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Øystein Baadsvik, Niklas Sivelöv - Danzas for Tuba and Piano (2006) Hi-Res

Øystein Baadsvik, Niklas Sivelöv - Danzas for Tuba and Piano (2006) Hi-Res
  • Title: Danzas for Tuba and Piano
  • Year Of Release: 2006
  • Label: BIS
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC 24bit-44.1kHz / FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:05:32
  • Total Size: 450 / 347 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

3 Danzas (Niklas Sivelov)
1. No. 1. Allegretto misterioso 03:18
2. No. 2. Andante quasi adagio 02:41
3. No. 3. Vivace 03:44
Tuba Sonata (Paul Hindemith)
4. I. Allegro pesante 05:37
5. II. Allegro assai 02:27
6. III. Variations 02:52
Suite (version for tuba and piano) (Gordon Jacob)
7. I. Prelude 05:04
8. II. Hornpipe 02:12
9. III. Saraband 03:02
10. IV. Bourree 03:15
11. V. Brief Interlude 02:08
12. VI. Mazurka 03:29
13. VII. Ground (Jacob's Dream) 02:20
14. VIII. Galop (with Cadenza) 02:06
Brass Music (Leonard Bernstein)
15. Brass Music: Waltz for Mippy III 02:03
3 Miniatures (Anthony Plog)
16. No. 1. Allegro vivace 03:50
17. No. 2. Freely 01:57
18. No. 3. Allegro vivace 02:38
Milonga del Angel (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov) (Oystein Baadsvik)
19. Milonga del angel (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov for tuba and piano) 04:40
Invierno porteno (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov) (Oystein Baadsvik)
20. Invierno porteno (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov for tuba and piano) 02:24
Adios Nonino (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov) (Oystein Baadsvik)
21. Adios Nonino (arr. O. Baadsvik and N. Sivelov) 03:45

Performers:
ystein Baadsvik (tuba)
Niklas Sivelöv (piano)

Vivaldi's Four Seasons violin concertos, arguably the most often performed works in the entire repertory of classical music, stand apart from the rest of his output by virtue of their very popularity. Every group of performers feels the necessity of adding something to the dialogue that surrounds the work. Here Swedish recorder player Dan Laurin and Poland's period-instrument Arte dei Suonatori not only replace the solo violin with a recorder (adding a good deal of new music for the soloist in the process), they also adopt an extremely subjective response to the music, using a style Laurin in his notes traces back to conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt and his Concentus Musicus Wien. Tempos shift and veer between extremes, seemingly conventional accompanimental parts are put in full regalia and brought out to center stage, and the reigning plan consists of a full-bore attempt to illustrate the composer's detailed poetic program for the music with maximum vividness. One may or may not accept this approach, which is becoming increasingly common. There is still plenty of room for performances that find the attraction of the work in the way it embodies extramusical scenes within the strict forms of the Baroque concerto. One may or may not be thrilled with the choice of the recorder as a solo instrument here, inasmuch as Vivaldi was an early adopter of the transverse flute and pushed toward new instrumental sonorities in much of his music. And one may wonder why the three short concertos that round out the disc are done in a much less radical style than the Four Seasons -- creating a specific style for program music is hard to fit with Baroque thinking about the nature of musical representation in general. All this said, however, Laurin is a really formidable recorder player who is able to make the comparatively simple instrument into an expressive powerhouse, leaping around the wide intervals and arpeggios of Vivaldi's violin writing as if he had had the recorder in mind all along. His control over his Polish accompanimental group is remarkable; even in difficult textures in which the music always seems to be shifting gears slightly, there is never the slightest hint that the musicians are having to sweat the effort to keep themselves together. This is a radical Four Seasons, right down to the odd graphic design (the old guy in the undershirt on the back of the booklet is apparently meant to be the opposite number of the baby on the front cover, representing seasons of life rather than of the year). It would be an odd choice for a buyer's first recording of the work, but it is consistently exciting, even beyond the sheer shock of the new.




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  • User offline
  • jackBlu
  •  wrote in 22:48
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both urls are complete with wrong contents!!!
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  • platico
  •  wrote in 01:10
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gracias...