Описание
Характеристики
Отзывы
Buxtehude - Opera Omnia XV, Chamber music vol. 3
Жанр: Classical chamber
Страна-производитель диска: Made in Netherland
Год издания диска: 2012
Издатель (лейбл): Challenge Classics
Номер по каталогу: CC 72254
Дата записи: 2010, 2011
Аудиокодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: (lossy + lossless)
Продолжительность: 73:27
Источник: релизер
-источник/ник/другое: Bodtje, подарок
: да
Треклист:
VII. Suonate à due
Violino & Violadagamba, con Cembalo
Opera secunda. Hamburg 1696
[1] Sonata in B flat op.2 nr.1 BuxWV 259 8:27
[2] Sonata in D op.2 nr.2 BuxWV 260 14:16
[3] Sonata in g op.2 nr. 3 BuxWV 261 13:18
[4] Sonata in c op.2 nr. 4 BuxWV 262 8:20
[5] Sonata in A op.2 nr. 5 BuxWV 263 10:41
[6] Sonata in E op.2 nr. 6 BuxWV 264 9:30
[7] Sonata in F op.2 nr. 7 BuxWV 265 8:51
Исполнители
DIETERICH BUXTEHUDE
Opera Omnia XV
CHAMBER MUSIC 3
TRIO SONATAS OPUS 2
VII. Suonate à due
Violino & Violadagamba, con Cembalo
Opera secunda. Hamburg 1696
Catherine Manson - violin
Paolo Pandolfo - viola da gamba
Ton Koopman - harpsichord and organ
Mike Fentross - lute
Recording Date: December 2010 and October 2011
Release date: 27 February 2012
About the album
The first Buxtehude Opera Omnia recording is steadily approaching completion. The harpsichord and organworks are finished and this is the final volume of the chamber music. All that remains are a number of vocal challenges! Buxtehude’s trio sonatas form a unique repertoire. Due to their formidable technical and musical demands, they have rarely been recorded. Stylus phantasticus, an unprecedented inventiveness, superb lines, improvisation, the list goes on... Buxtehude once again proves himself to be a great master. Although there are occasional touches of Corelli to be heard, the music is above all quintessentially Buxtehudian. It was a phenomenal experience to record these sonatas.
In the last decade of the 17th century, Dieterich Buxtehude published within a period of two years a group of fourteen instrumental chamber sonatas in two sets of seven each. Thereby, he contributed in a major way to a new and fashionable repertoire of trio sonatas that had originated in Italy after the middle of the century. Giovanni Legrenzi (1626-1690), the Venetian composer, had played the main influence in spreading a new type of instrumental music north of the Alps. His works published in the 1660s and 70s were well known in the Hanseatic cities around the Baltic Sea. Lübeck, one of the principal music centers in Northern Europe, was no exception in this respect. Buxtehude, who served as organist of the St. Mary’s Church in Lübeck from 1668 until his death in 1707, picked up and integrated the modern Italian style early in the instrumental introductions to his sacred concertos and cantatas, but turned to instrumental chamber music only late in his life.
Every single sonata presents different solutions in regard to section sequences; no two pieces show the same pattern. In general, the fast sections prefer more or less elaborate polyphonic and fugal designs whereas the slow sections emphasize harmonic and expressive features. Sections are sometimes connected without interruption, sometimes separated by fermatas or double bars. Towards the end of some phrases the violin makes use of double stops, in line with the overall virtuosic design of the sonatas. The compositional ideas pursued by the composer are based on the concept of the so-called “stylus fantasticus,” a manner favoured in keyboard and soloist instrumental ensemble music of the late 17th-century in North Germany. According to the 18th-century Hamburg writer Johann Mattheson, “this style is the most free and unrestrained manner of composing, singing, and playing that one can imagine, for one hits first on this idea and then upon that one, since one is bound neither to words nor to melody, only to harmony, so that the singer and player can display his skill
Жанр: Classical chamber
Страна-производитель диска: Made in Netherland
Год издания диска: 2012
Издатель (лейбл): Challenge Classics
Номер по каталогу: CC 72254
Дата записи: 2010, 2011
Аудиокодек: FLAC
Тип рипа: image+.cue
Битрейт аудио: (lossy + lossless)
Продолжительность: 73:27
Источник: релизер
-источник/ник/другое: Bodtje, подарок
: да
Треклист:
VII. Suonate à due
Violino & Violadagamba, con Cembalo
Opera secunda. Hamburg 1696
[1] Sonata in B flat op.2 nr.1 BuxWV 259 8:27
[2] Sonata in D op.2 nr.2 BuxWV 260 14:16
[3] Sonata in g op.2 nr. 3 BuxWV 261 13:18
[4] Sonata in c op.2 nr. 4 BuxWV 262 8:20
[5] Sonata in A op.2 nr. 5 BuxWV 263 10:41
[6] Sonata in E op.2 nr. 6 BuxWV 264 9:30
[7] Sonata in F op.2 nr. 7 BuxWV 265 8:51
Исполнители
DIETERICH BUXTEHUDE
Opera Omnia XV
CHAMBER MUSIC 3
TRIO SONATAS OPUS 2
VII. Suonate à due
Violino & Violadagamba, con Cembalo
Opera secunda. Hamburg 1696
Catherine Manson - violin
Paolo Pandolfo - viola da gamba
Ton Koopman - harpsichord and organ
Mike Fentross - lute
Recording Date: December 2010 and October 2011
Release date: 27 February 2012
About the album
The first Buxtehude Opera Omnia recording is steadily approaching completion. The harpsichord and organworks are finished and this is the final volume of the chamber music. All that remains are a number of vocal challenges! Buxtehude’s trio sonatas form a unique repertoire. Due to their formidable technical and musical demands, they have rarely been recorded. Stylus phantasticus, an unprecedented inventiveness, superb lines, improvisation, the list goes on... Buxtehude once again proves himself to be a great master. Although there are occasional touches of Corelli to be heard, the music is above all quintessentially Buxtehudian. It was a phenomenal experience to record these sonatas.
In the last decade of the 17th century, Dieterich Buxtehude published within a period of two years a group of fourteen instrumental chamber sonatas in two sets of seven each. Thereby, he contributed in a major way to a new and fashionable repertoire of trio sonatas that had originated in Italy after the middle of the century. Giovanni Legrenzi (1626-1690), the Venetian composer, had played the main influence in spreading a new type of instrumental music north of the Alps. His works published in the 1660s and 70s were well known in the Hanseatic cities around the Baltic Sea. Lübeck, one of the principal music centers in Northern Europe, was no exception in this respect. Buxtehude, who served as organist of the St. Mary’s Church in Lübeck from 1668 until his death in 1707, picked up and integrated the modern Italian style early in the instrumental introductions to his sacred concertos and cantatas, but turned to instrumental chamber music only late in his life.
Every single sonata presents different solutions in regard to section sequences; no two pieces show the same pattern. In general, the fast sections prefer more or less elaborate polyphonic and fugal designs whereas the slow sections emphasize harmonic and expressive features. Sections are sometimes connected without interruption, sometimes separated by fermatas or double bars. Towards the end of some phrases the violin makes use of double stops, in line with the overall virtuosic design of the sonatas. The compositional ideas pursued by the composer are based on the concept of the so-called “stylus fantasticus,” a manner favoured in keyboard and soloist instrumental ensemble music of the late 17th-century in North Germany. According to the 18th-century Hamburg writer Johann Mattheson, “this style is the most free and unrestrained manner of composing, singing, and playing that one can imagine, for one hits first on this idea and then upon that one, since one is bound neither to words nor to melody, only to harmony, so that the singer and player can display his skill
Характеристики
Количество CD
1
Тип упаковки
Пластиковый бокс
Вес
0.12 кг
Формат
(MP3)
Отзывов ещё нет — ваш может стать первым.
Все отзывы 0