Dostupnosť:
na sklade / dostupné okamžite
Autori:
Bruno Maderna, Count Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer, Giovanni Gabrieli, Giovanni Legrenzi, Girolamo Frescobaldi, Lodovico da Viadana, Luciano Berio
Interpreti:
Dennis Russell Davies, Orchestra della Svizzera italiana , Pablo Márquez
Vydavateľ:
ECM, ECM New Series
Girolamo Frescobaldi - Tre Pezzi
1
Recercar super LA-FA-SOL-LA-RE
04:33
2
Christe
00:52
3
Kyrie
00:44
4
Bergamasca
04:43
5
La Basadonna
(Giovanni Legrenzi)
03:20
6
Chemins V
(Luciano Berio)
20:42
7
Canzone a tre cori
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
05:20
8
La Napolitana
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
02:18
9
La Venetiana
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
03:11
10
La Veronese
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
02:43
11
La Romana
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
01:52
12
La Mantovana
(Giovanni Gabrieli, Tommaso Lodovico da Viadana)
01:31
Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer (1692-1744) Formerly attributed to Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736) - Palestrina-Konzert
13
Grave assai sostenuto
03:39
14
Andante
03:34
15
Vivace
03:26
Featured artists:
Dennis Russell Davies
Pablo Márquez - Guitar
Unlike many of his radical new music colleagues, Bruno Maderna (1920-1973) had a great affection for older music, especially that of the Italian Renaissance and Early Baroque eras. But his transcriptions had little to do with the orthodoxy of so-called ‘historically informed’ interpretation. In the belief that works of art can be removed from their original contexts, he used contemporary instrumental resources to discover new meaning and a new validity in the works of old masters. His transcriptions of Gabrieli, Frescobaldi, Legrenzi, Viadana and Wassenaer are vividly conveyed by the RSI Orchestra under Dennis Russell Davies in a programme which includes Chemins V by Maderna’s good friend Luciano Berio (1925-2003). Chemins V is itself a transcription of sorts, a chamber orchestra version of Berio’s Sequenza XI. Soloist Pablo Marquez references flamenco and the guitar’s classical heritage, while the orchestra engages with the guitar on levels of expanded harmony. Dialogue develops, as Berio said, “through multiple forms of interaction, from the most unanimous to the most conflictual and estranged.”