Thursday, September 27, 2012

Kodály / Bartók: Hungarian Songs ~ Kodály Girls' Choir conducted by Ilona Andor

Kodaly / Bartok: Hungarian Songs
Kodály Girls' Choir conducted by Ilona Andor

Music in the folk idiom by Hungary's two greatest composers. Recorded at Kingsway Hall, London under the supervision of Zoltán Kodály. LP rip


Zoltán Kodály

A1 The Gypsy
A2 Night on the Moutain
A3 Dancing Song
A4 Fancy
A5 Wainamoinen Makes Music
A6 King Ladislaus

Béla Bartók

B1 Breadbaking
B2 Wandering
B3 Bird Song
B4 Regret

Zoltán Kodály

B5 Psalm 150
B6 Angels and Shepherds
B7 Whitsuntide

Kodály - The Gypsy

Bartók - Breadbaking

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Canadian Brass - J.S. Bach ~ The Art of Fugue


The Art of the Fugue represents Johann Sebastian Bach's last musical gift to the world, standing as a thorough investigation of contrapuntal art through fugal style and technique. Bach had become musically "old-fashioned" within his lifetime, and, indeed, the year of his death is used to mark the end of the Baroque era. The Art of the Fugue can be said to comprehen­sively sum up an art form on which much of Bach's life's work had been based.

Two basic sources were available for developing the Canadian Brass' performing edition of The Art of the Fugue: first, copies of the original manuscript in Bach's own hand and, second, editions based on the first published edition (posthumous) of 1750. For clarity, the numbering system of the first published version has been maintained for this recording, but the performing order corresponds more closely to the original autograph version.

The Art of the Fugue uses a single D-minor subject or theme as its basis, clearly stated and answered at the opening of Contrapunctus I. Then begins a fascinating journey through all the possible techniques that Bach was able to call upon to treat this subject and other companion subjects fugally. The Art of the Fugue contains four "simple" fugues (I, II, III, IV), three stretto fugues (V, VI, VII), two double fugues (IX, X), two triple fugues (VIII, XI), and two "mirror" fugues (XII, XIII). The last fugue of the set (XIV) was to have been a quadruple fugue. Having already introduced three themes, the third of which was his own signature BACH (in German nomenclature B = B-flat and H = B natural), he was about to crown this last fugue with the main D-minor theme. However, illnesses from which he never recovered required him to abandon this work in order to dictate his last work: "Vor deinen Thron tret' ich hiermit." Although modern research

argues several other chronological possibilities, tradition seems to demand inclusion of this famous chorale prelude. Recording Bach's The Art of the Fugue heralds the coming of age for the

Brass Quintet medium. Brass can quite justifiably perform this work because of Bach's intentional avoidance in indicating specific instruments of his era to perform it. Thusly, The Art of the Fugue transcends mere time boundaries and becomes the cornerstone of an enduring repertory for a wide variety of instruments, including brass.

The Canadian Brass began its investigation of The Art of the Fugue in 1970. This led to a radio concert for the Canadian Broadcasting Corpora­tion, giving the group the opportunity to work intensively with the well-known Toronto Bach authority Reginald Godden. In 1976 the Brass had the first of many meetings with the legendary Glenn Gould. It was during these meetings that The Art of the Fugue was first conceived as a recording project. From Glenn's insight and advice, the Brass was encouraged to bring this project to fruition. It was producer James Mallinson's great love of The Art of the Fugue and his high regard for Arthur Frackenpohl's transcription that provided critical momentum.

The Art of Fugue, BWV 1080

01. Contrapunctus I.Andante Sostenuto (2:43)
02. Contrapunctus III.Andante Espressivo e Dolce (2:21)
03. Contrapunctus II.Allegro Moderato e Ritmico (2:44)
04. Contrapunctus IV.Allegro Moderato (3:35)
05. Contrapunctus V.Allegro Energico (2:21)
06. Contrapunctus IX.Vivace (3:14)
07. Contrapunctus X.Allegro Moderato (3:06)
08. Contrapunctus VI.Andante Ritmico (3:34)
09. Contrapunctus VII.Larghetto Maestoso (2:45)
10. Contrapunctus VIII.Allegro (4:52)
11. Contrapunctus XI.Allegro Moderato (4:33)
12. Contrapunctus XII.(Rectus), Lento (2:21)
13. Contrapunctus XII.(Inversus), Lento (2:20)
14. Contrapunctus XIII.(Rectus), Allegro Spiritoso (2:25)
15. Contrapunctus XIII.(Inversus), Allegro Spiritoso (2:28)
16. Contrapunctus XIV.Maestoso (unfinished) (7:07)
17. Contrapunctus XIVb.Chorale prelude: "Vor deinen Thron tret' ich hiermit (4:05)


Contrapunctus IX.Vivace

Contrapunctus XIII.(Inversus), Allegro Spiritoso

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ~ Flute and Harp Concerto / Basson Concerto

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Concerto In B flat for bassoon and orchestra, K191/186e Concerto in G for flute and orchestra, K313/285c Andante in C for flute and orchestra, K315/285e Concerto in C for flute, harp and orchestra, K299/297c

Apart from his unique endowment with taste and technique, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was fortunate also in another respect: he was lucky enough to have lived in an age not only of philosophical, but also of stylistic enlightenment. Succeeding generations have fixed on particular aspects of his art and blown them up, usually out of all proportion. But there are many Mozart’s and many styles, each individual style governed by its own laws according to the requirements of each individual work. Our age's obsession, still, with the 'daemonic' aspects of Mozart's music has tended to obscure the many other facets of his genius.
The Concerto in 8 flat for bassoon and orchestra, K191/186e, illustrates to perfection one fascinating technical aspect of Mozart's creativity: his ability to think himself into the character of a particular voice or instrument and to allow the music to arise out of the nature of the means to hand. The unknown recipient of this sunny, tuneful work, completed in Salzburg in June 1774, was no doubt delighted by the opportunities provided for showing off the instrument's particular capabilities. In the opening Allegro, cantabile melodic writing blends effortlessly with rapid scale passages, repeated-note phrases and great leaps - the latter also a feature of solo vocal music, especially of opera seria arias or those of a mock seria cast. Indeed, humor is never far away here: particularly captivating is the bassoon's perfectly poised counterpoint to the 'second subject' given out by the first violins.
A more tender note is struck by the slow movement, which has the singular marking 'Andante ma adagio'. Such a poetic melodic outpouring - enhanced by the muted strings, and all the more telling for its brevity - makes one feel most keenly the loss of the handful of bassoon concertos that Mozart was believed to have composed but whose existence has not been substantiated. As in the Concertone for two violins, K190/186E, dated only four days before the concerto, Mozart concludes with a minuet-rondo finale, whose loose-limbed decorative structure acts as a perfect foil, both emotionally and technically, to the preceding movements.

The Academy of Ancient Music 
The Academy of Ancient Music (AAM) is a period-instrument orchestra based in Cambridge, England. Founded by harpsichordist Christopher Hogwood in 1973, it was named after a previous organisation of the same name of the 18th century. The musicians play on either original instruments or modern copies of instruments from the period of time the music was composed. They generally play Baroque and Classical music, though they have also played some new compositions for baroque orchestra in recent years.
The original Academy of Ancient Music was founded in London, England in 1726 for the purpose of studying and performing "old" music — defined initially as anything composed at least a century earlier. This soon grew to include more contemporary composers, including William Croft, Michael Christian Festing, Maurice Greene, Bernard Gates, Giovanni Bononcini, Senesino, Nicola Haym, Francesco Geminiani, Pier Francesco Tosi, John Ernest Galliard, Charles Dieupart, Jean-Baptiste Loeillet and Giuseppe Riva. Handel was never a member, although the society studied and performed his music as well as their own, and that of other composers of the day. Directors of the organization included Johann Christoph Pepusch (from 1735 onward), Benjamin Cooke and Samuel Arnold (from 1789 onwards).

tracks
01. Flute and Harp Concerto C major, K299 - I Allegro (10:49)
02. Flute and Harp Concerto C major, K299 - II Andantino (8:26)
03. Flute and Harp Concerto C major, K299 - III Rondeau (9:45)
04. Andante for flute and orchestra C major, K315 - C-Dur (5:39)
05. Bassoon Concerto B flat major K191 - I Allegro (6:04)
06. Bassoon Concerto B flat major K191 - II Andante ma adagio (5:36)
07. Bassoon Concerto B flat major K191 - III Rondo: Tempo di Menuetto (4:08)
08. Flute Concerto No 1 G major, K313 - I Allegro maestoso (8:21)
09. Flute Concerto No 1 G major, K313 - II Adagio ma non troppo (8:24)
10. Flute Concerto No 1 G major, K313 - III Rondo: Tempo di Menuetto (7:37)

Andante for flute and orchestra C major, K315 - C-Dur

Bassoon Concerto B flat major K191 - III Rondo: Tempo di Menuetto

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Michala Petri ~ Blockflötenkonzerte / Recorder Concertos



In the history of European music, the recorder - a very early wind instrument - achieved its fullest potential during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. At that time, the models that were built included not only recorders corresponding to the registers of the human voice -soprano, alto, tenor, and bass - but also instruments in a number of intermediate, higher, and lower registers. The recorder was in general use in chamber and orchestral music, especially in Germany and England. From about 1700 on it encountered a strong rival in the transverse flute, whose more rounded and versatile tone suited the susceptibilities of the emergent Rococo period, and after 1750 it was ousted for many years from usual instrumental ensembles. For this reason it had only a limited opportunity to participate as a soloist in the concertante forms which had evolved in Italy. Even so, of the 16 flute concertos that Vivaldi wrote in all, six alone are for the recorder, three of these being for the sopranino. His Concerto in C does not merely sound idiomatic (by no means a foregone conclusion in music of that time), but also shows a sense of humor. There is much wit and high spirit in the way that the solo instrument, chirping inimitably in its highest register, is given extremely virtuosic material in the quick outer movements. Various concertos with occasional recorder solos as well as recorder concertos proper have also come down to us from the two Sammartini brothers, Giovanni Battista and Giuseppe. Giuseppe's concertos are relatively conservative in construction and combine polyphonic writing in the older manner with modern stylistic elements akin to those of the early Classical sinfonia.
Telemann wrote more than 20 concertos for the recorder, besides frequently using the instrument for prominent solo passages in his concerti grossi. A particularly bold venture was a double concerto in which he had the recorder and the transverse flute play together as equal partners. Italian influence is unmistakable in most of his concertos, but he was also thoroughly conversant with the modern manner of his day. Handel used the recorder in his chamber music and sometimes too in his operatic works for characterization or pictorial effect. His only concerto for the instrument

MICHALA PETRI

Born in Copenhagen, Michala Petri studied at the Staatliche Hochschule fur Musik und Theater in Hanover from 1969 until 1976. She made her first professional appearance with the Danish radio in 1964 at the age of eight and her debut as a soloist with orchestra in 1969 at the Tivoli. Since then she has given hundreds of concerts in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, West and East Germany, Italy, Belgium, Switzerland, and Great Britain, many of them with her own trio, formed in 1969. Everywhere critics and public have acclaimed her astonishing virtuosity in a repertoire ranging from the early Baroque to Berio's "Gesti." Several leading Scandinavian composers have also written works specially for her. She received the Danish Critics' Prize of Honor in 1976 and the Nordring Radio Prize in 1977, and has twice been awarded the Jacob Gade Prize, in 1969 and 1975.

tracks
01. Vivaldi - Concerto in C-Major, RV 443 - I. Allegro (3:53)
02. Vivaldi - Concerto in C-Major, RV 443 - II. Largo (3:54)
03. Vivaldi - Concerto in C-Major, RV 443 - III. Allegro molto (2:56)
04. Sammartini - Concerto in F-Majore - I. Allegro (3:38)
05. Sammartini - Concerto in F-Majore - II. Siciliano (5:06)
06. Sammartini - Concerto in F-Majore - III. Allegro assai (3:53)
07. Telemann - Concerto in C-Majore - I. Allegretto (3:38)
08. Telemann - Concerto in C-Majore - II. Allegro (3:17)
09. Telemann - Concerto in C-Majore - III. Andante (4:24)
10. Telemann - Concerto in C-Majore - IV. Tempo di minuet (4:03)
11. Haendel - Concerto in F-Major - Op. 4#5, HWV 29 - I. Larghetto - Allegro (3:55)
12. Haendel - Concerto in F-Major - Op. 4#5, HWV 29 - II. Alla siciliana - Presto (3:42)
mp3, 320kbps, artwork

Vivaldi - Concerto in C-Major, RV 443 - I. Allegro