Jump to content

Hispania Clásica

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Conciertos Daniel)

Hispania Clásica, known from 1914 to 1996 as Conciertos Daniel, is a classical music concert promotion agency active in Europe and in the Americas. The agency's primary base is in Madrid, Spain.

2008 is Hispania Clásica's centennial year. It was founded in Berlin in 1908 as Konzertdirektion H. Daniel by Cuban-born impresario Ernesto de Quesada.[1] As World War I was beginning in 1914, de Quesada moved his agency to Madrid and renamed it Conciertos Daniel.[2]

Ernesto de Quesada's youngest son, Ricardo de Quesada,[3][4] heading the agency in Madrid after the death of his father in 1972, reorganized the agency in 1996 and renamed it Hispania Clásica; he has recently (2007) retired. One of the founder's grandsons, Enrique de Quesada, Jr. in Caracas, Venezuela,[3][5] is the agency director for Latin America. Hispania Clásica also has offices in Mexico City and in Bogotá, Colombia.

Carlos Izcaray, the young Venezuelan cellist[6] and conductor who was a subject of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International concern in 2004,[7][8] and who was a 2007 fellow of the elite American Academy of Conducting under the direction of David Zinman at the Aspen Music Festival and School,[9][10] is one of the Hispania Clásica artists.[11]

Hispania Clásica is a member of the European Association of Artist Managers (AEAA), which was founded in Paris, France in 1947.[12]

Artists

[edit]

The artists[2] who have worked with the agency during its first ten decades include:

A   B   C   D
Larry Adler   Gina Bachauer   Robert Casadesus   Jörg Demus
Licia Albanese Wilhelm Backhaus Pablo Casals Misha Dichter
Marian Anderson Paul Badura-Skoda Gaspar Cassadó Dietrich Fischer Dieskau
Maurice André   Fedora Barbieri   Sergiu Celibidache   Plácido Domingo
Victoria de los Ángeles Daniel Barenboim Georges Cziffra François-René Duchâble
Enrique Fernández Arbós Teresa Berganza
Martha Argerich Jorge Bolet
Claudio Arrau Alexander Brailowsky
Martina Arroyo
E   F   G   H   I
Duke Ellington Vladimir Feltsman Walter Gieseking Jascha Heifetz Imperio Argentina
Mischa Elman Janina Fialkowska Emil Gilels Jascha Horenstein José Iturbi
George Enescu Rudolf Firkusny Arthur Grumiaux Marilyn Horne Carlos Izcaray
Edwin Fischer Citlalli Guevara Vladimir Horowitz
Miguel Fleta Friedrich Gulda
Justus Frantz
Nelson Freire
Ignaz Friedman
J   K   L   M   N
Antonio Janigro Rudolf Kempe La Argentinita Nikita Magaloff Birgit Nilsson
Byron Janis Paul Kletzki Wanda Landowska Enrico Mainardi
Maryla Jonas[13] Fritz Kreisler Alicia de Larrocha Igor Markevitch
Vladimir Krpan Lily Laskine Yehudi Menuhin
Horacio Lavandera Stefan Milenković
Erich Leinsdorf Nathan Milstein
Marguerite Long Pierre Monteux
Moura Lympany Leticia Moreno
Karl Münchinger
O   P   R   S
David Oistrakh Krysztof Penderecki Michael Rabin Regino Sainz de la Maza
Eugene Ormandy Philadelphia Virtuosi Sergei Rachmaninoff Esteban Sánchez
Rafael Orozco Gregor Piatigorsky Jean-Pierre Rampal György Sándor
Adolfo Odnoposoff Ezio Pinza Ruggiero Ricci Emil von Sauer
Ricardo Odnoposoff Lily Pons Pepe Romero Artur Schnabel
Michael Ponti Artur Rubinstein Wolfgang Schneiderhan
Rafael Puyana Elisabeth Schumann
Andrés Segovia
Abbey Simon
Gérard Souzay
Richard Strauss
Conchita Supervía
George Szell
Henryk Szeryng
Joseph Szigeti
T   U   V   W   Y, Z
Magda Tagliaferro Alexander Uninsky Paul van Kempen Helen Watts Narciso Yepes
Renata Tebaldi Edouard van Remoortel Felix Weingartner Nicanor Zabaleta
Jacques Thibaud Astrid Varnay Alexis Weissenberg
Dubravka Tomsic Vienna Boys' Choir
Paul Tortelier Ramón Vinay
Hans von Benda

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ricardo de Quesada. "Ernesto de Quesada López Chaves: Founder of Conciertos Daniel". Hispania Clásica. Archived from the original on 2007-08-08.
  2. ^ a b Hispania Clásica. "Conciertos Daniel 2008 - 100º anniversary". Archived from the original on 2007-08-07.
  3. ^ a b Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra. "Booking information for Latin America and Spain". Archived from the original on 2007-07-04. Retrieved 2007-08-12.
  4. ^ Hispania Clásica. "Brief biography of Ricardo de Quesada". Archived from the original on 2007-08-07. Born in Madrid, he and his family left Spain during the Civil War and initially settled in Mexico, where he went to grade school in "Colegio Cristóbal Colón", studying privately at the time violin. Every Summer, after 1949, he and his parents spent their holidays in Spain at their property located in the base of Peñon de Ifach in Alicante.
  5. ^ Hispania Clásica. "Director for Latin America, Enrique de Quesada, Jr". Archived from the original on 2007-08-06.
  6. ^ Nic & Birte Moller, Curaçao. "Art in Avila: Carlos Izcaray, cello". Art in Avila.
  7. ^ José Miguel Vivanco (April 9, 2004). "Letter to President Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías". Human Rights Watch. Archived from the original on August 21, 2008. Retrieved August 10, 2007.
  8. ^ Amnesty International (May 12, 2004). "Venezuela: Human Rights under Threat".
  9. ^ Aspen Music Festival and School Profile (July 15, 2007). "Carlos Izcaray, conducting fellow and cellist". Aspen Daily News.
  10. ^ Kyle MacMillan (July 25, 2007). "Learning to wield a mean baton". The Denver Post.
  11. ^ Hispania Clásica. "Carlos Izcaray". Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-08-10.
  12. ^ Association Européenne des Agents Artistiques (AEAA). "Members list by agency name". Archived from the original on 2007-06-08. Retrieved 2007-08-10.
  13. ^ Howard Taubman (May 10, 1947). "Lady Who Has Lived". Liberty (additional reprint). Archived from the original on September 13, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2007. The extraordinary story of Maryla Jonas, who crossed hell and high water to Carnegie Hall. {{cite news}}: External link in |work= (help)
[edit]