This new Ondine release by Danish-born recorder player Bolette Roed includes the music of Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750) arranged for solo recorder. The works were arranged by Frans Brüggen
(1934–2014), famous Dutch recorder player and conductor who was of the
greatest importance to the movement of the historically informed
performance practice.
With the exception of his Partita BWV 1013, Bach wrote relatively few
works for the recorder. However, composers like Bach and Vivaldi did
themselves arrange many of their works for different instruments. From
this point of view the work of arranging Bach’s solo cello and violin
pieces for recorder is something what Bach himself could have done, had
he been inspired by a talented recorder player himself at the time of
his compositions. For this recording several different recorders were
being chosen. For the 11 movements written for the violin original keys
were kept by changing the recorders accordingly. The cello suites are
being played by one recorder only by transposing the original keys down a
minor second.
Bolette Roed is an award-winning artist who
regularly performs with major Danish orchestras as well as with early
music ensembles and baroque orchestras in various countries. Bolette
Roed strives to extend the instrument’s repertoire beyond its
established role in Early Music, towards new frontiers of improvisation,
folk, and world music. Roed further aspires to adapt canonical
classical works to the recorder and stays in constant dialogue with and
commissions new works from today’s composers.
Can you please send a new link? This one unfortunately does not work. Mega or Zippyshare would be fine.
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