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Isaac Albéniz Zaragoza Ravel Respighi Rachmaninoff
This new recording presents the two Suites Espanola, including popular works like Cadiz and Asturias (with its unique guitar imitations), as well as the third Suite Ancienne, which contains baroque dance forms in romantic disguise. Purchase or streaming (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Naxos, Presto): (http•••) More Information: (http•••) Our music is available for sync licensing in videos, films, tv-shows, games, advertising and more. For more information and to request a license go to: (http•••) Composer: Isaac Albéniz Artist: Sebastian Stanley (piano) The first volume of Sebastian Stanley’s Albéniz survey was greeted with enthusiasm for the repertoire and praise for the interpretations in the pages of Fanfare and elsewhere: ‘He is tender and sentimental in the lyrical moments, animated and energetic in his attack elsewhere. He clearly loves the music, and dispatches it with unapologetic flair.’ His sequel opens with the First Suite Española which contains several of the composer’s most colourful and best-known pieces. It begins with the vibrant guitar-strumming textures and Moorish harmonies of ‘Granada (Serenata)’ and continues with his own interpretation of a dance from his native Catalonia. Evocations of Seville, Cadiz and Asturias all spring from the pages with the sharp colours of a Goya canvas, and the suite comes to an exotic, sensuous conclusion with a Cuban habanera. The Second Suite Española is much smaller and less well-known. Its two movements are evocations of Zaragoza and (once more) Seville. Sebastian Stanley includes two further landscapes in sound: the Zambra granadina (Danse orientale) evokes flamenco dance that features a haunting melody to a seductively syncopated accompaniment. The rolled chords of Cádiz (Gaditana) suggest the strumming of guitars, setting the scene for an animated copla dance. The neoclassical side of Albéniz comes to the fore with the third of his Suites Anciennes – consisting of a graceful Minuet and sprightly Gavotte – which anticipate similar projects to revive Baroque forms in modern guise by Ravel and Respighi. As a reminder of the incomparable richness of the finest Spanish piano music,’ Sebastian Stanley’s Albéniz series should invite the attention of curious listeners and pianophiles alike. Social media links: Facebook: (http•••) Spotify: (http•••) Brilliant Classics: Facebook: (http•••) Spotify: (http•••) Instagram: (http•••) TikTok: (http•••) Tracklist: Suite espanola No. 1, Op. 47: 0:00:00 I. Granada 0:05:09 II. Cataluna 0:07:45 III. Sevilla 0:12:38 IV. Cadiz 0:17:09 V. Asturias 0:23:50 VI. Aragon 0:28:59 VII. Castilla 0:32:08 VIII. Cuba Suite espanola No. 2, Op. 97: 0:38:12 I. Zaragoza 0:42:07 II. Sevilla Suite ancienne No. 3: 0:49:20 I. Minuetto 0:52:57 II. Gavota 0:56:55 Zambra granadina (danse orientale) 1:00:14 Cadiz (gaditana) Spotify Playlists: Most Popular Piano Classics: (http•••) Top 50 Rachmaninoff: (http•••) Best Piano Music: (http•••) Peaceful and Relaxing Piano Music: (http•••) Beautiful Piano Nocturnes: (http•••) Thank you for watching this video by Brilliant Classics, we hope you enjoyed it! Don’t forget to share it and subscribe to our YouTube channel. And visit our channel for more of the greatest composers. We upload daily with complete albums and compilations with the best classical music. (http•••) #Albinez #Suite #PianoMusic #ClassicalMusic #Piano #Music #PianoMusic #SoloPiano #PianoSolo #ClassicalPiano #PianoClassics #BrilliantClassics
Vladimir Samoylovich Horowitz Chopin Bach Debussy Schumann Alexander Scriabin Sergei Rachmaninoff Tchaikovsky Thomas Beecham Liszt Toscanini Brahms Scarlatti Haydn Clementi Beethoven Samuel Barber Prokofiev Kabalevsky Schonberg Carnegie Hall 1757 1903 1915 1925 1928 1932 1933 1936 1940 1950 1953 1965 1985 1987 1989
LIKE and SUBSCRIBE for more videos ! (http•••) SUBSCRIBE to my PATREON ! → (http•••) Vladimir Horowiz : Carnegie Hall Rehearsal, 7 January 1965 (Bach, Chopin, Debussy, Schumann, Conversations etc...) Performer : Vladimir Horowitz, piano Date : 7 January 1965 Place : Carnegie Hall Program : Rehearsal 00:00 Horowitz improvising 03:24 Conversation and Horowitz testing the piano 05:24 Horowitz improvising II 10:31 Conversation I 11:28 Bach : Toccata Adagio and Fugue in C Major, BWV 564, I Preludio 17:57 II Intermezzo Adagio 22:15 III Fuga Moderamente scherzando un poco umoristico 27:19 Conversation II 28:15 Chopin - Polonaise Fantaisie in A Flat Major Op. 61 41:19 Conversation III 41:42 Debussy : Etudes Livre II No. 11 Pour les arpeges composés 45:45 Conversation IV 47:12 Schumann : Fantasie in C Major Op. 17 I Durchaus phantastisch und leidenschaftlich vorzutragen fragment 58:08 Conversation V 58:24 Chopin : Nocturne No. 15 in F Minor Op. 55 No. 1 BIOGRAPHY The most famous pianist of the twentieth century, his name known to the proverbial man on the street the world over, Vladimir Samoylovich Horowitz (1903–1989) was born in 1903 in Kiev. Horowitz showed enough prodigious talent to play for Alexander Scriabin in 1915, just before the Russian composer-pianist’s early death. Horowitz would become a superlative interpreter of Scriabin’s music, which the pianist described as “mystical… expressionistic.” Horowitz also became friends with another great Russian composer-pianist (and Scriabin’s former schoolmate), Sergei Rachmaninoff – who was the acme of Romanticism. He also made a benchmark recording of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Sonata No. 2. Emigrating from Russia in 1925 and eventually settling in New York City, Horowitz made his American debut with Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in 1928 at Carnegie Hall, which would become his home venue, the site of many recordings. Impressed by the pianist’s tonal dynamism, conductor Thomas Beecham, who led that concert, reportedly said: “Really, Mr. Horowitz, you can’t play like that – it shows the orchestra up.” Horowitz made a series of solo recordings for HMV at London’s Abbey Road Studios in 1932, including several Chopin pieces and an electrifying take on Liszt’s B Minor Sonata, helping to establish the piece in the standard repertoire. A review of a 1933 London concert declared Horowitz “the greatest pianist dead or alive.” Horowitz would make hit recordings with Toscanini of the Tchaikovsky concerto and the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 in 1940–41. Over the course of his career, Horowitz’s recorded repertoire stretched far beyond those early specialties of Chopin, Brahms, Liszt, Tchaikovsky, Scriabin and Rachmaninoff; in long associations for RCA, then Columbia and, finally, Deutsche Grammophon, Horowitz also ranged from Scarlatti, Haydn and Clementi to Beethoven, Schumann and miniatures across the ages with artistic and commercial success; in a period of applying himself to modern music, he premiered Samuel Barber’s Sonata in 1950, along with recording sonatas by Prokofiev and Kabalevsky. Driven to “grow until I die,” he said, the pianist reapplied himself to select Beethoven sonatas in his middle period and then several Mozart works as he grew older. Horowitz also crafted his own transcriptions and arrangements, including such showstoppers as his variations on Carmen and Stars and Stripes Forever. In his book The Great Pianists, critic Harold Schonberg wrote: “As a technician, Horowitz was one of the most honest in the history of modern pianism. Famously high-strung, his art always a mental-physical high-wire act, Horowitz took four sabbaticals from public performance to deal with various issues, his returns much-ballyhooed events. The first layoff was for two years in 1936; the longest was 1953 to 1965, followed by a tremendous homecoming to Carnegie Hall. But even over his later breaks, he recorded regularly at home in his Manhattan townhouse, documenting his art as it subtly evolved even beyond great venues and the recording studio. A 1985 film, The Last Romantic, captured the pianist in his last years, performing at home as well as reminiscing about Scriabin and Rachmaninoff. The next year, Horowitz returned to Russia, 61 years after leaving — a hugely emotional event for both artist and audience, documented in the concert album and film Horowitz in Moscow. In 1987, he played his final recital, in Hamburg; he died two years later. “Piano playing consists of intellect, heart and technique,” Horowitz said. “All should be equally developed. Without intellect, you will be a fiasco; without technique, an amateur; without heart, a machine. The profession has its perils.”
Ivor Gurney Adolf Busch Busch Carl Flesch Hamilton Harty John Barbirolli Manley Boyd Neel Frank Bridge Benjamin Britten John Ireland Beethoven Ralph Vaughan Williams Lark Bach Henry Purcell Dvořák Arthur Benjamin Benjamin Dale Lennox Berkeley Kenneth Leighton Edmund Rubbra York Bowen Howard Ferguson Arthur Bliss Béla Bartók Handel Rachmaninoff Smetana Arnold Bax Yehudi Menuhin London Symphony Orchestra Aeolian Quartet Salzburg Festival Proms 1686 1697 1718 1908 1909 1911 1927 1930 1935 1936 1937 1938 1940 1942 1947 1952 1963 1966 1978 1979 1987
The Apple Orchard by Ivor Gurney, Frederick Grinke - Violin Ivor Newton - Piano Recorded in 1942. The Apple Orchard is one of two short pieces written for violin and piano by Ivor Gurney that were published posthumously in 1940. Frederick Grinke CBE (8 August 1911 – 16 March 1987) was a Canadian-born violinist who had an international career as soloist, chamber musician, and teacher. He was known especially for his performances of 20th-century English music. He started to learn the violin at the age of 9, and studied with John Waterhouse and others in Winnipeg. He made his first broadcast at the age of about 12, and formed a trio at age 15. In 1927, he won a Dominion of Canada scholarship award to the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he studied with Rowsby Woof. He continued his studies (at age 21) for a summer with Adolf Busch in Switzerland, and afterwards in Belgium and London with Carl Flesch. Hamilton Harty considered appointing him leader of the London Symphony Orchestra at the age of 21, but the offer was not made on account of his youth. From around 1930 to 1936, Grinke was second violin of the Kutcher String Quartet (in which John Barbirolli was for a time the 'cellist). In 1935, with pianist, Dorothy Manley, he gave the premiere of the Canadian composer Hector Gratton's Quatrieme danse canadienne. It was with Manley and Florence Hooton, both fellow students at the Academy, that Grinke formed his trio, Kendall Taylor later replacing Manley. In 1937 he became concertmaster of the Boyd Neel Orchestra, a post he would hold until 1947. His first performance with them was at the Salzburg Festival in 1937, giving the premiere of the Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge by Benjamin Britten. Thereafter he performed with them in Europe, USA, Australia and New Zealand, the London Proms, and at the Edinburgh Festival. He resigned as concertmaster to pursue his solo career. During the later 1940s, Grinke made numerous recordings, mainly for Decca, many of which were originally released in the last years of 78rpm records. His recordings of John Ireland's chamber music include the Phantasie Trio of 1908, the 1938 Trio no 3 in E major, and The Holy Boy (with Florence Hooton (cello) and Kendall Taylor (piano)), and the Violin Sonata no 1 of 1909 with the composer at the piano. The trio also recorded the Phantasy trio of Frank Bridge and the Beethoven trio in E flat. Ralph Vaughan Williams dedicated his Sonata in A minor, written in 1952, to Grinke, who recorded the composer's Concerto Accademico in D minor, and The Lark Ascending, with the Boyd Neel Orchestra. Grinke and David Martin (also a Canadian violinist) performed J.S. Bach's Concerto for two violins at Vaughan Williams's funeral. Among other recordings from the 1940s were no's 3 and 9 from the 1697 set of 10 Sonatas by Henry Purcell, with Jean Pougnet and Boris Ord, and Purcell's sonata in G minor with Arnold Goldsbrough. He is heard with Kendall Taylor in the Dvořák G major Sonatina op 100, and with Watson Forbes (violist of the Stratton Quartet and Aeolian Quartet) in Mozart duos. He also premiered and recorded works by Arthur Benjamin, Benjamin Dale, Lennox Berkeley, Kenneth Leighton, Edmund Rubbra, York Bowen, Howard Ferguson, Arthur Bliss, Béla Bartók, Beethoven, Handel, Rachmaninoff and Smetana, often accompanied by Ivor Newton. He recorded all six Brandenburg Concertos with the Boyd Neel Orchestra, and made a broadcast of the Arnold Bax violin concerto from Australia. From 1963 to 1966 he taught at the Yehudi Menuhin School at Stoke D'Abernon, Surrey. He frequently sat on juries for international competitions. He retired from the Royal Academy of Music in 1978, where his students included John Georgiadis, and was appointed a CBE in 1979, but continued teaching until his death, which occurred in 1987. The National Portrait Gallery lists 8 portraits of Grinke in its collections.[ Grinke played an instrument by J. B. Rogerius of 1686, with aluminium-covered D and A, and silver-covered G and steel E strings, but also often played a Stradivarius dated 1718, lent by the Royal Academy of Music. He was married in 1942 to Dorothy Sirr Sheldon and had one son. He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary, Thornham Parva, Suffolk.
Max Bruch Schumann Brahms Liszt Mahler Abbado Gergiev Muti Gatti Nagano Bach Satie Tchaikovsky Beethoven Chopin Haydn Ravel Debussy Verdi Vivaldi Handel Schubert Mendelssohn Rachmaninoff Verbier Festival Copenhagen Philharmonic 1738 1838 1909 1920
Max Bruch +••.••(...)) enjoyed a long, successful and fruitful career as a composer and conductor, holding several important posts in Germany. His musical language is firmly rooted in the German Romantic Tradition of Schumann and Brahms, as opposed to the “New Music” of Liszt, Wagner and Mahler. Bruch wrote his works for clarinet at the end of his musical life, when he actually had declared that his “source of inspiration had dried up”. But the clarinet playing of his son Max Felix inspired him to write two substantial works featuring the clarinet: the beautiful and still neglected Double Concerto for Clarinet, Viola and Orchestra Op. 88 and the substantial “8 Pieces for Clarinet, Viola and Piano” Op. 83, delightful Character Pieces in the style of Schumann’s Märchenerzählungen. Giovanni Punzi is one of the foremost clarinet players of the young Italian generation. He played in the Mahler Youth Orchestra, the Verbier Festival Orchestra under conductors like Abbado, Gergiev, Muti, Gatti and Nagano. On this recording he plays with the Copenhagen Philharmonic Orchestra, of which he is principal Clarinetist. Composer: Max Bruch Artists: Giovanni Punzi (clarinet), Eva Katrine Dalsgaard (viola), Tanja Zapolski (piano), Copenhagen Philharmonica, Vincenzo Millitarì (conductor) Ripe and romantic chamber and orchestral music from the Indian summer of Bruch’s career. The spring of Bruch’s invention was running dry in the first decade of the last century when it was refreshed once more by the sound of the clarinet. Just as the playing of Richard Muhlfeld had inspired Brahms to write his Clarinet Quintet and two sonatas, so Bruch discovered the melodies flowing from his pen once more thanks to his clarinettist son, Max Felix, to write the two works on this new album. Having composed no chamber music for several decades, he wrote the Eight Pieces for clarinet, viola and piano in 1909. They belong to the genre of character pieces by Schumann such as the eight Fantasiestücke Op.12, though they lean towards reflective introversion. The cycle’s high-point arrives with the fourth piece, a Romanian melody introduced to him by a young and beautiful aristocrat, the Princess zu Wied. Online purchase or streaming (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer, Google Play): (http•••) More Information: (http•••) Tracklist: Max Bruch: Double Concerto in E Minor, Op. 88: 00:00 I. Andante con moto 06:56 II. Allegro moderato 12:24 III. Allegro molto 8 Pieces for Clarinet, Viola and Piano, Op. 83: 17:38 I. Andante 21:05 II. Allegro molto 23:37 III. Andante con moto 30:18 IV. Allegro agitato 34:12 V. Rumanische Melodie 38:42 VI. Nachtgesang 44:22 VII. Allegro vivace, ma non troppo 47:54 VIII. Moderato Social media links: Instagram: (http•••) Facebook: (http•••) TikTok: (http•••) Spotify Playlists: Brilliant Classics Spotify: (http•••) New Classical Releases: (http•••) The Best of Liszt: (http•••) The Best of Bach: (http•••) Most Popular Piano Music: (http•••) Beautiful Classical Music: (http•••) Classical Music For Dinnertime: (http•••) Thank you for watching this video by Brilliant Classics, we hope you enjoyed it! Don’t forget to share it and subscribe to our YouTube channel: (http•••) And visit our channel for the best classical music from the greatest composers like: Bach, Satie, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Chopin, Haydn, Ravel, Debussy, Verdi, Vivaldi, Handel, Brahms, Liszt, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Rachmaninoff, Wagner, Strauss, Handel, Dvorak and many more! We upload complete albums, music for relaxing, working, studying, meditating, concentrating, instrumental music, opera, violin, classical piano music, sonatas and more! #Bruch #Punzi #Dalsgaard #Zapolski #Copenhagen #Philharmonica #Millitari #Clarinet #Violin #Piano #Classical #Music #BrilliantClassics
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