalov; Music by Reinhold Gliere; Libretto by Pyotr Abolimov, after a poem by Alexander Pushkin; Mariinsky Orchestra and Chorus; Valery Gergiev, musical director and conductor; Andrei Sevbo, production designer; Tatiana Noginova, costume; Alexander Naumov, lights; Alexander Logvinov, video graphics designer; Wth; Vladimir Shklyarov, Eugene; Viktoria Tereshkina, Parasha; Vladimir Ponomarev, Peter I; Ivan Oskorbin, Ibrahim the Blackmoor; Yekaterina Kondaurova, the Queen of the Ball; Sofia Ivanova-Skoblikova, Columbine; Vasily Tkachenko, Harlequin; Grigory Popov, Balakirev the Jester; Valeria Karpina, Parasha's mother; Recorded at the Théâtre Mariinsky II on June 15th and 17th 2016; TV direction by Louise Narboni (130 min)

      • China Moses - Alfa Jazz Fest

        China Moses; China Moses, vocals; Luigi Grasso, saxophone, keyboard; Joe Armon Jones, piano; Neil Charles, bass; Marijus Aleksa, drums; China Moses is an outstanding American vocalist and the daughter of the famous jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater (the headliner at the fourth Alfa Jazz Fest) and Gilbert Moses. She was born in Los Angeles and later moved to Paris. She released her first single, 'Time' (1996), at the age of 16. Her first albums brought her success and fame in France on the soul and pop scene. In addition to her career as a singer and backing vocalist, she also works as a host at Radio Nova and MTV in France. In 2008, she launched her own production company, MadeInChina Productions. In 2009, she released an album called This One's for Dinah (Blue Note France), a tribute to Dinah Washington. Her next album, Crazy Blues, was named by British newspaper The Times as one of the top 100 albums of 2013. At the end of March 2017, she released her long-awaited new album, Nightintales. China co-hosted and sang at the first UNESCO International Jazz Day in Paris, and she also often performs concerts for US UNESCO. Recorded on 2017, June 25th at the Leopolis Jazz Fest, Ukraine; TV Director, Amos Rozenberg (61 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (8 min)

      • Mark Guiliana Beat Music with Bigyuki - Festival international de jazz de Montréal

        Mark Guiliana Beat Music avec Bigyuki; Mark Guilliana (batterie); Bigyuki (Clavier); For the second of his Invitation series concerts, supremely gifted drummer Mark Guiliana presents his project Beat Music, where jazz and electronica are fused with equal parts daring and creativity. He'll be joined by phenomenal New York keyboardist Bigyuki for a leisurely exploration of the many worlds of jazz. Recorded on July 2nd, 2018 at the Montrel Jazz Festival, Gesu; TV Director, Mathieu Mastin 04.07.2020 (73 min)

      • Shabaka and the Ancestors - Festival international de Jazz de Montreal

        Shabaka and the Ancestors; Shabaka Hutchings, saxophone, tenor; Hutchings was born in 1984 in London. He moved to Barbados at the age of six, began studying classical clarinet aged nine and remained until sixteen. Shabaka's primary project is the group Sons of Kemet, which won the 2013 MOBO Award for Jazz Act of the Year. In June 2014 Shabaka was invited to join the Sun Ra Arkestra, performing with them and recording a session for BBC Radio 3. He has performed and recorded with Courtney Pine's Jazz Warriors, Mulatu Astatke and the Heliocentrics, Polar Bear and Soweto Kinch. Some of the many notable musicians he has shared the stage with include Jack DeJohnette, Charlie Haden and the Liberation Music Orchestra, Louis Moholo, Evan Parker, King Sunny Ade and Orlando Julius to name a few. Recorded on, 2017, June 29 at Gesú, Montreal Jazz Festival; TV Director, Mathieu Mastin 05.07.2020 (80 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (84 min)

      • The Tatarstan State Symphony Orchestra and Alexander Sladkovsky: Strauss, Mahler

        Tatarstan National Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Sladkovsky (conductor); Anastasia Kalagina (soprano); Richard Strauss (1864 - 1949); Death and Transfiguration, tone poem, Op. 24 /; Four Last Songs, for soprano and orchestra, Op. 150/; Gustav Mahler (1860 - 1911); Symphony No. 5 in C-sharp minor; Recorded at the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall, Moscow, 16 February 2019 (122 min)

      • The Tatarstan State Symphony Orchestra and Alexander Sladkovsky: Mozart, Mahler

        Tatarstan State Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Sladkovsky (Conductor); Philipp Kopachevsky (piano); Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791); Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 13 in C major, KV 415; Gustav Mahler (1860 - 1911); Symphony No. 9 in D major; Recorded at the Tchaikovsky Hall, Moscow, 29 October 2017 (115 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (17 min)

      • The Bronze Horseman, Mariinsky Theater Ballet

        The Bronze Horseman; Ballet in three acts; Choreography by Rostislav Zakharov and Yuri Smekalov; Music by Reinhold Gliere; Libretto by Pyotr Abolimov, after a poem by Alexander Pushkin; Mariinsky Orchestra and Chorus; Valery Gergiev, musical director and conductor; Andrei Sevbo, production designer; Tatiana Noginova, costume; Alexander Naumov, lights; Alexander Logvinov, video graphics designer; Wth; Vladimir Shklyarov, Eugene; Viktoria Tereshkina, Parasha; Vladimir Ponomarev, Peter I; Ivan Oskorbin, Ibrahim the Blackmoor; Yekaterina Kondaurova, the Queen of the Ball; Sofia Ivanova-Skoblikova, Columbine; Vasily Tkachenko, Harlequin; Grigory Popov, Balakirev the Jester; Valeria Karpina, Parasha's mother; Recorded at the Théâtre Mariinsky II on June 15th and 17th 2016; TV direction by Louise Narboni (130 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (30 min)

      • Tugan Sokhiev and the Berlin Philharmonic at the Waldbühne

        Berliner Philharmoniker, Tugan Sokhiev (conductor); Marianne Crebassa (mezzo-soprano); Sergei Prokofiev (1891 - 1953); Lieutenant Kije Suite, op. 60; Maurice Ravel (1875 - 1937); Shéhérazade, song cycle after Tristan Klingsor; Sergei Prokofiev; Romeo and Juliet, ballet, op. 64 (arranged in the form of a suite by Tugan Sokhiev); Recorded at the Waldbühne, Berlin, 29 June 2019; TV Director, Henning Kasten (99 min)

      • Moment musical - Daniel Barenboim at the Boulez Saal: Chopin

        Daniel Barenboim (piano); Frédéric Chopin (1810 - 1849); Etudes, op. 25 (No. 1 in A flat major, No. 2 in F minor, No. 7 in C sharp minor); Etudes, op. 10 (n ° 4 in C sharp minor, n ° 6 in E flat minor, nº8 in F major); Nocturne, op. 15 No. 2 in F sharp major; Ballade No. 1 in G minor, op. 23; Recorded at the Pierre Boulez Saal, Berlin, 19 April 2020 (33 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (94 min)

      • Orfeo by Luigi Rossi conducted by Raphaël Pichon

        Orfeo; Tragicommedia in a prologue and three acts by Luigi Rossi (1597 - 1653); Libretto by Francesco Buti; First performance in Paris, Palais Royal, 2 March 1647; Edited by Raphaël Pichon and Miguel Henry; Ensemble Pygmalion, Raphaël Pichon (Conductor); Jetske Mijnssen (Stage Director); Ben Baur (Sets), Gideon Davey (Costumes), Bernd Purkrabek (Lighting); Judith van Wanroij (Orfeo); Francesca Aspromonte (Euridice); Giuseppina Bridelli (Aristeo); Giulia Semenzato (Venere, Proserpina); Luigi de Donato (Augure, Plutone); Ray Chenez (Nutrice, Amore); Renato Dolcini (Satiro); Dominique Visse (Vecchia); Victor Torres (Endimione, Caronte); Marc Mauillon (Momo); David Tricou (Apollo); Recorded on February 9, 2016 at the Opéra de Nancy; Directed by Stéphane Vérité (180 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (60 min)

      • John Eliot Gardiner conducts Berlioz's Benvenuto Cellini

        Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, Monteverdi Choir, John Eliot Gardiner (Conductor); Michael Spyres (tenor) (Benvenuto Cellini); Sophia Burgos (soprano) (Teresa); Maurizio Muraro (bass) (Giacomo Balducci); Lionel Lhote (baritone) (Fieramosca); Tareq Nazmi (bass) (Pape Clément); Adéle Charvet (mezzo-soprano) (Ascanio); Vincent Delhoume (tenor) (Francesco); Ashley Riches (baritone) (Bernardino); Hector Berlioz (1803-1869); Benvenuto Cellini; 'Opéra-comique' in two acts and four tableaux; Libretto by Léon de Wailly and Auguste Barbier; First performance in Paris, 1838. Recorded on 7 & 8 September 2019 at the Opéra Royal, Château de Versailles; TV Director, Sébastien Glas (173 min)

      • We Love Ella - The Amazing Keystone Big Band

        We Love Ella; The Amazing Keystone Big Band; Bastien Ballaz, Alois Benoit, Loic Bacheveillier, Sylvain Thomas (trombones); Jon Boutellier, Pierre Desassis, Kenny Jeanney, Eric Prost, Ghyslain Regard (saxophones); David Enhco, Thierry Sénéau, Vincent Labarre, Félicien Bouchot (trumpets); Fred Nardin (piano), François Thibaut (Guitar); Patrick Maradan (Double Bass); Romain Sarron (Drums); Guests; Célia Kaméni (vocal); China Moses (vocal); Sarah McKenzie (vocal, piano); The Amazing Keystone Big Band loves Ella and pays more than a simple vibrant homage to she who loved big bands so much (she sang with those of Chick Weeb, Duke Ellington and Count Basie)and identified with the same vein as the one of the same name that the PBS Radio had???? with Jon Faddis, James Moody, Lizz Wright, Patti Austin. The guest singer, Célia Kaméni, does not attempt either to compete with or to imitate, that would be impossible anyway, the first lady of song gets to grips with her world in order to sing it better. And it works perfectly, and it has to be said that the orchestra is absolutely irreproachable with its waves of intensity, its stresses, an expressive clarity which gives it a very lare range of expression. It's all there, the phrasing, the accents, the rhythm, the groove, the drive this swing, this je ne sais quoi between individual liberty and collective happiness, put simply...Jazz! Recorded on March 23, 2019 at the Salle Pleyel; TV Director,Laurent Hasse (53 min)

      • InterMezzo

        (60 min)

      • Hommage á Jerome Robbins - Opéra national de Paris

        Tribute to Jerome Robbins; Les Etoiles, les Premiers Danseurs and the Corps de Ballet of the Opéra national de Paris; Opéra national de Paris orchestra; Valery Ovsyanikov, conductor; With the kind collaboration of Jean-Pierre Fröhlich; Fancy Free; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Leonard Bernstein; Sets, Oliver Stmith; Costume, Kermit Love; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; Eleonora Abbagnato (Danseuse Etoile), Alice Renavand (Danseuse Etoile), Stéphane Bullion (Danseur Etoile), Karl Paquette (Danseur Etoile), François Alu (Premier Danseur), Aurélia Bellet, Alexandre Carniato; A suite of Dances; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Johann Sebastian Bach; Costume, Santo Loquasto; Light, Jennifer Tipton; Cello, Artist invited; Sonia Wieder-Atherton; Afternoon of a Faun; Choreographiy, Jerome Robbins; Music, Claude Debussy; Prélude á l'aprés-midi d'un faune (1894); Sets, Jean Rosenthal; Costume, Irene Sharaff; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; The Nymph, Amandine Albisson (Danseuse Etoile); The Faun, Hugo Marchand (Danseur Etoile); Glass Pieces; Choreography, Jerome Robbins; Music, Philip Glass [Façades / Rubric extraits de Glassworks (1981) - Marche funébre extraite de l'opéra Aknaten (1983)]; Sets, Jerome Robbins et Ronal Bates; Costume, Ben Benson; Light, Jennifer Tipton; With; Sae Eun Park (Premiére Danseuse) - Florian Magnenet (Premier Danseur); and le Corps de Ballet de l'Opéra national de Paris; Recorded on November 6 & 8, 2018 at the Opéra national de Paris, Palais Garnier; TV director, Vincent Bataillon (92 min)

      • The Bronze Horseman, Mariinsky Theater Ballet

        The Bronze Horseman; Ballet in three acts; Choreography by Rostislav Zakharov and Yuri Smekalov; Music by Reinhold Gliere; Libretto by Pyotr Abolimov, after a poem by Alexander Pushkin; Mariinsky Orchestra and Chorus; Valery Gergiev, musical director and conductor; Andrei Sevbo, production designer; Tatiana Noginova, costume; Alexander Naumov, lights; Alexander Logvinov, video graphics designer; Wth; Vladimir Shklyarov, Eugene; Viktoria Tereshkina, Parasha; Vladimir Ponomarev, Peter I; Ivan Oskorbin, Ibrahim the Blackmoor; Yekaterina Kondaurova, the Queen of the Ball; Sofia Ivanova-Skoblikova, Columbine; Vasily Tkachenko, Harlequin; Grigory Popov, Balakirev the Jester; Valeria Karpina, Parasha's mother; Recorded at the Théâtre Mariinsky II on June 15th and 17th 2016; TV direction by Louise Narboni (130 min)