After the success of their first volume Ophélie Gaillard and Pulcinella
propose a second disc devoted to Johann Sebastian Bach's most talented
and surprising son, Carl Philipp Emanuel (1714-1788). The Sinfonia in C
major expresses multiple emotions, ranging from irrepressible suffering
in the Adagio to joyous release and insouciance in the concluding
Allegretto, tinged with near-Mozartian grace. The Cello Concerto in B flat reveals the influence of the waning Baroque era and Vivaldi in
particular. The Sinfonia in E minor, nicknamed 'Fandango' and dating
from his Berlin years, is commonly regarded as one of his finest
symphonies. The particularly virtuosic Sonata for cello piccolo and
keyboard shows to advantage the two soloists of this recording: Ophélie
Gaillard and Francesco Corti, whose fieriness is further revealed in the
Harpsichord Concerto in D minor. (Presto Classical)
jueves, 31 de marzo de 2016
miércoles, 30 de marzo de 2016
Lucas Debargue SCARLATTI - CHOPIN - LISZT - RAVEL

The London Spectator called Debargue 'the real winner' of the competition, due to the Moscow Music Critics Association prize bestowed on the 4th prize recipient.
Debargue began piano studies at age 11 at the Compiegne Conservatory under Christine Muenier. He gave up formal studies at age 16, but always maintained an admiration for virtuoso repertoire. After three years completing his Bachelor of Science at Paris 7 Diderot University, two of which spent famously not touching a piano, Debargue began studying at the Beauvais Conservatory under Philippe Tamborini. There he met his current professor Rena Shereshevskaya at the Rueil-Malmaison Conservatory and this encounter became decisive to him. They soon prepared for his entrance examinations at the National Superior Conservatory of Paris, where he was admitted with unanimous approval to study with Professor Jean-François Heisser and ultimately obtained his bachelor’s degree in piano performance in 2015. Seeing in Debargue a future as a great interpreter, Professor Shereshevskaya admitted him into her class at the Cortot School to prepare him for grand international competitions.
An introspective and insightful artist who draws inspiration across disciplines, in literature, painting, cinema and jazz, Debargue seeks to foster a deeper sense of musical appreciation among his audiences and develop personal interpretations of a carefully selected repertoire, including works by some lesser-known composers, like Nikolai Medtner, Samuel Maykapar and Nikolai Roslavets. (Columbia Artists Management Inc.)
martes, 22 de marzo de 2016
Pinchas Zukerman / Royal Philharmonic Orchestra VAUGHAN WILLIAMS The Lark Ascending - Tallis Fantasia ELGAR Introduction & Allegro - In Moonlight
Double Grammy Award winner Pinchas Zukerman stars as violin and
viola soloist and conductor in a landmark new Decca recording with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. 'Elgar & Vaughan Williams' offers his
mature thoughts on Ralph Vaughan Williams' evocative masterwork The Lark
Ascending, which Zukerman first recorded over forty years ago.
It also includes revelatory performances of Elgar's Introduction and
Allegro and Serenade for String Orchestra, Vaughan Williams' Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis, such evergreen Elgar miniatures as Salut
d'amour and Chanson de matin, and the world premiere recording of In
Moonlight, an arrangement for solo viola, strings and harp of Elgar's
celebrated Canto popolare. Maestro Zukerman here draws on the strength
of his partnership as Principal Guest Conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra as the
orchestra celebrates its 70th anniversary.
Pinchas Zukerman recorded his new album at Cadogan Hall, the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra's central London home. The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra was founded by Sir
Thomas Beecham, a great champion of English music, and gave its first
performance in September 1946. The orchestra launched its 70th
anniversary year on tour to the United States in company with Pinchas
Zukerman, now in his seventh season as Principal Guest Conductor. He is
set to conduct the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at London's Royal Festival Hall on 1 March and
perform at Buckingham Palace two days later for the orchestra's 70th
Anniversary Gala Concert.
Marie van Rhijn MARIN MARAIS Dans les jardins d'Eurytus

viernes, 18 de marzo de 2016
Mark Padmore / Kristian Bezuidenhout SCHUMANN Dichterliebe - Liederkreis op. 24
Mark Padmore (b.1961) started his musical activities as a clarinetist and singer. During the early 1980s he sang with The Sixteen and the Hilliard Ensemble. With the Hilliards he can be heard on ‘Perotinus’, an ECM album that has meanwhile achieved legendary status. In the 1990s he worked as a soloist with William Christie, Philippe Herreweghe and John Eliot Gardiner, and was much sought after as the Evangelist in the Passions of Johann Sebastian Bach. In 2002 he appeared for the first time in a lieder recital, singing Schubert’s ‘Die Schöne Müllerin’. His accompanist, Roger Vignoles, encouraged him to concentrate on the lied repertoire, and as a result, Padmore now spends a large amount of his time on the recital podium. He performs with seasoned accompanists: Julius Drake, Graham Johnson and Malcolm Martineau, and has also forged performing relationships with famous pianists: Imogen Cooper, Till Fellner and Paul Lewis. The latter accompanied him in very successful recordings of Schubert’s great song-cycles, ‘Die Winterreise’ and ‘Die Schöne Müllerin’.
For his most recent recital tour Padmore opted for a collaboration with fortepianist Kristian Bezuidenhout, an artist who was invited by Harmonia Mundi to record Mozart’s complete solo piano music. Padmore dedicated his tour to the poet Heinrich Heine, who was a fount of inspiration for Franz Schubert. Robert Schumann visited Vienna in 1838, ten years after Schubert’s death, and became acquainted with the older composer’s Ninth Symphony and the song cycles ‘Winterreise’, ‘Müllerin’ and ‘Schwanengesang’. Despite the fact that Schumann initially looked down on the Lied phenomenon, but in 1840, just married to Clara, in his new role as family man felt obliged to provide a more substantial income. Considering the popularity of the lied genre with the middle class in those days, publishing songs was a logical way to bolster his wages. Schumann’s preference for Heinrich Heine was no coincidence. Heine’s ‘Das Buch der Lieder’, published in 1820, enjoyed an immense popularity and inspired nineteenth-century composers to write no less than 8000 songs. On this CD five of those are placed between Schumann’s opp. 24 and 48. They were selected from the volume ‘Sängerfahrt’ by Franz Paul Lachner (1803-1890). During the last two years of Schubert’s life Lachner befriended Schubert, who was six years his senior. Lachner’s music pays homage to Schubert, and some of his settings employ texts that were also set by Schubert and Schumann. On this recital they are ‘Im Mai’, the opening song of ‘Dichterliebe’ (‘Im wunderschönen Monat Mai’), and ‘Das Fischermädchen’, also known in a setting by Schubert. They are a resounding testimony to the difference between talent and genius. (Siebe Riedstra)
For his most recent recital tour Padmore opted for a collaboration with fortepianist Kristian Bezuidenhout, an artist who was invited by Harmonia Mundi to record Mozart’s complete solo piano music. Padmore dedicated his tour to the poet Heinrich Heine, who was a fount of inspiration for Franz Schubert. Robert Schumann visited Vienna in 1838, ten years after Schubert’s death, and became acquainted with the older composer’s Ninth Symphony and the song cycles ‘Winterreise’, ‘Müllerin’ and ‘Schwanengesang’. Despite the fact that Schumann initially looked down on the Lied phenomenon, but in 1840, just married to Clara, in his new role as family man felt obliged to provide a more substantial income. Considering the popularity of the lied genre with the middle class in those days, publishing songs was a logical way to bolster his wages. Schumann’s preference for Heinrich Heine was no coincidence. Heine’s ‘Das Buch der Lieder’, published in 1820, enjoyed an immense popularity and inspired nineteenth-century composers to write no less than 8000 songs. On this CD five of those are placed between Schumann’s opp. 24 and 48. They were selected from the volume ‘Sängerfahrt’ by Franz Paul Lachner (1803-1890). During the last two years of Schubert’s life Lachner befriended Schubert, who was six years his senior. Lachner’s music pays homage to Schubert, and some of his settings employ texts that were also set by Schubert and Schumann. On this recital they are ‘Im Mai’, the opening song of ‘Dichterliebe’ (‘Im wunderschönen Monat Mai’), and ‘Das Fischermädchen’, also known in a setting by Schubert. They are a resounding testimony to the difference between talent and genius. (Siebe Riedstra)
miércoles, 16 de marzo de 2016
Yundi Li CHOPIN

Yundi CHOPIN Ballades - Berceuse - Mazurkas
Following his 2015 release of Frédéric Chopin's Préludes on Deutsche Grammophon, Yundi Li continues his survey of the Polish master's works with the Four Ballades, the Berceuse in D flat major, and the Four Mazurkas, Op. 17. Yundi's album is part of his ongoing Chopin Project, which has the appearance of being his life's work, so closely is he associated with this music. In keeping with Chopin's preferences, Yundi plays with calm introspection and flexibility in his phrasing, which gives the music a spontaneity that avoids formulaic Romantic clichés. Most importantly, Yundi's use of rubato and his dynamic adjustments are appropriate to the music's flow and not employed for sentimentality or showmanship. Instead, Yundi gives the lyrical Ballades room to breathe, and the tugging of the tempo is always at the service of expression, rather than effect. To sample Yundi's exquisite treatment of line and pacing, the poetic opening of the Ballade in F major, Op. 38 (track two) is a good place to start. But for a livelier example, the Mazurka No. 1 in B flat major shows the pianist in fine form. (Blair Sanderson)
Alliage Quintett / Sabine Meyer FANTASIA

Like a storyteller narrating his own adaption of a legend the Alliage Quintet and Sabine Meyer move through imaginative compositions of Alexander Borodin (Polovtsian Dances), Igor Stravinsky (The Firebird), Paul Dukas (Sorcerer’s Apprentice), Leonard Bernstein (‘Candide’ overture), and Dmitri Shostakovich (Five Pieces). Sebastian Gottschick, Rainer Schottstädt, Stéphane Gassot, Camille Pépin, and Itai Sobol are well experienced in writing perfect arrangements for the needs of Alliage. With this extraordinary chamber ensemble a bunch of well-known compositions re-sounds in a completely new tonal language. Let yourself be captivated by the magic of this fairy-tale evening.
martes, 15 de marzo de 2016
Christian-Pierre La Marca / Les Ambassadeurs / Alexis Kossenko CANTUS

Christian-Pierre La Marca’s Cantus
ticks all boxes when it comes to originality, having interpreted famous
sacred pieces into a single-instruments voice - the cello. What is left
is an understanding of the musical emotion displayed in these famous
pieces, with his repertoire including the titles Mass, Stabat Mater and
Agnus Dei.
Tackling on classics by Mozart, Bach and Pergolesi is a
stupendous task, however Christian-Pierre successfully reveals the
intensity of these melodies. In turn his album acts as a message,
reinforcing the eighteenth century idea that music, by its power of
proposition and submission, goes beyond words to express the
unspeakable, often with clarity and extent.
If you admire the
organ, viola and theorbo of sacred music than Cantus is for you, with
Christian-Pierre’s repertoire covering the most important names in
sacred music from the sixteenth to twenty-first century. Although you
will not find me listening to Cantus I can still very much appreciate
the depth of artistic expression and understanding that has gone into
this album. (Taylor Woodward)
Mark Padmore / Kristian Bezuidenhout BEETHOVEN An die ferne Geliebte Op. 98 - HAYDN Songs - MOZART Masonic Cantata K. 619
Following up on their acclaimed recording of Schumann's Dichterliebe and
Liederkreis, tenor Mark Padmore and fortepianist Kristian Bezuidenhout
join forces once again for a varied and appealing lieder recital of
songs by Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart. Works featured here include
Beethoven's An die ferne Geliebte, Mozart's Masonic Cantata and
selections from Haydn's English Songs.
Don't assume that the British tenor Mark Padmore is an opera lightweight
from the ethereal sound and almost choirboy purity of his voice...he can
sing with penetrating intensity...his is an intimate tenor voice,
ideally suited to the Evangelist in Bachs St. Matthew Passion, and, as
this new recording again demonstrates, the lieder repertory...This is
eloquent lieder singing driven by astute and sensitive attention to the
texts. (The New York Times)
The songs are thoughtful and the interpretations deeply considered.
Tenor Mark Padmore sidles in with an artless tone and only gradually
unfurls the fronds of his full voice across the Haydn rarities that open
this recital...An die ferne Geliebte finds fortepianist Kristian
Bezuidenhout on inspired form: his transitions between songs are
seamless, the extended lead-in to Es kehret der Maien notably elegant. (Sinfini Music)
TrioFenix LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN String Trio in E flat major, Op. 3 - Serenade in D major, Op. 8

Their first CD was recorded in 2010 on the Fuga Libera label. The well-known Divertimento KV 563 and the six Adagio
and Fugues KV 404a by W.A. Mozart became their musical
calling card and a significant step for TrioFenix. In 2012 they
recorded the Serenades Opus 8 by Ludwig Van Beethoven
and Opus 10 by Ernst Von Dohnany for the television channel
Canvas.
Their new CD dedicated to Beethoven string trios will be released in April 2016 (Fuga Libera).
Shirly Laub
studied violin at the Royal Conservatory of Music
in Brussels with Clemens Quatacker and furthered her studies in Utrecht with Viktor Liberman and Philippe Hirschhorn.
From 1998 to 2005 she was Co-Principal Violin of the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra in London. As such, she is regularly
invited to play with various eminent orchestras in Europe and
Asia. As first violin of the Oxalys Ensemble she plays at the
most prestigious international venues. She is professor at the
Conservatoire Royale de Musique de Bruxelles.
Tony Nys
studied at the Koninklijk Conservatorium Brussel
with Clemens Quatacker and Philippe Hirschhorn. As a violist
in the Danel Quartet from 1998 till 2005 he played worldwide in numerous festivals, recordings and performances of
newly composed pieces. Since 2005 he has regularly worked
as a freelance musician with ensembles such as Prometheus,
Ictus, Ensemble Modern, Explorations. He is currently member
of the String Trio & Quartet Malibran. As an orchestra musician, Tony Nys has been viola solo in La Monnaie Symphony
Orchestra since 2007 and in that position he was also invited
by the Frankfurt Rundfunkorchester. He teaches viola and
chamber music at the Koninklijk Conservatorium Brussel and
at the Fontys Muziekhogeschool in Tilburg.
Karel Steylaerts
studied at the Brussels Conservatoire with
Carlo Schmitz and then at the Hochschule für Musik of Cologne with Maria Kliegel. He was a prize winner of the 1990
Tenuto competition. He has been Principal Cellist of the Beethoven Academie for many years. Karel Steylaerts is currently Principal Cellist at the Brussels Philharmonic.
martes, 8 de marzo de 2016
Nikolaus Harnoncourt / Wiener Philharmoniker BRAHMS Ein Deutsches Requiem

lunes, 7 de marzo de 2016
Nikolaus Harnoncourt (1929-2016) / Wiener Philharmoniker ANTON BRUCKNER Symphony No. 9

Yundi Li / Berliner Philharmoniker / Seiji Ozawa PROKOFIEV Piano Concerto No. 2 - RAVEL Piano Concerto in G major

Sara Stowe / Matthew Spring / Jon Banks / Martin Souter MUSIC FOR THE SIX WIVES OF HENRY VIII
Henry VIII was a musician and music lover. This album of cheerful
songs and dances brings together some of Henry's own compositions with
the best Renaissance music from England and the continent, reflecting
the taste of each of Henry's wives and giving a lively impression of
Tudor court life.
Spanish, French, Italian and English music -
including many pieces by Henry VIII himself - in a programme designed to
reflect the tastes and characters of Henry's wives. Cheerful songs,
dances and reflective pieces give an impression of court life and the
music that was made and composed there. Many of the pieces are taken
from a manuscript which was written during the reign of Henry VIII and
which contains many of the King's own compositions.
Henry VIII's
turbulent loves and life are famous. It is not so often remembered,
however, that court life had its own rhythms and occasions which
continued throughout all the confusion and turmoil of the King's
personal problems. Music was a major feature of that court life, and
this included marvellous, soaring choral music to match the superb
ecclesiastical buildings that Henry VIII built or worshipped in. But
court life also included more secular, domestic music-making in which
the king himself took an important part. He was an accomplished
composer, as the works on this album will show, and it is clear that he
liked music, and that it was one of his many accomplishments as one of
the most cultured and intellectually gifted monarchs that the English
throne has ever seen.
The pieces on this album have been grouped
together here to represent each of Henry's wives - hence the distinctly
Spanish style of the opening few tracks, which are for Catherine of
Aragon. Each section of music ends with a quiet, gentle piece (a 'Consort'), written by Henry, and which are dotted about throughout the
manuscript. Anne Boleyn was educated in France, so the pieces for her
are French in style. Helas madame is a love song by Henry. And I were a
mayden reflects her youth when she became Queen. Pastime with good
company, which we have placed with Jane Seymour, is probably Henry's
most famous composition, along with Greensleeves, a beautiful melody
which is often attributed to the king's pen. Anne of Cleves has her
European dance, and a Flemish song from Obrecht, one of the greatest
European composers of the time.
Catherine Howard's music is more
rustic, with echoes of the countryside and the royal ritual of hunting.
Le pied de cheval is from an English manuscript, despite its French
title, and is sometimes known as the Horse's Brawl. Catherine Parr's
music features some traditional English tunes and a beautiful Italian
fantasia, first published in 1536, which Henry may have played to her.
sábado, 5 de marzo de 2016
Simone Kermes / Enrico Casazza / La Magnifica Comunità LOVE

Love is Simone Kermes’ most intimate and personal album yet.
The
arrangement, cast of instruments, and recording set up is as such that
the “pop song” quality, the contemporary and eternal spirit, the
immediacy of these compositions is revealed. All sung with the unique
legato, pure, and silver quality that makes Simone Kermes’ voice so
special.
Simone Kermes is a dramatic coloratura soprano and
multi-award winner. For her solo albums she has received a number of
international awards, such as the annual award of the Deutsche
Schallplattenkritik, the Echo Klassik award for 2011 Female Singer of
the Year, the Diapason d`Or, Midem Award, Choc Le Monde de la Musique
and Gramophone magazine’s Recording of the Month. In April 2013 she
received one of Russia’s highest cultural awards, the Golden Mask, for
her performances as Fiordiligi in Mozart’s Così fan tutte at the
Tchaikovsky State Academic Theatre in Perm.
Opera performances
have taken her as Konstanze, the Queen of the Night, Fiordiligi, Donna
Anna, Giunia, Rosalinde, Lucia, Gilda, Ann Truelove, Alcina and Laodice,
among other roles, to New York, Paris, Lisbon, Copenhagen, Moscow,
Beijing and German state opera houses. (Presto Classical)
jueves, 3 de marzo de 2016
LOIS V. VIERK Simoom

miércoles, 2 de marzo de 2016
LOIS V. VIERK River Beneath the River

martes, 1 de marzo de 2016
LSO / Pierre Boulez / Klangforum Wien / Emilio Pomàrico OLGA NEUWIRTH Clinamen / Nodus - Construction in Space
Olga Neuwirth 's faible for grotesque themes and her occasional
vegetative proliferation of pieces ensured her a permanent place in the
repertoire. As brilliant growths of an undomesticated artist.
Many-facetted, vigorously arranged scores with the most heterogeneous
influences and styles, far remote from any of the false glamour
characteristic of postmodernity. With the conductor Pierre Boulez she
has found herself a genuine ally. (Wolfgang Fuhrmann)
ICI Ensemble OLGA NEUWIRTH Who am I? - No more
The title ‘Composer in Dialogue’ stands for a biennial cooperation between the ICI Ensemble and a contemporary figure, the aim of which is to create a kind of ‘work in progress’ through composition itself but also by involving improvisational forms. Performances of pieces thus created remain the intention. The present recording documents an ICI concert with the composer Olga Neuwirth.
Olga Neuwirth began her musical career on the trumpet, before she embraced composition as her favoured means of expression. She remains one of today’s most important protagonists in the field. She can thank exchanges with Adriana Hölszky and Luigi Nono, studies with Tristan Murail, and a befriended author, Elfriede Jelinek, for the path her professional life took.
Olga Neuwirth meets an ICI Ensemble whose calling card is a kind of improvised music that draws on Afro-American roots. Here we must look to Vinko Globokar, Barry Guy, Giancarlo Schiaffini, and George E. Lewis for any explanation. NEOS will now release, after the duo CD JOMO (Johanna Varner & Mary Oliver), the second recording in the ICI Edition.
The most exciting thing about this meeting of musical minds is the feeling that opposites impinge on each other. Here, that which is composed comes into head-on conflict with what has been – or can be – improvised. This simultaneity of determination and random coincidence, the inherent paradox of which is something that especially interests Olga Neuwirth, guarantees friction. As for the medium of live electronics and the use of samples, which have such an important bearing on the way instruments actually sound, these too point in this direction.
Olga Neuwirth likes to describe her music as ‘music for catastrophes’, because just beneath the surface with its confusing patterns of sound – ones which resemble a series of labyrinths – there is a dark undertow that suddenly takes the music in new and unexpected directions. This is how she enables the listener to take part in a virtuosic deconstruction, and experience how sounds are perceived. What are called into question are our aural habits. And what is born is the impingement of possible associations.
Two works emerged as joint projects and were premiered: the first, Who Am I?, is a composition that uses musically heterogeneous material and fragments of Kafka’s Letter to his Father, these excerpts read, however, by a woman. In the second work, No More, Olga Neuwirth incorporates her own writings with lines from the songs of Frank Zappa as well as providing us with an instrumental song, one that “continues to return and which is ‘worked through’, as in the process of Psychoanalysis”, to quote the composer. At the end, only vague reminiscences of The Long Rain remain. (Gunnar Geisse)
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