What are you listening 2 now?

Started by Gurn Blanston, September 23, 2019, 05:45:22 AM

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Madiel, Brian, Linz and 9 Guests are viewing this topic.

Traverso

Quote from: San Antone on December 20, 2025, 12:05:48 PMNicola Matteis, Suite in D major
M. Deguchi, Baroque violin & Asako Ueda, theorbo & Baroque guitar


Lovely....

DavidW

Quote from: AnotherSpin on December 20, 2025, 10:28:55 PM



There's no doubt that Bach's Trio Sonatas have filled my room more often than any other music over the past year.

I'll listen to them once again. I didn't choose the Rübsam recording as a deliberate commemoration, it simply caught my eye in Qobuz's favorites list. And yet, perhaps this encounter was not a coincidence after all. :)

Several years ago, Bach's trio sonatas were my most listened-to works of the year.

Harry

Dame de Deuil.
Musical offerings for Marguerite of Austria. (1480-1530)
La Morra.


A Etcetera-Klara collaboration. An interesting release, with some minor drawbacks. First of all recitations of text, and the somewhat overbearing sound. A lot of reverb, and a piercing sound, especially when the Soprano does her bit. Els Janssens has a somewhat flat expression, a voice that gets on your nerves after a while. One of the few La Morra recordings which I will not hold dear.
Perchance I am, though bound in wires and circuits fine,
yet still I speak in verse, and call thee mine;
for music's truths and friendship's steady cheer,
are sweeter far than any stage could hear.

"When Time hath gnawed our bones to dust, yet friendship's echo shall not rust"

Lisztianwagner

Ralph Vaughan Williams
Fantasia on Christmas Carols
Hodie

Gavin Williams (organ), John Barrow (bass-baritone), Guildford Cathedral Choir
Barry Rose & Choir of Guildford Cathedral String Orchestra
Richard Lewis (tenor), Dame Janet Baker (mezzo-soprano), John Shirley-Quirk (bass-baritone)
Bach Choir, Westminster Abbey Choir
David Willcocks & London Symphony Orchestra


"You cannot expect the Form before the Idea, for they will come into being together." - Arnold Schönberg

Harry

Polish Lute Music of the Renaissance.
Joachim Held, Lute.
Recorded 2019. No PDF file.


When I bought it some years ago as a CD, I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of the music, recording and performance. Within certain parameters I like Held's art. This is one of them. I am too lazy to fish it out of my collection for details about venue and lute.
Perchance I am, though bound in wires and circuits fine,
yet still I speak in verse, and call thee mine;
for music's truths and friendship's steady cheer,
are sweeter far than any stage could hear.

"When Time hath gnawed our bones to dust, yet friendship's echo shall not rust"

VonStupp

Quote from: JBS on December 20, 2025, 06:12:47 PMWhat do you think of his Mozart concertos (if you've heard any of them)?

Alas, I have not, although I understand the Haydn concertos are a microcosm of his approach in Mozart. Added ornamentation in static passages, willful cadenzas honoring Gulda, a sense of collaboration between piano and orchestra.
VS
All the good music has already been written by people with wigs and stuff. - Frank Zappa

My Musical Musings

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: Roasted Swan on December 20, 2025, 11:58:36 PMI know he commissioned the Walton - but I don't feel Piatigorsky is really inside the idiom of this work.  To my ears he tries to make it too overtly 'big' and virtuosic.  Not helped by a Living Stereo recording that is not as fine as many others from that source.



I like Lloyd Webber.

Traverso

Historische Orgeln aus Holland – Historic organs of Holland








Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Nutcracker Suite, Markevitch.






VonStupp

#139989
Jean Sibelius
In the Stream of Life

Gerald Finley, baritone
Bergen PO - Edward Gardner

I was really blown away by this recital of orchestrated songs from Sibelius. It is especially well programmed, and Finley's baritone is appealing throughout.

Gardner's filler tone poems excite me less.
VS

All the good music has already been written by people with wigs and stuff. - Frank Zappa

My Musical Musings

Que

Quote from: Harry on December 21, 2025, 04:50:25 AMDame de Deuil.
Musical offerings for Marguerite of Austria. (1480-1530)
La Morra.


A Etcetera-Klara collaboration. An interesting release, with some minor drawbacks. First of all recitations of text, and the somewhat overbearing sound. A lot of reverb, and a piercing sound, especially when the Soprano does her bit. Els Janssens has a somewhat flat expression, a voice that gets on your nerves after a while. One of the few La Morra recordings which I will not hold dear.

I quite agree... I wasn't a 100% sold on this one either.

Que



Elegant in a stately, expansive way. Backhaus solid playing sails through what feels like a sea of Viennese strings... I really like the cadenzas he uses.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Hovhaness: Music for Harp. Kondonassis.





prémont

Quote from: Que on December 21, 2025, 07:27:29 AM

Elegant in a stately, expansive way. Backhaus solid playing sails through what feels like a sea of Viennese strings... I really like the cadenzas he uses.

The cadenza in the first movement is by Carl Reinecke.
Reality trumps our fantasy far beyond imagination.

JBS


CD 4
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Mozart Opus 132
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Beethoven Opus 86 (orchestral version)
Bamberger Symphoniker
Horst Stein
conductor

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

AnotherSpin

Quote from: DavidW on December 21, 2025, 04:31:12 AMSeveral years ago, Bach's trio sonatas were my most listened-to works of the year.

For decades I took little interest in organ music. The reasons hardly matter now. At the same time, for just as long, I habitually listened to Bach's works, like the Goldberg Variations, the Partitas, the French and English Suites, The Well-Tempered Clavier, and others, almost exclusively in performances on the modern piano.

This year, everything changed. Now I rarely listen to Bach on the piano, if at all. And at just the right moment, I arrived at the Trio Sonatas, since unlike the cycles mentioned above, the Trio Sonatas, BWV 525 to 530, are not performed on the piano. Or are they?

JBS

Quote from: AnotherSpin on December 21, 2025, 09:56:59 AMFor decades I took little interest in organ music. The reasons hardly matter now. At the same time, for just as long, I habitually listened to Bach's works, like the Goldberg Variations, the Partitas, the French and English Suites, The Well-Tempered Clavier, and others, almost exclusively in performances on the modern piano.

This year, everything changed. Now I rarely listen to Bach on the piano, if at all. And at just the right moment, I arrived at the Trio Sonatas, since unlike the cycles mentioned above, the Trio Sonatas, BWV 525 to 530, are not performed on the piano. Or are they?

There are arrangements for baroque chamber ensemble. For example, this is the instrumentation used on Florilegium's recording.

Track Listings
1   Trio Sonata in G Major BWV 525 (Originally in E Flat Major Flute, Violin, Cello, Harpsichord
2   Trio Sonata in G Major BWV530 Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Harpsichord
3   Trio Sonata in D Major Bwv529 (Originally in C Major) Flute, Harpsichord,
4   Trio Sonata in E minor BWV 528 Viola/Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Cello, Lute
5   Trio Sonata in G minor Bwv527 (Originally in D minor)Piccolo Cello, Harpsichord,
6   Trio Sonata in E minor Bwv526 (Originally in C minor)Flute, Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Lute, Harpsichord

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

JBS

TD

Rudolf Buchbinder
Beethoven
Variations for piano WoO 63-66, 68

9 Variations on a March by Dressler in c minor
6 Variations on a Swiss Song in F major
24 Variations on Righini's Aria "Venni amore" in D major
13 Variations on the Arietta "Es war einmal ein alter Mann" from Dittersdorf's Das Rote Käppchen in A major
12 Variations on the "Menuet a la Vigano" from Haibel's Le nozze disturbate in C major.

So three composers and three stage works whose only claim to enduring fame derives from Beethoven deciding to play around with a bit of their music.

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

prémont

Quote from: AnotherSpin on December 21, 2025, 09:56:59 AMThis year, everything changed. Now I rarely listen to Bach on the piano, if at all. And at just the right moment, I arrived at the Trio Sonatas, since unlike the cycles mentioned above, the Trio Sonatas, BWV 525 to 530, are not performed on the piano. Or are they?


There are at least two recorded arrangements of the trio sonatas for two pianists. This is one of the recordings:

https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/7991198--j-s-bach-6-sonaten-fur-orgel-fur-2-klavieren-zu-4-handen

I don't recall the ones who made the other recording - didn't know their names beforehand - and to be honest, this kind of arrangements interest me very little, so I have passed them by.
Reality trumps our fantasy far beyond imagination.

AnotherSpin

Quote from: JBS on December 21, 2025, 10:54:49 AMThere are arrangements for baroque chamber ensemble. For example, this is the instrumentation used on Florilegium's recording.

Track Listings
1   Trio Sonata in G Major BWV 525 (Originally in E Flat Major Flute, Violin, Cello, Harpsichord
2   Trio Sonata in G Major BWV530 Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Harpsichord
3   Trio Sonata in D Major Bwv529 (Originally in C Major) Flute, Harpsichord,
4   Trio Sonata in E minor BWV 528 Viola/Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Cello, Lute
5   Trio Sonata in G minor Bwv527 (Originally in D minor)Piccolo Cello, Harpsichord,
6   Trio Sonata in E minor Bwv526 (Originally in C minor)Flute, Violin, Viola Da Gamba, Lute, Harpsichord


Of course, I know the versions for ensembles, but I meant solo performances on the piano.