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This is an attempt to resuscitate this interesting 2013 thread

Listening to this Opera recording thru Qobuz FLAC 96/24 streaming thru my audio system



Welcome Claus!

The thread is quite alive I think. ;)
 
I'm working my way through this set on Qobuz. Classic performances.


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This is still one of the most realistic guitar recordings I have heard. He was only 14 at the time and had mind-blowing chops even then, although he was prone to excessive speed.


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La Famille Forqueray - Portrait(s)
Justin Taylor
Qobuz 24/96

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Magnificently sounding instrument!
The family history - see below - is quite interesting...!

Justin Taylor, the winner of the 2015 edition of the celebrated harpsichord competition of the Musica Antiqua Festival in Bruges (which has honoured some of the world’s finest players, including Scott Ross, Christophe Rousset, Pierre Hantaï, Benjamin Alard, and more recently Jean Rondeau), has recorded for Alpha Classics a programme of music by the Forqueray family: Antoine, Michel, Jean-Baptiste, Nicolas-Gilles . . . Those are just some of the first names of a great dynasty of French composers, gambists and organists. Antoine Forqueray, born in 1672, obtained the highly coveted position of Musicien de la Chambre du Roi. He subsequently had, shall we say, a complicated relationship with his son Jean-Baptiste, born in 1699 . . . Envious of the boy’s talent for the viol, Antoine had him imprisoned when he was just sixteen years old! The recital, as well as painting a musical portrait of this unique family, also offers a chance to reflect on the issue of transcription. In fact, the suites performed here on the harpsichord were originally written for viola da gamba. The passage from one instrument to another, from one soundworld to another, sheds new light on the music and allows us to grasp its full originality. © Alpha
 
Arvo Pärt
Mullova - Järvi
Qobuz 24/48

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All well known works, but brought with passion and power yet delicacy by Mullova and Järvi.
Pärt definitely is one of the best composers of our time.
This is magnificent.

Nearly all the pieces on this album were first performed and widely promoted by the Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer, one of them – Tabula rasa (1977) – being specifically written with his artistry in mind. They are also all products of what Arvo Pärt himself describes as a ‘tintinnabuli’ style, developed by the composer in the 1970s through studying medieval church music. As Pärt has explained: “I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is beautifully played. This one note, or a silent beat, or a moment of silence, comforts me. I work with very few elements – with one voice, two voices. I build with primitive materials – with the triad, with one specific tonality. The three notes of a triad are like bells and that is why I call it tintinnabulation.” Tabula rasa and Fratres, both composed in 1977, effectively established Pärt’s international reputation. Tabula rasa is effectively a concerto for two violins with string orchestra and a prepared piano, the latter instrument creating explicitly bell-like sonorities in the work’s slow second movement. Fratres, since its first performance by the Estonian ensemble of early music, Hortus Musicus, has been arranged for various instrumental combinations. The version heard here is the composer’s own, written in 1991 for solo violin, strings and percussion (involving claves and bass drum or tom-tom). Bach has long been an important influence in Pärt’s music, as is evident in his Passacaglia, composed in 2003, and in Darf ich... (May I…) originally composed in 1995 and dedicated to Yehudi Menuhin; Pärt subsequently revised the work in 1999, Kremer giving the premiere of this revised version with his ensemble, Kremerata Baltica. Spiegel im Spiegel, composed in 1978, is one of Pärt’s simplest compositions, a violin unhurriedly playing a mostly stepwise melody over a steadily arpeggiating piano part. © Onyx Classics
 
Joining you with Haydn John:


Haydn - Divertimenti per il partiton a tre
Guido Balestracci
Alessandro Tampieri
Bruno Cocset

Qobuz 24/44.1

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Very pure, intimate Haydn.
I didn't know these pieces until I heard them now.


Just finished listening to this album again.
Very glad we'll be seeing him live next month!
 
Mozart - Horn Concertos 1 - 4
Camerata Salzburg
Felix Klieser

Qobuz 24/96

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Very nice interpretations of these joyful pieces.
This is sooo enjoyable...
 
Bach - Concertos for Organ and Strings
Les Muffatti, Bart Jacobs
Qobuz 24/88.2

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Great sound and enthusiastic playing.

This music sounds so familiar to me, yet there is a twist:

Although we know of at least five concertos J.S. Bach wrote for solo organ we have no surviving Bach organ concertos with orchestral accompaniment. Contrast this with the 200+ cantatas: of these, 18 feature organ obbligato, which Bach uses as a solo instrument in arias, choral sections and sinfonias. The most obviously conspicuous date to 1726. In May to November of that year, Bach composed six cantatas which assign a prominent solo role to the organ. Most of these are reworkings of movements of lost violin and oboe concertos written in Bach’s time at Weimar and Köthen. Why Bach wrote such a number of obbligato organ cantatas in such a short period remains unknown. One possible explanation may lie in Dresden, where Bach had given a concert on the new Silbermann organ in the Sophienkirche in 1725. Some scholars think that, in addition to other organ works, he also performed organ concertos, or at least a few earlier versions of the sinfonias, with obbligato organ and strings in order to show off the organ. From the cantatas mentioned above, along with the related violin and harpsichord concertos, it is perfectly possible to reconstruct a number of three-movement organ concertos of this type. By using this method, we hope to bring some of the music which Bach may have performed in Dresden in 1725 back to life. © Ramée/Outhere


It is a terrific album.
I've seen Jacobs live, and heard interviews with him.
Seems like one of the more 'serious' and earnest Bach interpreters.
 
Bach - Concertos for Organ and Strings
Les Muffatti, Bart Jacobs
Qobuz 24/88.2

u59glcjn31hfc_600.jpg



Great sound and enthusiastic playing.

This music sounds so familiar to me, yet there is a twist:

Although we know of at least five concertos J.S. Bach wrote for solo organ we have no surviving Bach organ concertos with orchestral accompaniment. Contrast this with the 200+ cantatas: of these, 18 feature organ obbligato, which Bach uses as a solo instrument in arias, choral sections and sinfonias. The most obviously conspicuous date to 1726. In May to November of that year, Bach composed six cantatas which assign a prominent solo role to the organ. Most of these are reworkings of movements of lost violin and oboe concertos written in Bach’s time at Weimar and Köthen. Why Bach wrote such a number of obbligato organ cantatas in such a short period remains unknown. One possible explanation may lie in Dresden, where Bach had given a concert on the new Silbermann organ in the Sophienkirche in 1725. Some scholars think that, in addition to other organ works, he also performed organ concertos, or at least a few earlier versions of the sinfonias, with obbligato organ and strings in order to show off the organ. From the cantatas mentioned above, along with the related violin and harpsichord concertos, it is perfectly possible to reconstruct a number of three-movement organ concertos of this type. By using this method, we hope to bring some of the music which Bach may have performed in Dresden in 1725 back to life. © Ramée/Outhere


It is a terrific album.
I've seen Jacobs live, and heard interviews with him.
Seems like one of the more 'serious' and earnest Bach interpreters.
Thank you for sharing this--it's wonderful!
 
I enjoyed his Bach recital so much I thought I'd investigate some of his other recordings--I was not disappointed. This is wonderfully played and recorded.


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