• logo

José Serebrier - Tango in Blue: Orchestral Tangos (2005)

José Serebrier - Tango in Blue: Orchestral Tangos (2005)

BAND/ARTIST: José Serebrier

  • Title: Tango in Blue: Orchestral Tangos
  • Year Of Release: 2005
  • Label: BIS
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:14:50
  • Total Size: 284 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

José Serebrier
01. Tango in Blue (Tango en Azul) 3'09
Samuel Barber
02. Hesitation - Tango from Souvenirs, Ballet Suite, Op. 28 3'39
Astor Piazzolla
03. Oblivion 4'24
Igor Stravinsky
04. Tango 3'55
Erik Satie
05. Tango perpétuel from Sports et divertissements 3'26
Morton Gould
06. Tango from Stringmusic 4'08
Kurt Weill
07. Matrosen-Tango from Happy End (text: Bertolt Brecht) 4'53
José Serebrier
08. Casi un Tango for cor anglais and string orchestra 5'16
Morton Gould
09. Tango from American Symphonette No.4: Latin-American 5'26
Kurt Weill
10. Youkali - Tango Habanera (text: Roger Fernay) 5'49
Astor Piazzolla
11. Tangazo 12'32
Fernando Condon
12. Impresiones sobre Ástor (Homenaje a Piazziolla) 8'45
Jacob Gade
13. Tango Jalousie 3'57
Gerardo Matos Rodríguez
14. Tango La Cumparsita 3'26

Performers:
Daniel Espasa
Carole Farley
Molly Judson
Damián Martinez
Enrique Tellería
The Barcelona Symphony Orchestra
José Serebrier, conductor

There's a tendency to classify composers of the twentieth century as progressives and conservatives. Some certainly qualify for these designations, but it's actually more helpful to regard twentieth century music as a field of competing ideas, of "isms," that swept successively across the musical landscape and influenced most composers at one time or another. Most composers, for instance, tried their hands at serialism. Conversely, even Schoenberg, grimly devoted to advancing the art of music, wrote cabaret songs (the Brettl-Lieder). And, as this enjoyable album shows, quite a few composers succumbed to the international allure of the tango. The variety of the 14 orchestral tangos here (a few have lyrics) is the main appeal. There's Stravinsky's muttering Tango of 1940 (played here in a 1953 orchestration), surely the least sensuous tango ever composed. Erik Satie's "Tango perpétuel" from Sports et divertissements cleverly takes up and manipulates the tango's motoric quality. There's a South American tango classic (La cumparsita), an exaggeration of the classic tango style (Jacob Gade's Tango jalousie), two Kurt Weill tango songs, two very different treatments of the tango idea by Morton Gould, two of Piazzolla's darker tango pieces, and more. Conductor José Serebrier contributes two tangos of his own (one of them is "Casí un tango" -- almost a tango); they're not on a level with the rest of the music, but they serve well as a curtain-raiser and intermission. Serebrier and the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra remain sensitive to the various styles involved rather than blaring their way through. This disc recommends itself especially to students in classes covering music of the twentieth century; it's really an instant term paper contained in a CD case. Tango lovers and general pops repertoire listeners will also find it a worthwhile buy or gift.




As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads