SACDs - Scarlatti, D

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D. Scarlatti: La Dirindina

D. Scarlatti: La Dirindina


Scarlatti, D:

La Dirindina

Makoto Sakurada (tenor), Marina Bartoli (soprano), Giulio Mastrototaro (baritone)

Violin Sonata in D minor, K89

Keyboard Sonata K90 in D minor

Sinfonia No. 3 for strings and continuo in G major

Sinfonia No. 7 for strings and continuo in C major

Sinfonia No. 15 in B flat major

Sinfonia No. 10 in G major


L’Arte dell’Arco (on period instruments), Federico Guglielmo

This month Federico Guglielmo and his historical instruments ensemble L’arte dell’arco turn to sinfonias and sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti and to the same composer’s short intermezzo farce La Dirindina. The intermezzo was a type of entr’acte music inserted as ‘comic relief’ between the acts of court dramas and operas during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This particular farsetta involves the personal relations between a budding opera diva and her teacher; she is vain and reluctant to practice, and he is extremely jealous of her lover.

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

CPO - 7775552

(SACD)

$17.25

(also available to download from $10.75)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

D. Scarlatti - Sonatas (arranged for guitar)

D. Scarlatti - Sonatas (arranged for guitar)


Scarlatti, D:

Keyboard Sonata K175 in A minor

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K213 in D minor

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K402 in E minor

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K403 in E major

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K449 in G major

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K450 in G minor

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K462 in F minor

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K474 in E flat major

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K475 in E flat major

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda

Keyboard Sonata K513 in C major

arr. for guitar by Stephen Marchionda


Stephen Marchionda (guitar)

Stephen Marchionda has arranged these sonatas for guitar himself. It is surprising that this has not been done before. Marchionda reveals sides of these sonatas that one would never have been able to tease out of them on the harpsichord.

“It's difficult not to hear in Marchionda's insightful performances...a certain authenticity. This arises not out of any obvious virtuosity...but out of skilfully transcribing the works...and then performing them in a manner that likewise preserves their inherent colour, drama and humour.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2010

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

MDG Scene - MDG9031587

(SACD)

$18.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Volume 1 - Scarlatti & Bartók

Volume 1 - Scarlatti & Bartók


Bartók:

3 Rondos on Slovak Folk Tunes, BB 92, Sz. 84

7 Sketches, BB 54, Sz. 44

Marche funèbre from Kossuth, BB 31

(arranged for piano by the composer)

6 Danses bulgares. extr. de Mikrokosmos, Vol.VI, Sz.107

Scarlatti, D:

Keyboard Sonata K420 in C major

Keyboard Sonata K58 in C minor

Keyboard Sonata K82 in F major

Keyboard Sonata K491 in D major

Keyboard Sonata K430 in D major

Keyboard Sonata K159 in C major 'La caccia'

Keyboard Sonata K9 in D minor

Keyboard Sonata K17 in F major

Keyboard Sonata K3 in A minor

Keyboard Sonata K380 in E major

Keyboard Sonata K135 in E major


Dejan Lazic (piano)

At first sight, they appear to have nothing in common - but disregarding the stylistic elements and a difference of two centuries, you soon recognize that both Scarlatti and Bartók, are in a sense, musical architects, who as piano virtuosos were equally interested in miniature forms and inspired by folk music.

Inspired by an 18th century performance practice, where two different character pieces were executed opposite each other in pairs in contrast with each other, I experimented in both the concert hall and the recording studio with the series of pieces on this CD. I found out quickly that I heard, experienced and played both Scarlatti and Bartók’s work ‘differently’ when they were executed alternately - as if discovering hidden secrets in familiar works! This realization led to a new and fresh perspective on the style and rubato and reconsideration of rhythmic, melodic and dynamic elements. (Dejan Lazic, liner notes)

“An exciting idea this… and it works! After all, Bartók greatly admired Scarlatti: he even recorded a couple of his sonatas. Both composers were innovators and combined a strong feeling for rhythm with an audacious sense of harmony.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2008

“Imaginative fantasy, whole-hearted expressiveness, compelling, dramatic performance, playing of real individuality.” Gramophone Magazine

“An exciting idea this…and it works! After all, Bartók greatly admired Scarlatti: he even recorded a couple of his sonatas. Both composers were innovators and combined a strong feeling for rhythm with an audacious sense of harmony.
Dejan Lazic wastes no time in establishing his credentials as a Scarlatti player. He opens the programme with a somewhat militaristic-sounding C major piece, K420, and already it's all there – the light, resilient touch, the crisp (and often free) approach to rhythm, nimble passage- Bartók Orchestral 113 work and an obvious appreciation of subsidiary material. The last of that particular Scarlatti trio, a filigree piece in F, segues beautifully with the first of Bartók's Three Rondos on Slovak Folktunes (in C), the principal common denominator here, as so often elsewhere, the dance element.
Lazic has a very individual Bartók style; he's no literalist, as illustrated by his emphatic handling of the syncopated main motif of the last Rondo.
Again the segue from Bartók (third Rondo) to Scarlatti (the processional D major Sonata, K491) is imaginative, though the switch from the gaily skipping D major Sonata (K159) to the first of Bartók's haunting Seven Sketches is more surprising. Lazic personalises the sequence in a most compelling way. He then gently breaks their spell with Scarlatti's D minor ('Pastoral') and interestingly sandwiches a dramatic piano version (Bartók's own) of the Kossuth Funeral March between lively sonatas in F major and A minor. Perhaps the most effective segue finds the flamenco strumming of Scarlatti's K135 (E major) acting as a prelude to the first of six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm which conclude Bartók's Mikrokosmos. Here Lazic underlines the individual character of each dance, tenderising the fourth (a tribute to Gershwin) with expressive arpeggios, and focusing the fifth's dizzying rhythmic ambiguities.
You reach the journey's end eager to start all over again – or maybe work out another Scarlatti- Bartók sequence. The potential is limitless and let's hope that that this first volume of a series called 'Liaisons' doesn't preclude a second Scarlatti-Bartók sequence.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

Channel Liaisons - CCSSA23407

(SACD)

$17.25

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Inspirations

Inspirations


Brahms:

Ballade in G minor, Op. 118, No. 3

Bruckner:

Locus iste, WAB 23

Buxtehude:

Toccata in D minor, BuxWV155

Haydn:

Trumpet Concerto in E flat major, Hob. VIIe:1: first movement

Symphony No. 94 in G Major 'Surprise' - Finale (Allegro di molto)

Mozart:

Vesperae solemnes de confessore in C, K339: Dixit Dominus

Regondi:

Hexaméron du concertiniste: No. 4

Rubinstein:

Il Demone: Dance

Scarlatti, D:

Keyboard Sonata K406 in C major

Schumann:

Piano Quartet in E flat major, Op. 47: Scherzo

Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54: Allegro affetuoso

Schütz:

Psalm 110: Der Herr sprach zu meinem Herrn SWV 22

Vivaldi:

Concerto RV 564 for 2 violins & 2 cellos: Allegro


Super Audio CD

Format:

unknown

MDG - MDG9061449

(SACD)

$6.75

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Domenico Scarlatti - Sonatas

Domenico Scarlatti - Sonatas


Scarlatti, D:

Keyboard Sonata K31 in G minor

Keyboard Sonata K35 in G minor

Keyboard Sonata K84 in C minor

Keyboard Sonata K58 in C minor

Keyboard Sonata K69 in F minor

Keyboard Sonata K517 in D minor

Keyboard Sonata K61 in A minor

Keyboard Sonata K9 in D minor

Keyboard Sonata K525 in F major

Keyboard Sonata K1 in D minor

Keyboard Sonata K191 in D minor

Keyboard Sonata K287 in D major

Keyboard Sonata K288 in D major

Keyboard Sonata K87 in B minor

Keyboard Sonata K56 in C minor

Keyboard Sonata K99 in C minor

Keyboard Sonata K12 in G minor

Keyboard Sonata K30 in G minor 'Cat's Fugue'


Vincent Boucher (organ)

Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757) wrote 555 sonatas for harpsichord. Following the custom of the period, these sonatas may be played on various keyboard instruments. Scarlatti was not only a virtuoso harpsichordist but also an exceptional organist. Some sonatas, by virtue of their nature or of how they are written, are particularly well suited to the organ. Examples include certain preludes and fugues from Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier, which dates from the same period.

Vincent Boucher has chosen 18 sonatas which not only can be played on the organ, but on which he feels the organ sheds "a new and favorable light by virtue of its colorful registrations, the notes held and heard for their full duration, the doubling of low notes by the pedal, etc."

Vincent Boucher played these sonatas on the splendid Italian organ, made by Karl Wilhelm, of the Très-Saint-Rédempteur church in Montreal.

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

Atma - SACD22341

(SACD)

$18.25

(also available to download from $10.75)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

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