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Mozart By Arrangement, Vol. 2 / Herscovitch, Shovk
Mozart wrote only one actual sonata for two pianos. Mozart By Arrangement is the first instalment of six sparkling new Mozart two-piano sonatas. Violinist and conductor Andrew Manze once observed that the frequent concerto-like writing in Mozart's op. 2 (1781) sonatas for violin and piano might make them effective piano duets. The Australian composer Stephen Yates has taken him up on the idea, adding these delightful new works to the two-piano repertoire.
REVIEW:
These transcriptions by British composer Stephen Yates were inspired by none other than one of the world’s foremost interpreters of the original works, violinist Andrew Manze, who suggested that the violin music could effectively be reimagined as piano music. I was dubious of the concept in practice, owing to my supreme respect—wonderment, really—of Mozart’s intuitive sense of instrumental timbre and dramatic intent. Clearly, Manze has better intuition on this matter than do I (no surprise!), because this is a completely charming production. Here is yet another enchanting and novel release from Toccata Classics, an indispensable label for all true piano lovers.
-- Fanfare
QUARTET CHOREOGRAPHY
Beethoven: Piano Concertos No. 4 - Mendelssohn: Concerto for
Easy Studies For Guitar, Vol. 1
Resonance - Music for Marimba & Cello
Rising at Dawn: Chamber Music with brass by Carson Cooman
Christmas A Cappella: Songs From Around The World / Chicago A Cappella
The world-class vocal ensemble Chicago a cappella does Christmas choral music fans a real service by daring to create a program entirely of contemporary (primarily within the last 20 or so years) works that defy the usual and predictable holiday concert choices that guarantee instant audience familiarity and gratification (not that there's anything wrong with those beloved, treasured standards!). Most of the works featured here require a bit more-than-usual attention from listeners--the composers and arrangers obviously approached such common texts as "What sweeter music", "Il est Né, le Divin Enfant", "O Come, O Come Emmanuel", "Noël nouvelet", "I wonder as I wander", "Lo Yisa Goy", and "The Huron Carol" with an idea to say something that hadn't already been said. And they do--splendidly. Then we have entirely original pieces by Stephen Paulus (Splendid Jewel--from a 14th-century Italian text), Gwyneth Walker (The Christ-child's Lullaby--inspired by a traditional Hebridean song), Richard Proulx (Prayer of the Venerable Bede--from a text found on the wall of Galilee Chapel in Durham Cathedral), and Danish composer Per Nørgård (En stjerne er sat--a dialogue between the Angel and the shepherds).
It's a tribute to the power of the Christmas story and to its enduring, compelling fascination for composers that the best of them continue--more than 2000 years later--to devote their efforts to writing music to recognize and celebrate the birth of Christ. And we are fortunate to have choirs of this caliber to bring this music to us in a context that presents it most favorably and gives it a permanent presence in our listening repertoire.
Another of the disc's strengths is the sheer variety of music, from the Nigerian setting of the text "For unto us a child is born" by Christian Onyeji, to Rosephanye Powell's "spiritual-like" Who is the baby?, to Yemeni composer Chaim Parchi's alluring Chanukah tune "Aleih Neiri", arranged for choir by Zamir Chorale of Boston founder Joshua Jacobson. The nine singers of Chicago a cappella are absolutely right-on in every respect, and the sound is ideal. This is an unqualified success, a holiday treat, a musical bounty that will both challenge and enliven your Christmastime listening. Highly recommended!
--David Vernier, ClassicsToday.com
Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro / Harnoncourt, Concentus Musicus Wien, Arnold Schoenberg Chor
This Blu-ray Disc is only playable on Blu-ray Disc players and not compatible with standard DVD players.
Also available on standard DVD
“He was out to create something ‘unheard-of’,” observed conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt beforehand. And true to form: What the conductor had to offer as he commenced his Mozart/Da Ponte cycle in the Theater an der Wien was something we “had never before heard like this” (Kurier). Nikolaus Harnoncourt, “master” of period performance practice, realized a project that had long been one of his dearest wishes: for the first time, he and his “original-sound orchestra” Concentus Musicus and his personal choice of singers were presenting the complete Mozart/Da Ponte cycle and harvesting the fruits of his Mozart research – an “enthusiastically acclaimed cycle!” (news.at). PART I - Le nozze di Figaro + Documentary: Nikolaus Harnoncourt - Between Obsession and Perfection (Le nozze di Figaro)
Impermanence / Lorelei Ensemble [CD + Blu-ray Audio]
A New York Times 25 Best Classical Music Track Selection for 2018 - Apostolo glorioso
Migration of peoples across borders has shaped the human experience for millennia. While securing permanent shelter—a home—has become a goal for the majority of individuals in our world, migration remains one of our main strategies for survival. Today, tens of millions of individuals live a nomadic lifestyle as hunter gatherers or pastoralists. Pilgrims seek moral or spiritual significance through extended physical journeys. Immigrants and refugees seek freedom, stability, and safety in a new community or country. Whether physical or metaphysical, humanity survives by way of continuous movement—our culture, beliefs, and histories are marked by impermanence. Music functions as a container of meaning, a vehicle we have used for centuries to express and grapple with the ineffable. We want to capture music—to write it down with a notation that clearly defines and preserves our musical ideas for generations to come. Yet, we have struggled to create a collection of symbols that can fully express our intentions—intentions that go far beyond pitch and rhythm. With this evolution came an ever-expanding musical vocabulary, new levels of complexity, and an increased desire to prescribe performance practices with the pen. But music resists this containment—the possibilities precede and outlast the technology that seeks to write them down. The repertoire on this album is rife with symbolism and metaphor that further teases out concepts of impermanence, migration, and the transient nature of musical language. From the wordless vocalises of Takemitsu’s Windhorse depicting Tibetan nomads, to the 12th century polyphony of the Codex Calixtinus sung by pilgrims traveling along the Camino de Santiago, to the dramatic shifts of polyphonic style seen in the 15th century motets of Du Fay and the Turin Manuscript, to Peter Gilbert’s contemporary meditation on the phases of the moon—temporality is a common and unmistakable thread.
REVIEW:
While it’s fun to dip in and sample, the album unfolds its full mesmerizing effect when you follow the singers on their squiggly line through music history, weaving together the ancient and the new in wondrous ways.
– New York Times
Carlo Maria Giulini Collection, Vol. 2
Festival of Carols / McNair, Stark, Indianapolis Symphonic Choir
This collection of best-loved Christmas repertoire was recorded live at the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir Festival of Carols concerts in 2015 and 2016. GRAMMY award-winning vocalist Sylvia McNair adds her own unique beauty and warmth, and as ever, the programme celebrates the joys of the season with sparkling versions of family favorites. The tranquillity and magic of Christmas eve, heartfelt messages of hope, reconciliation and peace, and thrilling new compositions all combine to capture the celebratory excitement of the holiday season.
REVIEWS:
The title refers to the practice in many churches of having a ceremony of carols and traditionals during the Christmas season, a holiday for the choir when they can really open up and let 'er rip, and, quite often, a sing-along for the congregation as well. It is, after all, the most joyous time of the Christian year.
We get all of that in a well-packed program by the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir and Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra under conductor Eric Stark. The substantial choir are supported by an orchestra that plays with a lot of gusto, especially the folks in the percussion section (this genre of music encourages a lot of gongs and bells). Listen for some distinguished playing by pianist David Duncan in Rob Swenson’s Christmas Hosanna with its jaunty rhythms recalling that old chestnut, Good Christian men, rejoice.
Most welcome of all is soprano Sylvia McNair, whose warm vocal presence...adds a special quality to such songs by contemporary composers as Mary, Did You Know? (Buddy Greene) in which the choir asks Jesus’ mother a series of poignant questions (“Did you know when you kissed your baby boy, then you touched the face of God?) and Grown-Up Christmas List (David Foster/Linda Thompson Jenner) with its plea for greater understanding and peace among people).
McNair does some of her best work in the two spirituals, This Little Light of Mine and Go Tell It on the Mountain, the last-named with an accompaniment by David Duncan that partakes deliciously of the spirit of the blues and R&B. Sylvia’s intimate vocal warmth and sensitive interpretation capture the special quality of both these grand old songs.
There’s something for everyone here, including J.S. Bach’s Sinfonia from the Christmas Oratorio, its lilting melodies and swaying pastoral rhythm recalling those time-honored instruments of simple shepherds, the wooden flute and the hurdy-gurdy. We also have John Rutter’s All Bells in Paradise and his Magnificat, the lastnamed animated by use of Latin-American rhythms, Mendelssohn’s Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, a recounting by composer William Goldstein of ‘Twas the Night before Chistmas with delightful spoken narration by Sherry Stark, and a rousing Jingle Bells.
-- Audio Video Club of Atlanta
Ravel: Orchestral Music, Vol. 1 / Slatkin, Orchestre National De Lyon
To Music / Lucas Debargue
A performer of fierce integrity and dazzling communicative power, young French pianist Lucas Debargue became the most talked-about artist of the fifteenth International Tchaikovsky Competition. Placed Fourth in the final round, he was however awarded the coveted Moscow Music Critic’s Prize as a player whose ‘incredible gift, artistic vision, and creative freedom have impressed the critics as well as the audience.’ This film offers unique insights into Debargue’s life as a musician at the beginning of a remarkable career, with rehearsals and concerts from Moscow to Chicago via Weimar and Salerno, revealing talents as a composer and jazz improvisor and his first-time entry into a world of recording studios, touring and fame, in a crucial year of discoveries.
Rodrigo: Complete Piano Music
Joaquin Rodrigo (1901 - 99) composed music for solo and piano duet throughout his long creative life. The earliest works on this collection of his complete music for piano dates from 1923 and the last from 1987.
Blind from birth, Rodrigo studied composition in Paris with Paul Dukas and became a pianist of considerable ability. Whilst his main contemporary Manuel de Falla delved deeply in to Spanish traditional music, Rodrigo created a kind of neo classical style imbued with a Spanish flavour, drawing heavily on 18th century musical styles and mannerisms. The more conservative style of his music compared with de Falla’s appealed greatly to the post civil war authorities of Franco’s Spain.
Many of the works for piano are short, and look back to the single movement sonatas of Scarlatti, and the keyboard music of Rameau, Couperin and Soler. However some of the works display considerable virtuosity such as Preludio al galo manañero which is a brilliant and highly effective composition.
The third of the CDs in this set features the composer and his wife, pianist Victoria Kamhi performing his music for four hands – it is a fascinating document and the listener can hear the composer adding personal touches to his music.
Other information:
- The first volume in an edition of Rodrigo’s music approved by the Rodrigo Foundation.
- Unusual repertoire that adds another dimension to the composer of one of the most famous concertos in the repertoire, the Concierto de Aranjuez for guitar and orchestra.
- Detailed booklet notes included.
- Fascinating historical recordings of the composer as pianist.
Track list:
Disk 1
· 1 Tres evocaciones: I. Tarde en el parque
· 2 Tres evocaciones: II. Noche junto al Guadalquivir
· 3 Tres evocaciones: III. Mañana en Triana
· 4 Danza de la amapola
· 5 Sonada de adiós
· 6 A l’ombre de Torre Bermeja
· 7 Preludio de añoranza
· 8 Suite para piano: I. Preludio
· 9 Suite para piano: II. Siciliana
· 10 Suite para piano: III. Bourrée
· 11 Suite para piano: IV. Minué
· 12 Suite para piano: V. Rigodón
· 13 Cancion y danza
· 14 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: I. Toccata a modo de pregón
· 15 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: II. Sonata
· 16 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: III. Sonata en fa sostenido menor
· 17 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: IV. Sonata en Re
· 18 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: V. Sonata como un tiento
· 19 Sonatas de Castilla con Toccata a modo de Pregón: VI. Sonata en La
· 20 El álbum de Cecilia: I. María de los Reyes (sevillanas)
· 21 El álbum de Cecilia: II. A la jota (jota de las palomas)
· 22 El álbum de Cecilia: III Canción del hada rubia
· 23 El álbum de Cecilia: IV. Canción del hada morena
· 24 El álbum de Cecilia: V. El negrito Pepo
· 25 El álbum de Cecilia: VI. Borriquillos a Belén
Disk 2
· 1 Serenata española
· 2 Cuatro estampas andaluzas: I. El vendedor de chanquetes
· 3 Cuatro estampas andaluzas: II. Crepúsculo sobre el Guadalquivir
· 4 Cuatro estampas andaluzas: III Seguidillas del diablo
· 5 Cuatro estampas andaluzas: IV. Barquitos de Cádiz
· 6 Cinco piezas del Siglo XVI: I. Diferencias sobre el Canto del Caballero (Antonio de Cabezón)
· 7 Cinco piezas del Siglo XVI: II. Pavana (Luys de Milán)
· 8 Cinco piezas del Siglo XVI: III. Pavana (Luys de Milán)
· 9 Cinco piezas del Siglo XVI: IV. Pavana (Enriquez de Valderrábano)
· 10 Cinco piezas del Siglo XVI: V. Fantasia que contrahaze la harpa a la manera de Ludovico (Alonso Mudarra)
· 11 Cuatro piezas para piano: I. Caleseras (Homenaje a Chueca)
· 12 Cuatro piezas para piano: II. Fandango del ventorrillo
· 13 Cuatro piezas para piano: III. Plegaria de la Infanta de Castilla
· 14 Cuatro piezas para piano: IV. Danza valenciana
· 15 Preludio al gallo mañanero
· 16 Zarabanda lejana
· 17 Bagatela
· 18 Air de ballet sur le nom d’une jeune fille
· 19 Deux berceuses: I. Berceuse de printemps
· 20 Deux berceuses: II. Berceuse d’automne
· 21 Tres danzas de España: I. Rústica
· 22 Tres danzas de España: II. Danza de las tres doncellas
· 23 Tres danzas de España: III. Serrana
· 24 Pastoral
Disk 3
· 1 Cinco piezas infantiles: I. Son chicos que pasan
· 2 Cinco piezas infantiles: II. Después de un cuento
· 3 Cinco piezas infantiles: III Mazurka
· 4 Cinco piezas infantiles: IV. Plegaria
· 5 Cinco piezas infantiles: V. Gritería final
· 6 Gran marcha de los subsecretarios for piano with 4 hands
· 7 Atardecer for piano with 4 hands
· 8 Juglares for piano with 4 hands
· 9 Sonatina para dos muñecas, for piano with 4 hands: I. Empieza el día
· 10 Sonatina para dos muñecas, for piano with 4 hands: II. Alegres peripecias
· 11 Sonatina para dos muñecas, for piano with 4 hands: III. Recogimiento
· 12 Sonatina para dos muñecas, for piano with 4 hands: IV. Vuelta del cole
Britten: Cello Suites / Versen
Wagner: Die Walküre, WWV 86B (Live)
Rudolf Serkin Plays Beethoven, Vol. 1 (1958)
Songs of Travel - Trombone Travels, Vol. 2 / Matthew Gee, Christopher Glynn
This second volume of Trombone Travels (Volume 1 is on 8.574093) continues with Matthew Gee’s exploration of three great cycles of early 20th-century British song. Elgar’s Sea Pictures evoke lullaby and turbulence alike, Vaughan Williams’ Songs of Travel chart a wanderer’s lonely journey through the landscape, and in Songs of the Sea Stanford’s music embraces both the somber and the exhilarating, with Gee joined by a trombone chorus to emulate the male voice choir. Throughout the recital Gee lavishes coloristic effects, the use of mutes, and subtle inflections that reinforce the trombone’s unique ability to mimic vocal techniques.
