SACDs - Lutoslawski |
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Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Lutosławski: Orchestral Works 4
This is the fifth and now final volume in our survey of orchestral works by the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski. Gramophone wrote of a previous volume in the series (CHSA5106) that it ‘offers a broad view of Lutosławski’s creative profile, which the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Edward Gardner fleshes out with playing that is as polished as it is animated, and alert to the individuality of Lutosławski’s musical vocabulary and mode of expression’. Lutosławski wrote his Symphony No. 1 between 1941 and 1947, but interestingly it does not display any obvious signs of his trying to come to terms with the ordeal that befell his people. Quite the opposite, in fact. Lutosławski himself described the symphony as bright and cheerful, ‘because that was the idea of the composition, which was conceived in the period of independence before the war, but brought into being during the terrible wartime and in far from idyllic post-war years’. At the time, one Polish colleague went so far as to call it ‘fauvist’, so wild and vibrant did it appear to the audiences at its first performance in April 1948. Lutosławski was a meticulous collector of folk materials in the first half of the 1950s, but for him, Dance Preludes was a ‘farewell to folklore’, even though he privately still explored folk tunes for several more years. Here the orchestra and conductor are joined by the clarinettist Michael Collins, an exclusive Chandos artist. As his career developed in the more open environment that emerged after the ‘socialist-realist’ period, Lutosławski began to receive international recognition, and with the Partita (1984, orchestrated 1988), for violin and orchestra, he presented a newly relaxed, more melodic compositional style to the public. The soloist is the exclusive Chandos artist Tasmin Little. Chain 2 (1984 – 85) was premiered by Anne-Sophie Mutter on 31 January 1986 with Collegium Musicum, conducted by Paul Sacher to whom it was dedicated. On this recording Tasmin Little leads the orchestra through a succession of ideas, much as the soloist had done in the ‘Episodes’ movement of the Cello Concerto (recorded on CHSA5106 with Paul Watkins). “The BBCSO and Edward Gardner, in the latest of this excellent series, capture the range of moods eloquently.” The Observer, 17th March 2013 “the violin concertos [are] notable for their expressive intensity, a quality matched by Tasmin Little’s performances. Finally, Michael Collins relishes the solo opportunities of Dance Preludes for clarinet and chamber orchestra” Financial Times, 16th March 2013 **** “[Gardner's] ear for detail, a feature of all these Chandos releases, brings out colours and associations which you might have missed in other versions...This is as vibrant and engaging a performance of this symphony as I have ever heard on record...a series of recordings which has to be considered a worthy new reference in some of the best music the 20th century has to offer.” MusicWeb International, 23rd April 2013 “Gardner's interpretative decisions vary from Lutoslawski's, swifter in the fast movements, very slow in the Poco adagio...The composer had the balance between them just right but Gardner is very persuasive...Highly recommended.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2013 “[Little] finds the soft-edged energy of the Partita and traces a broad melodic arc in its central Largo. All the performers show their awareness of the work's indebtedness to Baroque gesture.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2013 **** | 
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| |  | Lutosławski: Orchestral Works 3
This is the fourth volume in Chandos’ series devoted to the music of the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski. Edward Gardner and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, described by Gramophone as a ‘veritable dream team’ in a review for Vol. 1, are joined on this recording by the cellist and exclusive Chandos artist Paul Watkins. Lutosławski drew his main thematic material for Little Suite (Mała suita) from folk melodies from the village of Machów in south-east Poland. As such he was following one of the paths recommended by the communist government for connecting to the ‘broad masses’ by creating what today might be called ‘people’s music’. In this work Lutosławski demonstrates his characteristic lightness of touch, excellent ear for orchestral timbre, and ability to transform his material into something highly individual. The Second Symphony (1965 – 67) was Lutosławski’s first large-scale orchestral work since the Concerto for Orchestra (1950 – 54), and a lot had happened in Poland since the premiere of that work. The government had significantly eased its cultural restrictions for music, which meant that Polish composers were becoming increasingly exposed to new ideas from the West. Lutosławski, ever his own man, chartered a distinctive path through this thicket of new music, and by the mid-60s he had developed his own individual and expressive idiom. In the Second Symphony, he creates an atmosphere of tense anticipation in the opening stages, before drawing the listener into the ensuing, more purposefully developed music, which reaches a climactic explosion and resolution. Paul Watkins is the soloist in the Cello Concerto, one of the most original works of recent times. While Lutosławski insisted that this highly dramatic work was a purely musical drama, Mstislav Rostropovich, its dedicatee, considered the music to be a mirror of his own battles with the authorities in the Soviet Union in the late 1960s and ’70s. In Grave, for solo cello and strings, for the first time in his life (not counting folk-inspired pieces), Lutosławski based a work on the music of another composer: the first four notes of Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande. He takes Debussy’s motif and transforms it from intense musings into a free-flowing succession of robust and vigorous shapes. “The characteristic formal diptych of the symphony is superbly enacted.” Sunday Times, 25th November 2012 “a broad view of Lutoslawki's creative profile, which the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Edward Gardner fleshes out with playing that is as polished as it is animated and alert to the individuality of Lutoslawski's musical vocabulary and mode of expression. Gardner keeps the overall structural span of the Symphony in view...while giving close attention to the localised instrumental combinations and conflicts that lend the music its vibrant personality.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2012 “This is a wonderful disc, brilliantly delivered by Edward Gardner’s BBC Symphony forces. Few orchestras play this repertoire so well.” The Arts Desk, 8th December 2012 “The performances continue the highly favourable impression of this series to date, with Gardner securing playing of real immediacy and finesse from a BBC Symphony Orchestra that sounds as fully engaged in the lighter aspects of the composer's music as in its more searching utterances.” International Record Review, December 2012 “Gardner's control of [the Second], not least its eventual disintegration, is highly compelling...the Cello Concerto receives a superbly concentrated performance here from the soloists Paul Watkins...[Grave] forms a fitting counterbalance to everything else on this disc.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2013 **** “With my ideas about the Cello Concerto completely transfixed by Paul Watkins and the BBC Symphony Orchestra...I feel pretty secure in being able to put forward this Chandos version against and above all others.” MusicWeb International, January 2013 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Lutosławski: Orchestral Works 2
This is the third volume in the Chandos series devoted to the music of the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski. It brings together his first surviving orchestral piece (The Symphonic Variations) and his last symphony, as well as two works for piano and orchestra – an early work originally written for two pianos (The ‘Paganini’ Variations), and his very last concerto. The works are performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Edward Gardner, described by Gramophone as a veritable ‘Dream Team’ in Vol. 1. They are joined in this recording by Louis Lortie, the award-winning pianist and exclusive Chandos artist. Lutosławski composed his Symphonic Variations while he was studying with Witold Maliszewski at the Warsaw Conservatory. When he showed the work to his teacher, he was told in no uncertain terms: ‘For me your work is ugly.’ A rather disheartening response to be sure, but perhaps also proof that here was a work that was well ahead of its time. Today it fits in easily with the European tradition of variation form, and is considered a prime example of the lush, but edgy harmonies of the composer, and of his vivid ear for instrumental colour and virtuosity. Less than three years later, Poland was invaded by Germany, and normal music life disappeared. In its place, musical cafés emerged as places where light music as well as mainstream repertoire was performed. Lutosławski made his living in these cafés by playing a repertoire of light music, arranged by himself and his piano-duet partner, Andrzej Panufnik. All but one of these works were destroyed during the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. The sole survivor was the Variations on a Theme of Paganini. The version recorded here is Lutosławski’s orchestration for piano and orchestra, of the original version for two pianos. Also on this disc is the Piano Concerto, the last of Lutosławski’s concertante works, as well as Symphony No. 4, which Lutosławski composed over four years (1988 – 92), conducting its premiere in Los Angeles, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, in 1993, just a year before his death. The Polish series is supported by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute. “[the Symphony Variations] now sound lush and exuberant...Louis Lortie makes the most of the slightly underwhelming Piano Concerto (1987-88). The jaunty Variations on a Theme of Paganini (1978) – written within a year of Andrew Lloyd Webber's better-known version – and the Fourth Symphony (1988-92) give far more sense of this discreetly quixotic composer.” The Observer, 8th January 2012 “Gardner and the BBC Symphony, backed up by glittering sound, do [the Symphonic Variations] proud, from the folk-like opening flute theme, through its varied treatments...Lortie is an ideal soloist [in the Concerto], with a clarity of touch familiar from his recordings of the French repertoire, but also the power for the bigger gestures...Again, Gardner leads a detailed, musically sure-paced orchestral contribution.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2012 **** “in a performance as vivacious and committed as this one, [the Symphonic Variations] comprises a veritable treat...Gardner's conception of the riveting Fourth Symphony (1988-92)...has both infectious involvement and considerable expressive ardour to commend it...Throughout, Gardner secures some first-class playing from the BBC SO; Ralph Couzens's engineering is, needless to say, state of the art.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Martin Fröst: Dances to a Black Pipe
Martin Fröst’s latest releases have featured core repertoire for his instrument from the 18th and 19th centuries, and most recently a disc of his wide-ranging encores. All of these offerings have been singularly well received by reviewers and record buyers alike, and have contributed to Fröst’s flourishing concert career. On this disc, accompanied by the Australian Chamber Orchestra under Richard Tognetti, Fröst presents a wide-ranging selection of works all connected with dancing. The principal work on this disc is Copland’s Clarinet Concerto, and with special permission from the Copland Fund, the disc ends with the fireworks of the original and later revised, dazzling ending of the Concerto. Fröst also includes on this disc works by Lutoslawski, Anders Hillborg and Piazzolla, as well as an arrangement of Brahms’ Four Hungarian Dances arranged by his brother, Göran. “His virtuosity lies in his exceptional dexterity and agility…and in his daring control of the instrument’s dynamic and expressive extremes.” The Times “Performed in both the original and revised versions, Copland's hot, slick Clarinet Concerto bookends a programme that incorporates waltz, schmaltz, tango and klezmer. Not all of it works. Brahms's Hungarian Dances are downgraded to vehicle status as a showcase for Fröst's dexterity. But elsewhere (Piazzola, Hillborg, Högberg) soloist and orchestra sizzle.” The Independent on Sunday, 8th January 2012 **** “almost every piece is a novelty in Martin Fröst's dance-themed programme...This partnership of soloists and orchestra is an inspired one, not least in the smaller-scale pieces...There is a quirky and highly personal essay in lieu of booklet-note from Fröst himself.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2012 “No point in pulling my punches: this is a wonderful disc. The playing is superb, and these dance-inspired pieces will put a skip in your own step...It's obvious that Frost and his Australian colleagues must have had enormous fun recording this programme and their enjoyment bubbles through at every turn. Frost's virtuosity is a delight in its own right, but it's deployed in the service of unquenchable good humour.” International Record Review, February 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Lutosławski: Orchestral Works 1
Edward Gardner, the music director of English National Opera and an exclusive Chandos artist, has completed the first disc in a projected Chandos series devoted to Polish music. Also his first purely orchestral CD for Chandos, the disc presents music by one of Poland’s most important twentieth-century composers, Witold Lutosławski, including perhaps his most famous work, the Concerto for Orchestra (1950 – 54), a brilliant and highly attractive work. Also included is the Third Symphony (1981 – 83) which was given its world premiere by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Sir Georg Solti, on 29 September 1983. Many passages employ the by then well-developed technique which the composer called ‘limited aleatorism’, according to which each individual orchestral musician is asked to play a phrase or repeated fragment in his own time – rhythmically independent of the other musicians. During these passages very little synchronisation is specified: events that are coordinated include the simultaneous entrances of groups of instruments, the abrupt end of some episodes, and some transitions to new sections. By this method the composer retains control of the work’s architecture and of the realisation of the performance, while simultaneously facilitating complex and unpredictable polyphony. In later years Lutosławski developed musical forms that combine unrelated strands of music, whose short, discrete sections overlap one another like the links of a chain. Elements of this method can be found in many of his earlier works, but the first to emphasise it was Chain 1 of 1983 for fourteen instruments, written for the London Sinfonietta. Chain 2, subtitled ‘Dialogue for Violin and Orchestra’, followed in 1985. The last work to adopt this approach was Chain 3 (1986) for large orchestra. Broadly speaking, the composition’s ten-minute span falls into three sections, of which the first provides a particularly clear, readily audible example of the chain technique. After a quick opening flourish, Lutosławski presents a sequence of twelve overlapping ideas, each characterised by a particular mode of expression, and each vividly coloured by a few instruments playing as a unit. For example, chimes, violas, and flutes together form the first ‘link’; this is overlapped by a quartet of double-basses; these in turn overlap a xylophone and three violins, and so on. The last of the twelve links in this musical chain thicken into a kind of general babble among the winds, which marks the first stage in the work’s larger form. Chain 3 was written for the San Francisco Symphony which gave the first performance, conducted by the composer, on 10 December 1986 in Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco. “Their account of the concerto is lively and crisply virtuosic, but the performances of the other two, much later works on this disc are the more significant...Gardner's performance [of Symphony No. 3] is impressive – vivid, incisive and well controlled – and he does an equally good job on the slighter and more elusive Chain 3 from 1986.” The Guardian, 14th October 2010 **** “This CD offers a thrilling reminder of [Lutoslawski's] craftsmanship...Chain 3 is a small, brilliant orchestral jewel. Atmospheric, if not quite virtuosic, performances from the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Gardner, who must be encouraged to explore more of Lutoslawski’s oeuvre.” Financial Times, 16th October 2010 **** “Exciting performances of exciting music. Lutoslawski is a master of whipping up the orchestra, though in a tasteful, increasingly refined manner...A fanfare guides us through the novel form [of the Symphony], though Gardner is a persuasive guide in his own right.” Sunday Times, 24th October 2010 **** “Gardner makes the most of the taut rhythmic energy in the music...all the colours of this showpiece [the Concerto for Orchestra] are brightly painted, with a virtuosity which is never empty, but always has direction and purpose, and a sense of real enjoyment.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2010 **** “On this evidence, Edward Gardner and the BBC SO are a dream team, pressing the claims of a composer who has been neglected since his death in 1994...This performance sets a seal on a disc that leaves one eager for its successors” Gramophone Magazine, December 2010 “Gardner’s ENO-honed ability to choose and hold a tempo and set a tangible mood from the off serves him well in each movement: there’s tautness and weight in the Intrada’s production line of pounding rhythms, a fine sense of pace to the slow-burn Passacaglia and impressive lightness in the piquant woodwind flutterings” Andrew Mellor, bbc.co.uk, 2nd November 2010 “Gardner pulls no punches in the 'Intrada'...few have equalled this for long-term conviction, in which the playing of the BBC forces leaves little to be desired...Gardner's interpretations are much more 'inside' the idiom than Daniel Barenboim's rather dutiful readings...this disc can be warmly recommended, not least if it hastens the return of Lutoslawski's music to its former eminence.” International Record Review, December 2010 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. 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ComposersAa Aagaard-Nilsen Abe, Keiko Acosta Acuña Adamek Adams, J Adams, S Aho Aiblinger Alain Albéniz Albert, E Albicastro Albinoni Albrechtsberger, J G Alfvén Alkan Allegri Allende-Blin Alvarez, R D Alyabyev Amargos Amner Amper Andia André Anerio, G F anon. Aperghis Apostel Aquino Araujo, J de Arauxo Arbeau Arensky Argento Arnaud Arndt Arne Arnold Arolas Arutiunian Assad, C Astorga Atterberg Auerbach Avison Baadsvik, A Baadsvik, Ø Babell Bacewicz Bach, C P E Bach, H Bach, J B Bach, J C Bach, J C F Bach, J C'ph Bach, J Ludwig Bach, J M I Bach, J S Bach, W F Badajoz Badings Balakirev Balay Balbi Ballard Banasik Bantock Barbarino Barber, S Bardi, A Barlow, K Barrett, N Barrière, J Bartók Bartolotti Bassani, F Bassani, G B Bassani, O Bassano, G Batchelar Bauersachs Bax Beach Beamish Beck, F I Becker, A Becker, G Bedford, L Bedrossian Beethoven Beintus Bellinati Bellini Bellstedt Belmont Belmonte Ben Ben-Haim Benda, G Benevoli Bennet Bennett, R R Berberian Berezovsky Berg Bergman, E Berio Berkeley, L Berkeley, M Berlioz Bernat Bernstein Bertali Berwald Biber Biebl Binchois Bishop, H R Bitsch Bizet Blarr Bliss Bloch, E Blumer Boccherini Body Boeck, F Boellmann Boesset Bohlin Böhm, G Böhme Boieldieu Bolcom Bonizzi Bonnet Bonporti Borcht Borg, O Borne Borodin Bortnyansky Börtz Bosanko Bosmans Botma Bottesini Boulanger, L Boulez Bourgeois, D Boutmy Bouzignac Boyd Bozza Brackett, J Bradbury Brade Brahms Brandt, V Brassin Bredero Brentner Briccialdi Briceño Bridge Britten Broström Broughton Brouwer, L Browne, J Bruch Bruckner Bruhns Brumel, A Brunckhorst Bruun Bryars Buche Buchner, H Buene Bull, O Burian Burkhard Burton, J Busoni Busto Butterworth, G Buxtehude Byrd Byrnes Cabanilles Cabezón, A Cabezón, H Caccini, G Cage Caldini Camphuysen Campion Camus, S Canova da Milano Caplet Carey, C Carissimi Carmichael, H Caroso Carpenter, C Carrara Carreno, I Cartellieri Carter, E Carulli Casella Cassidy Castagnoli Castello Castelnuovo-Tedesco Castérède Castro, Juan de Catoire Cavalli Ceballos Cendo Certon Ceuleers Chabrier Chailleux Chaminade Chaoketu Siqin Chaplin, C Charlier Charpentier, M-A Chausson Chavarria Cheetham, J Chen Yi Cherubini Chesky Chesnokov Chiti Chopin Churchill Ciaia Cilea Cimarosa Clanché Clarke, H L Clarke, Rebecca Classen Clausen, R Clemens Clementi Clerch Coates, E Codax Code Comes, J B Connesson Constant, M Coornhert Copland Corbett, S Corbetta Corea Corelli Corigliano Corkine Cornago Cornysh the elder Cornyshe Correa, H Corteccia Couperin, A-L Couperin, F Couperin, L Coward, L Cowell Cramer, J B Crecquillon Crijns Croce Croes Croft Crumb Crusell Cutting Czernowin Czerny Dalbavie Dalza Damase Damrosch Danyel Daquin Dargomïzhsky Darke Darwall Daugherty Daverson David, Ferdinand Davidov Davidovsky, M Davies, H Davies, Maxwell Davies, Walford | Davis, C Dean, B Debussy Dediu Defaye Delibes Delius Demessieux Demus Deng Yu-Hsien Denhoff Denisov Denza Desenclos Desmarest Despres Destouches, F S Deutsch, B R Devienne Diamond Didkovsky Dietholm Dieupart Dillen Dillon, J Dinicu Distler, H Dittersdorf Dlugoraj Dobrogosz Dohmen Dohnányi Dominique, C-A Donizetti Donjon Doráti Dowland Dresden Driessler Drouet, L Düben, A Düben, G Düben, M Dubois, T Dubugnon Dufay Dukas Dunne Dünser Duparc Duport Dupré Duron Duruflé Dussek, J L Dutilleux Dvorak Dykes Dzon Eben Eberlin Eberwein, C Ebner Ebreo da Pesaro Eccard Edwards, Ross Egge Eggert Elgar Eliasson Ellington Encina Enescu Engström Enrique Eötvös Erich, D Ericsson, H-O Eriksson, John Ernst, H W Erod Erskine Escher Escobar Estévez Ewald Eybler Eyck Facco Fage, J Fagerlund Falconieri Falla Farnaby, G Farrenc Fauré Favara Federico Feld Feldman Feng Zi Cun Fernández, H Fernandez, O L Ferneyhough Fernie Ferrabosco, A I Ferrabosco, A II Ferrari, Luc Ferroud Festa, C Fibich Figueredo Filiberto Finger Finnissy Finzi Fischer, J K F Fiser Fitkin Flammer Flecha I Fletcher, A Fockenbroch Foerster Fondse Fontana, G B Fontyn Foote Förster, K Foscarini Foss Foulds Françaix Francescatti Franck, C Franck, E Franck, M Franck, R Frank, S French, W P Frescobaldi Fresedo Fritz Froberger Froom Fröst, G Fröst, M Fryklöf Fuentes Führer Fukushima Fulkerson Furrer Furstenau Gabrieli, G Gade, J Gade, N Gál Galilei, M Galíndez Galuppi Gandolfi Gang Chen Gardel Gardner, Johann von Gardner, John Gardner, Stephen Gariboldi Garner, D Gastaldon Gaubert Gaultier, E Gaultier, J Ge Gan-Ru Gedizlioğlu Gees Geijer Geist, C Geminiani Gemrot Genzmer German Gershwin Gervaise Gesualdo Getty Ghiselin Ghizeghem Gibbons, C Gibbons, O Gigout Gilkyson, E Gillespie, D Giordano, U Giorgi Gismonti Giuliani Gjeilo Glanert Glanzberg Glass, P Glazunov Glière Glinka Globokar Gluck Godard, B Goedicke Goens Goldmark Goldsmith Goller Gombert Goodman, P Goorhuis Goossens Gorecki Gould, M Gounod Graaf, C E Graham, P Grainger Granados Grandi Grantham Graun, C H Graupner Grechaninov Green, G H Gregorian Chant Grieg Grosz Groven, E Gruber, F Gruber, HK Grünberger Grunelius Gruytters Gu Guanren Guan Xia Guarnieri, C Gubaidulina Gudmundsen-Holmgreen Guédron Guerrero Guerrero, P Guido, G A Guilmant Guo Wenjing Gurney Haan Haas, G F Haas, P Hába Haddad, S Hadjiev Hagen, L P Hahn, R Hake Hakim Halévy Halffter, E Halvorsen Hamerik, A Hamers Hammerschmidt Handel Handl Hanff Hanson, H Harris, M Harris, Roy Harris, W Harrison, L Hartmann, John Hartmann, K Hartmann, W E Z Harvey, R Hasse, N Hassler, H L Hauer Haug Hausegger Haydn Haydn, M Heaton Heggie Heiniö Hekking Helmont Henderickx Heneghan Henryson Henze Heredia Herkenhoff Hérold Herrmann, A Herrmann, B Hertel, J C Hertel, J W Hervelois Herz Hessen Hessenberg Heuberger Higdon | Hildegard Hill, J Hillborg Hiltzik Hindemith Hindmarsh Hintz Hoch Hoffmann, H A Hoffmeister Hofmann, H Högberg Höhne Holborne Holdar Holliger Holmboe Holmen Holst Hölszky Homilius Honegger Hooft Hopkins, J H Horneman, C F E Horovitz Hosokawa Hotman Hough Hout Hovhaness Howells Hsu Zhen Ming Hu Xiao Ou Hua Yan Jun Huang Yijun Hubay Huber, K Huber, N A Hüe Hufschmidt Hume, T Humfrey Hummel, J Hummel, T Huwet Hvoslef Ibert Idenstam Ignatowicz Imbescheid India Indy Ingenhoven Ippolitov-Ivanov Ireland Iriarte, C Isaac Ives, C Jacob, G Jadin, L Jager Janacek Janequin Jansen Jarzebski Jenkins, J Jersild Jeurissen Jobim Johnson, C Johnson, E Johnson, R Jolivet Jones, Robert Jongen Joubert Jørgenson Judenkönig Juon Jusid Kabalevsky Kagel Kahn, E Kaipainen Kaiser, Leander Kalman Kaminski, H Kapsberger Karg-Elert Karlsson, Leif Kastalsky Katzer Kauderer Keller, C Keller, Matthias Kellner, J C Kengyô, Yatsuhashi Kerll Kern Ketting Keuris Khachaturian Killmayer Kilpinen Kim King, K Kirchner, L Kleiberg Klein, Gideon Klughardt Kneller Kobrich Koch-Raphael Kocsis Kodály Koechlin Köhler, Emmy Kohler, Ernesto Komitas Kompaneysky Komulainen Koppel, A Korngold Korpijaakko Koschat Kotter Kraayenhof Krahmer Kraus Krebs, J L Kreek Kreisler Krieger, E Krieger, J P Krisse Krol Krommer Küffner Kuhlau Kuhnau Kuhr Kummer, K Kurtág Kuula Lachenmann Lachner, F Lalo Lama, J Lambert, F Lambert, M Lang, B Lang, D Lange-Müller Lange, W R Langgaard, R Langlais Lanier Lara, Ana Larsen, G Lasso Lauber Lauermann Laufer Laurenz Lauridsen Lauro Lavry Lawes, H Lawes, W Lawson, I Lazic Lebrun, L Lecuona Ledger Lefebure-Wely Legrand Lehár Leifs Leighton Lemmens León Leoncavallo Leopold I Levitzki Levy, A Leyding Lhéritier Liadov Liebermann, L Ligeti Lim Lindberg, C Lindberg, N Lindblad, A F Linde, B Linden Lipaiev Liszt Liu Tianhua Liu Wenjin Lloyd, G Lloyd, John Locatelli Locke Loewe, C Loguin Lohse, M López, Jimmy Lorenzo, L Louvier Lowry, R Lübeck Luigini Lukas Lully Lundgren Luo Nian Yi Luparini Lutoslawski Luzzaschi Lvov, A Lysenko Ma Shui-long Mac Low Machado, M Machaut MacMillan Maderna Madetoja Maessins Mahler Maier, F M Malipiero Manchicourt Mancini, H Manoury Mäntyjärvi Marais, M Marbe Marcello, A Marchand, L Marenzio Marín Marini, B Marsh, R Marshall-Hall Martin y Coll Martin, Eduardo Martin, F Martin, M Martin, V Martinu Marx Mascagni Maslanka Mason, L Massenet Masson Massonneau Mathias Matiegka Matitia Matos Rodriguez Matthews, C Matthus Mauduit Maynard, John Mayseder Mayuzumi Mazzocchi, D McCabe McCartney McDowall McPhee, C Medek Medtner Mena Mendelssohn Mendelssohn, A Mendelssohn, Fanny Mercadante Mercure, P Merikanto, A Meriläinen Merula Merulo Messager Messiaen Miaskovsky Miasnikov Mielczewski Mignone Milán Milhaud Millard Milstein, N Milwid Miroglio Mitchell, J Mitterer Mochizuki Molina, H Molique Molloy Molter Mompou | Monrad Monteverdi Monti, V Moore, C Morales, C Morata Moreno, Y Mores Morhard Morley Morricone, E Mortensen, F E Moscheles Moss, K Moszkowski Moulinié Mouton, J Mozart Mozart, L Muczynski Mudarra Muffat, Georg Müller, M Mumford Murashkin Murcia Murray, A Musgrave Mussorgsky Muthspiel Myslivecek Narvaez Nas Nau Naumann, E Naumann, J G Nebra Blasco Negri, C Nepomuceno Neruda, J B G Ness, J Ø Neunhaber Neuwirth, O Newman, T Newsome Newton, E Nielsen Nielsen, M Nietzsche Nikolsky Niles Ning Bao Sheng Ning Yong Nono Noot Nordheim Nordqvist Novácek, O Novák, V Nørgård Nutile Nyman O'Hogan O'Regan Obukhov Ockeghem Oehring Offenbach Olesen Olofsson, K Olsen, M Olsen, O Olsson Olthuis Oppenheim Orff Orkin Ortiz, D Ospald Otterloo Pachelbel Pacini Padding Paganini Pagh-Paan Palestrina Palmgren Pampani Panufnik, A Pape, A Parabosco Paradis Parra, H Parry Parsons, R Pärt Pascoal Passawar Patterson, P Paulus Paumann Peeters Penaforte Penderecki Pereira, M Pergolesi Perrichon Perrin, J Persichetti Peterson-Berger Petit, P Pettersson Pfitzner Philidor, A Phillips, Richard Piazzólla Picchi Piccinini Pierné, G Pijper Pilkington Pilss Pinel Pintscher Piston Pitsch Pixis Pizzetti Plagge Planel Platti Platz Playford Plaza Podbielski Poglietti Pohjola Ponc Ponce, J Ponce, M Ponchielli Poncio Pons, J L Ponse Poppe Posadas Poston Poulenc Praetorius, H Praetorius, Johann Praetorius, M Praulinš Previn Prichard Prieto, D Priuli Prokofiev Protopopov Puccini Pugliese, O Puhan Wang Pulkkis Purcell Puts Qu Xiang Raasted Rabaud Rabbath Rabin Rachmaninov Radeck, M Raff Raick Rameau Ramos de Pareja Ramsey, R Rands Raphael, G Rasmussen, S Rathgeber Ratkje Rautavaara Ravel Rebel, J-F Rebelo Reda Reger Regondi Reich Reicha, A Reichardt, J F Reimann, A Reincken Reinecke Reiner Reinshagen Reng Tong Xiang Resch Respighi Reubke Revueltas Rheinberger Richter, F X Richter, P Riedel, K Riehm Riera Ries Rietz Rihm Riisager Rimsky Korsakov Ristori Ritter, C Rivier Robinson, C Robinson, E Rocha Vianna Filho Rodgers, R Rodrigo Rofelt Rogier Rojko Roller Roma Roman Romero, Antonio Romero, M Röntgen Ropartz Rorem Rosauro Rosenberg, H Rosenmüller Rosetti Rossi, Luigi Rossi, M Rossini Rota Rouse, C Roussel Roux, G Rox Rozsa Rubinstein Rue, P Rueff Ruffo, V Rui Li Ruiz Ruomei Chen Rutter Saariaho Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach Saeverud Saint-Preux Saint-Saëns Sainte Colombe the elder Salazar, D Salgán Salieri Salzedo Saman Sametz Sammartini, G Sammartini, G B Sancan Sanderson, W Sandstrøm, J Sandstrøm, S-D Sanford Sanz Sarasate Sarhan Satie Sauguet Saunders, J Saunders, R Savall, J Scarlatti, A Scarlatti, D Scelsi Schäfer, D Scheidemann Scheidt Schein Scheindienst Schiedmayr Schieferdecker Schildt Schimmelpfennig Schimmerling Schiphorst Schlick Schlimé Schlünz Schmelzer Schmidt, F Schmidt, O Schmidt, W Schmidt, Walther Schmitt, F Schmitt, J Schmitt, M Schnebel Schneider, John | Schneider, Stephan Schneider, W Schneller Schnittke Schnitzer Schoenberg Schop Schreker Schubert Schubert, Heino Schul Schulhoff Schuman Schumann Schumann, Clara Schütz Schwantner Schwartz, I Schwindl Sciarrino Scriabin Seifen Sejlund Sermisy Settle Shakhov Sharp Shchedrin Sheng Sheppard, J Shilkret Shostakovich Sibelius Sides Siegl Silva, A Silvestrov Silvmark Simon, F Simpson, C Sinisalo Sitt Skalkottas Skempton Smetana Smith, H B Snekkestad Snoer Söderman Södersten Sojo Sokolov, N Sola, Liu Soler, A Sommer, H Sor Sotelo Soto Sousa Søraas Sørensen, B Speaks Spohr Sporck Staes Stamitz, C Stamitz, J Stanford Stankovych Stanley, J Starter Stebbins Steen-Andersen Steffe Steffens Stenhammar Stephan Sterk Stern, M Sting Stockhausen Stölzel Storace, B Storm Stradal Straus, O Strauss, F Strauss, J, I Strauss, J, II Strauss, R Stravinsky Striggio Stroppa Strungk, D Stucky Sudbin Suk Sullivan, A Suppe Susato Svendsen Swayne Sweelinck Sweeney, E Szarzynski Szervánszky Szymanowski Taffanel Tailleferre Takahashi Takemitsu Talbot, J Tallis Taneyev Tang Biguang Tang Jianping Tang Li Zhong Tann Tansman Tárrega Tartini Tate, J W Tavener Taverner Tchaikovsky Tcherepnin Techelmann Telemann Telonius Tenney Terzi, G A Thalberg Thayer, P Theofanidis Thomalla Thomas, Ambroise Thomas, M T Thommessen Thompson, B Ticheli Tietz Tiomkin Tippett Toduta Tomasi, B Tomasi, H F Tomkins Tordesillas Tormis Torre, F Tosti Tournemire Trabaci trad. Traversa Triana Tsangaris Tubin Tulev Tunder Turina Türk, H P Turnage Turner, K Tveitt Tye Ullmann, V Urrede Ustvolskaya Vähi Valderrabano Valen Valentini, Giovanni Valerius Vallet Vanhal Varèse Vasilenko Vasks Vasquez, J Vaughan Williams Vega Velasco, S Veldhuis Veloso, C Venegas de Henestrosa Veracini Verardi Verbey Verdalle Verdi Vermeeren Vermeulen Verrijt Viardot-Garcia Vicent Victoria Vierne, L Vieuxtemps Villa-Lobos Villoldo Viñao, E Visée Vitali, T Vivaldi Vivanco Viviani Vloeimans Vondel Vorisek Vranický, P Vriend Vries Wade Wagenseil Wagner Wagner, S Wallin Walter, B Walther, J G Walton Wang Hui-Ran Ward, J Warlock Weber Webern Weck Weckmann Weelkes Weill, K Weinberg Weiner, Leó Weingartner Weiss, J S Weiss, S Weyerman Whitacre White, Robert Whitlock Widéen Widerkehr Widmann, J Widor Wieniawski Wiesemann Wikander Willaert Willan Willcocks, D Willering Williams, John Willis, R S Willke Wills, A Wilms Wilson, T Wolf-Ferrari Wolf, E W Wolf, H Wölfl Wood, C Woolf, L P Woud Wronowicz Wu Hua Wylkynson Wyschnegradsky Xenakis Xerés Yaitchkov Yamaguchi Yan Hai Deng Yánez Yang Bao Zhi Yang Qing Yao Hu Yeznikian Yiu-Kwong Chung York Yoshimatsu Youmans Ysaye Yu Xun Fa Yun Yupanqui Yuste Zabel Zacher, G Zappa, Francesco Zarius Zbinden Zelenka Zemlinsky Zender Zhao Jiping Zhao Song-Ting Zhou Long Zhou Wei Ziegler Zimmerman Zimmermann, B A Zimmermann, U Zimmermann, W Zipoli Zivkovic, N J Zorn |
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