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Joanna Macgregor, Britten Sinfonia - Live in Buenos Aires (2010)

Joanna Macgregor, Britten Sinfonia - Live in Buenos Aires (2010)
  • Title: Live in Buenos Aires
  • Year Of Release: 2010
  • Label: SoundCircus
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
  • Total Time: 01:10:48
  • Total Size: 373 / 172 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Concerto For Keyboard And Strings In D Minor BWV 1052
Composed By – Johann Sebastian Bach
1. I. Allegro
2. II. Adagio
3. III. Allegro
Concerto In D Major For String Orchestra
Composed By – Igor Stravinsky
4. I. Vivace
5. II. Arioso
6. III. Rondo
7. Forlorn Hope Fancy
Arranged By – Joanna MacGregor
Composed By – John Dowland
8. Mr. Dowland's Midnight
Arranged By – Joanna MacGregor
Bass – Markus Van Horn, Roger Linley
Composed By – John Dowland
9. Can She Excuse
Arranged By – Joanna MacGregor
Composed By – John Dowland
10. Forrobodo
Composed By – Egberto Gismonti
11. Frevo (Arranged For Piano And Strings)
Composed By – Egberto Gismonti
12. Last Round (For String Ensemble)
Composed By – Osvaldo Golijov
13. Milongo Del Angel (For Piano, Bass And Solo Violin)
Composed By – Astor Piazzolla
14. Libertango (For Piano Solo)
Composed By – Astor Piazzolla

Performers:
Piano – Joanna MacGregor
Britten Sinfonia

British pianist Joanna MacGregor, with her inclination toward challenging crossover programming, would seem to be an excellent fit for Buenos Aires, and so it is in this recital, recorded live in May 2007. The enthusiasm of the demonstrative Argentine crowds, presented in snippets of applause, builds throughout the daring program, beginning with the jazzy-without-being-syncopated reading of the Bach Keyboard Concerto in D minor, BWV 152. The placement of the Stravinsky Concerto in D minor for string orchestra, with its rhythmically unstable opening movement, is ideal, but nothing quite sets you up for the three pieces by John Dowland, all arranged in different ways. Dowland has been arranged for piano before, but nobody has done anything quite like this intense little trilogy. The South American material is reserved for the second half of the program, with all of it tied to popular traditions in some way. The Forrobodó and Frevo of Egberto Gismonti suggest a contemporary Brazilian Ravel, and Osvaldo Golijov has stated that he wrote his Last Round (1996) as a sort of idealized exrapolation of Astor Piazzolla's tango sound. The arrangements of Piazzolla's Milonga del Ángel and Libertango are MacGregor's own, as are those of the Gismonti and Dowland pieces, and all these received their world premieres at the concert. The cumulative effect gains strength as the program hovers between classical, jazz, and tango influences, emphasizing more public and more inward faces by turns. Predicting the future of classical music may be a fool's game, but nobody should be surprised if it comes out something like this.


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