NewDayz.Ru > Музыка > Wolfram Christ - J.C. Bach, M. Haydn, C. Stamitz: Viola Concertos (1994)
Wolfram Christ - J.C. Bach, M. Haydn, C. Stamitz: Viola Concertos (1994)10 июля 2020. Разместил: kingdevil |
![]() Artist: Wolfram Christ Title: J.C. Bach, M. Haydn, C. Stamitz: Viola Concertos Year Of Release: 1994 Label: Koch Schwann Genre: Classical Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) Total Time: 01:05:50 Total Size: 384 Mb Tracklist: 01. Concerto for cello (or viola) & orchestra in C minor (falsely attrib. to J.C. Bach)- 1. Allegro molto ma maestoso [0:04:24.03] 02. Concerto for cello (or viola) & orchestra in C minor (falsely attrib. to J.C. Bach)- 2. Adagio molto espressivo [0:05:52.37] 03. Concerto for cello (or viola) & orchestra in C minor (falsely attrib. to J.C. Bach)- 3. Allegro molto energico [0:03:55.03] 04. Concerto for organ (or harpsichord), viola & orchestra in C major, MH 41 (P 55)- 1. Allegro moderato [0:11:51.62] 05. Concerto for organ (or harpsichord), viola & orchestra in C major, MH 41 (P 55)- 2. Adagio [0:10:59.15] 06. Concerto for organ (or harpsichord), viola & orchestra in C major, MH 41 (P 55)- 3. Prestissimo [0:08:37.53] 07. Viola Concerto in C major- 1. Allegro [0:10:25.55] 08. Viola Concerto in C major- 2. Andante moderato [0:05:13.45] 09. Viola Concerto in C major- 3. Rondo allegretto [0:04:34.20] Performers: Wolfram Christ - viola Roswitha Trimborn - harpsichord Kölner Kammerorchester Helmut Müller-Brühl - conductor Wolfram Christ can be a boring performer (witness a deadpan Berlioz Harold in Italy with Maazel), but these works seem to suit him perfectly. The J.C. Bach Concerto (is *that* really J.C. Bach???) is quite splashy, especially witness the final movement. It's very exciting, and definitely worth exploring, with a tuneful first movement, and a lovely second. The first theme of I comes back to haunt in III, making it a "cyclical" work. The Stamitz is well known to any violist, and is a very rewarding concerto, regardless of the instrumentation. One reviewer stated that these works are not "virtuosic". That's a judgment made from the twentieth (twenty-first!) century: in their time, these works were considered to be very much the fare of virtuosos. The attitude that only modern or romantic works can be virtuosic (vis-a-vis the viola literature) miss the point. In any case, even music without lots of notes or string crossing, double stops, etc., is MUCH harder to perform; witness Mozart, where so many performers spin notes but don't make music. Conversely, virtuosic affairs by Sarasate or Paganini may have all of the fireworks, but no soul--the performer only need play all the notes. Anyway, I'm off the track. Explore this recording; it's rewarding! Download links: Вернуться назад |