As Wolfgang Wiehe wrote in his new thread "K(r)oesus" it is a opera "Kr�sus" by 
Reinhard Kaiser. 

Best
Markus

On Wed, 4 May 2005 00:46:08 -0800 (GMT-08:00), Dr. Marion Ceruti wrote:

DMC> Dear Arto,
DMC>
DMC> Try to search the web for the radio station's call sign. If they have a web
DMC> site they may post their schedules. If you remember when you heard it
DMC> you might be able to look up the exact spelling of the composer's name
DMC> and then search again on that. Sounds interesting. Please let us know
DMC> what you find.
DMC>
DMC> Viva la tiorba,
DMC> Marion,
DMC> Mezzosoprano
DMC>
DMC> -----Original Message-----
DMC> From: Arto Wikla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
DMC> Sent: May 3, 2005 10:30 PM
DMC> To: [email protected]
DMC> Subject: German baroque opera - Reinhardt Eise??
DMC>
DMC>
DMC> Dear lutenists,
DMC>
DMC> yesterday I was listening a classical radio channel in my car radio, and
DMC> I heard something very interesting: a baroque opera sung in German! The
DMC> style was - let us say - something "middle baroque" 1680-1710?
DMC> Normally you would expect that style in German being sacred.
DMC>
DMC> In the intermission they said the name on the composer and the opera,
DMC> but I could not hear that clearly. The composer was something like
DMC> Reinhardt Eise and the opera told about Kroisos.
DMC>
DMC> Very nice recitatives, choirs, and even battle music with drums. The
DMC> style was VERY Italian.
DMC>
DMC> And the performance was good! Someone played theorbo well in recitatives
DMC> and also "in concert". :-)
DMC>
DMC> So does anyone here know anything about that music? Google did not help.
DMC>
DMC> All the best,
DMC>
DMC> Arto
DMC>
DMC>
DMC>
DMC> To get on or off this list see list information at
DMC> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
DMC>
DMC>
DMC>



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