Orchestral and Symphonic
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Wolf: Orchesterlieder & Penthesilea / Appl, Gaudenz, Jena Philharmonic
Bruk: Orchestral Music, Vol. 4 / Resnis, Lithuanian National Symphony Orchestra
This fourth instalment of the recent symphonic output of Fridrich Bruk (born in Ukraine in 1937 but a Finnish resident since 1974) brings two earlier works – from when Bruk was merely in his late seventies. His Symphonies Nos. 15 and 16 – both predicated on Bruk’s concern for the environment – inhabit the soundworld that has become familiar from his more recent symphonies: almost a stream of consciousness expressed through wildly inventive orchestral writing in a kaleidoscope of colour and counterpoint, sitting somewhere between Villa-Lobos and Pettersson in its profligate abundance.
Trockne Blumen
A very appealing compilation of popular classical works, partly original, partly especially arranged for pan flute and piano.
Schumann: Works for Solo Piano / Tanin
After his succesful debut album for Prospero Classical, pianist Sergey Tanin has now recorded Schumann's "Davidbündlertänze" and the "Faschingsschwank aus Wien"
Turning Page
Home / Miró Quartet
The pieces in this album represent the Miró Quartet’s artistic home in many ways. The four works include two new commissions for the Miró by Kevin Puts and Caroline Shaw, as well as works by George Walker and Samuel Barber. The concept of home and our complex relation to it is woven in a variety of ways into all the music in this album: this music invites you to feel, reflect, and engage in Miró’s world. This is Miró second album.
Tribute to Rachmaninoff
J.S. Bach: From Kothen to Leipzig
Khumalo: Tracing Hollow Traces
Mozart: Don Giovanni
Mozart: Concerto for Two Pianos, KV 365; Sinfonia Concertant
A. Hugo: Mélodies sur des poèmes de Victor Hugo
Thomas: Terpsichore's Box Of Dreams - Study Score
Piazzolla: Buenos Aires - Arrangements for Violin & String Orchestra
All the arrangements on this album are of instrumental works that Astor Piazzolla composed for his Quinteto Nuevo Tango. Most prominent is the Vivaldi-inspired Las cuatro estaciones porteñas reimagined in concerto style for solo violin and string orchestra by Leonid Desyatnikov. The seven other companion pieces are heard here in world premiere recordings of arrangements by conductor Ken Selden, who leads the Martingale Ensemble.
Monteverdi: L'Orfeo
Forgotten Songs, Forgotten Love
Lopes-Graça: Canções portuguesas / Hillier, Coro Casa da Música
Mozart a Paris 1778
Gesualdo: Silenzio mio - Il quarto libro di madrigali
Blackford: Nadia Anjuman Piano Reduction for Mezzo Soprano &
Bruckner: Piano Works / Mari Kodama
Lully: Armide
Blamont: Les Fetes grecques et romaines
Fly - Electronic Music for Accordion
Between the new and the familiar, the accordion is a young instrument. This is precisely why I believe it lends itself almost naturally, or rather vocationally, to experimentation. At the same time, its place in the collective imagination, its wide diffusion in popular and folkloric cultures, also make it a “familiar”, “domestic” instrument. This combination of “familiarity” and experimentation is, then, the inspiration behind the entire “Fly. Electronic Music for Accordion” project. New works for accordion and electronics aimed precisely at enhancing such duplicity: the feeling of familiarity and the disconcerting activation of the new. For this purpose, I involved some of the Italian composers among those I most respect, with whom I could establish a creative relationship that could lead to the development of particularly significant works featuring this instrument. At least in my ambitions and intentions. What the outcome will be is not for me to say. The fact remains that when a new work is born, especially one with some compositional weight, we are always faced with an event, the opening up of a world, which, however bewildering, or perhaps precisely because of this, proves capable of putting us in relation with ourselves and with the contemporaneity in which we live. Besides this, the choice of alternating the electroacoustic works with “small” pieces (in terms of duration) taken from the historical, classical literature to which we belong, is also intended to promote precisely the coexistence between familiarity and experimentation. A piece of “easy” listening, “familiar”, a prelude or postlude, as it were, in order to “cleanse” the ear, in some way to prepare it for a different kind of listening, that of electroacoustic music, which is complex and full of novel information, not “familiar”. Fragments of history, therefore, that intervene in the rhythm of listening, supposing a linear path, almost like recollections that assail the involuntary memory, to try to undergo an experience that allows us to achieve a relationship between reminiscence and the new.
Germano Scurti
