Orchestral and Symphonic
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Elias: Music for Strings
O-Celli fait son cinema
Marchesi & Schubert: The String Quartets Project, Vol. 3
Haydn2032, Vol. 11 - Au gout parisien (LP)
Alfred Brendel plays Busoni & Liszt
Scharwenka: Piano Concerto No. 1; Symphony C minor
Puccini: Complete Works for String Quartet / Morena, Ravasi, Liao, Zanetti
Anyone who hears about Giacomo Puccini today is instinctively led to think of his most famous operatic compositions. However, not everyone knows that his production during his Milanese training years, which ended in 1883, was exclusively instrumental. The pieces included in this album belong to this artistic challenge, except for Crisantemi, which came later and will contribute with its two main themes to the last act of Manon Lescaut (1893).
Rosetti: Der sterbende Jesus / Moesus, L'arpa festante
In contrast to his more famous classical contemporaries, Antonio Rosetti was a "provincial" composer in terms of his external living circumstances. But the suspicion that he was only active for a quarter century in Swabian Wallerstein because his level was not high enough for the great centres of music has proven to be completely without merit. Whether we look at his symphonic works, concertos, chamber music or vocal works – a master's hand is unmistakable, as our continuously growing collection of impressive examples shows. This now includes the oratorio The Dying Jesus, which depicts the events of Good Friday both urgently and compassionately – an ideal complement to the scenes of Jesus in Gethsemane already available.
Elgar: The Dream of Gerontius / McCreesh, Gabrieli Consort
The Dream of Gerontius by Edward Elgar is a two-part work for voices and orchestra composed in 1900 to text by John Henry Newman. Widely regarded as Elgar's finest choral work, and by some his masterpiece, Gabrieli’s first-class performance, and McCreesh’s superb interpretation demonstrate why their recordings are seen as some of the best in classical music today.
REVIEW:
This strong performance is apparently the first to use historically appropriate instruments. The trombone, just to give the listener an idea, was owned by Elgar. Tenor Nicky Spence, in the lead role, offers a rich, serious performance. McCreesh’s interpretation focuses on the chorus, placing the work in the grand English oratorio tradition.
— AllMusic.com (James Manheim)
Colista: Cantatas & Arias
Castelnuovo-Tedesco: String Quartets / Quartetto Adorno
Queen - Piano Trascription
The mixing of musical genres is now a widespread practice even among the so-called “classical musicians”; from the jazz influences that seduced Ravel and Stravinsky, to Mussorgsky Pictures reinterpreted in a rock key by Emerson Lake & Palmer, no matter what the musical form of origin and destination; the important thing is to experiment, and in the experimentation, keeping alive the character of the work itself, with a contribution of originality that brings different styles and audiences closer together.
Kapralova: The Completed Orchestral Works
Impressions of Evans
Impressions of Evans
Bach & Chick Corea / Luiza Borac
Pianist Luiza Borac plays Bach's Goldberg Variations and Canons, transcriptions of Bach works by Lipatti, Busoni, Kempff, and Siloti, concluding with Chick Corea's Children's Songs.
REVIEW:
There is no attempt on Borac’s part (unlike some other famous pianists) to suggest the sonority of the harpsichord. But her playing has a clarity and deftness of touch entirely appropriate for this repertoire. Borac’s superb technique, crystalline tone, and seamless legato provide the utmost pleasure.
The remaining Bach items embody a comparable level of artistry, both unaffected and highly expressive. Jazz pianist and composer Chick Corea’s Children’s Songs were inspired in part by Bartók’s Mikrokosmos. Borac, who participated in some of Corea’s workshops, and found them “unforgettable and matchless,” plays the songs with masterful technique, captivating energy, and pervasive joy. She dedicates this recital “to the memory of my father George Borac.” What a beautiful musical tribute, and gift to us all. Highest recommendation.
— Fanfare (Ken Meltzer)
Busoni: Violin Sonatas & 4 Bagatelles / Dego, Leonardi
Jones: String Quartet No. 1; Wind Quintet; Nielsen: Aladdin,
Albinoni, Legrenzi, Muffat & Telemann: A Cinque - String Sonatas PURGATORY
The five-part writing for strings has its period of greatest development in the 16th and 17th centuries, only to fall into a progressive obsolescence. The most commonly used instrumental ensemble included two violins, alto and tenor viola da braccio, cello and basso continuo. Of this quintet, the instrument that undergoes a progressive dismissal is the viola tenore, which in this recording we propose in its original late seventeenth century mounting.
Mozart: Adagio & Fugue, KV 546; Sinfonia Concertante, KV 364
Constantinescu: Piano Concerto; Wedding in the Carpathians
Constantinescu stands out among the composers who followed George Enescu into the Romanian musical limelight during the first half of the 20th century. On the one hand, through his diverse oeuvre, which encompasses almost all of the genres from chamber music to film music, and on the other hand, through his own musical language, consisting of great color and harmonic variety. Skilfully adapted ecclesiastic Byzantine modes and chants, modal scales, and the authentic and fascinating melodies of Romanian folk music merge within Constantinescu's oeuvre, which stands balanced somewhere between Western tradition and a national musical idiom.
Fauré, Grieg, and Prokofiev / Music for Saxophone & Piano / Duo Laterza - Bandiera
