Nazareth: Fon-Fon!

This page lists all recordings of Fon-Fon!, by Ernesto Nazareth (1863-1934) on CD.

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Gabriela Montero: Solatino

Gabriela Montero: Solatino


Carreño:

Kleiner Waltzer (Mi Teresita)

Estévez:

Angelito negro

Ancestro 1

Ancestro 2

Toccatina

Ginastera:

Pastorale

Danza Criolla, Op. 15 No. 1

Piano Sonata No. 1, Op. 22

Lecuona:

La comparsa

....Y la negra bailaba!

A La Antigua

Impromptu

Porqué te vas?

Gitanerías

Suite Andalucía: Malagueña

Córdoba

Moleiro:

Joropo

Montero:

Soñando Contigo (Improvisation)

Texturas de la Gran Sabana (Improvisation)

A la Argentina

Sin Aire (Improvisation)

Mi Venezuela (Improvisation)

Nazareth:

Odeon - Tango Brasileiro

Brejeiro (Mischievous)

Fon-Fon!

Carioca


Gabriela Montero is as famous for her playing of Bach, Chopin and Rachmaninov as she is for her extraordinary improvisations. Her latest recording is another adventurous departure from the norm. It features 26 short sparkling works by seven South American composers with the daunting Piano Sonata No.1 by Ginastera at its centre.

‘The Ginastera Sonata I’ve been playing a lot in the last few years,’ says the Caracas-born star. ‘I actually learnt it while I was studying at the Royal Academy [of Music, London] with Hamish Milne. That and the Joropo by Moleiro, the last piece on the album, have been with me most of my life. This is music which has great significance to me because of course I am Latin. The Latin sound and the Latin rhythm are somehow embedded not just in me but in everybody from my part of the world: it’s such a popular style of music that everyone relates to it in one way or another. A lot of composers have been influenced by it.’

The composers Montero has chosen to showcase are Ernesto Lecuona (1896-1963) from Cuba, Ernesto Nazareth (1863-1934) from Brazil, Antonío Esteves (1916-88), Teresa Carreño (1853-1917) and Moisés Moleiro (1904-79) from Venezuela and Alberto Ginastera (1916-83) from Argentina. ‘These,’ Montero feels, ‘are some of the greatest representatives of this genre of music. For me it is music that is so alive that it transcends the written score. When you approach this music and you learn it and play it, you have to let go of all the pre-established notions of what is right and what is wrong. You really have to dance with it. You must have a physical way of seeing the music – it’s very sensual and very descriptive. You can almost hear the conversation between people within it.’

Many of the 26 miniatures Montero has selected for her CD are dance-based. The exception is Ginastera’s four-movement Sonata No.1 composed in 1952 and generally considered to be his master work for the piano, demanding incredible virtuosity. ‘The Ginastera Sonata is a very enigmatic and at times mysterious and violent piece – in a way, very animalistic,’ says Montero. ‘In that respect it’s a different sound on the recording. The rest of the repertoire on the disc is a lot of fun, lively and song-orientated, but I think the whole programme is well-rounded in the way it describes Latin America. I’m thrilled to be playing these pieces and to have recorded them.’

South American piano music is a comparatively recent phenomenon. ‘Our part of the world is very young and of course the European influence has been tremendous,’ Montero enthuses, ‘but when you think of the indigenous people and their innate feeling for rhythm – and rhythm is the backbone of Latin-American music – that and the emotional component make this style of music unique. The beginning of our music was in the rhythms and the songs and the complaints of love. Most South American love songs are about the unfairness and injustice of love! We may be a young culture in writing it, but not in the process of being it and feeling it. That is innate. It’s part of us, even if the process of scoring it is quite recent.’

How did Montero go about selecting the programme to record? ‘Well, I have a very quick, instinctive reaction to things, so it was based on that. And I have to say I really think I got it right. There is a time and space for everything. I mean you are definitely not going to have an epiphany playing Nazareth! It’s music to drink a rum and Coke to, to go out and be happy. And we need a bit of that – especially in the classical world. I love to sit and play Brahms and feel it’s an important moment in my life, to communicate and connect with that, but I also think we need the healing of laughter and movement and the joy that comes with this kind of music.’

“Montero has a phenomenal as an improviser...And what these amount to is a charming palimpsest from the Latin American classical tradition. And while Ginastera's Sonata - delivered here with brio - is now a concert staple, everything else has the freshness of novelty.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2010 ****

“This is Latin American music the way it should be heard, i.e. played by one with it in her blood. Phrasing and colouring are intensely human. Fingerwork is crisply articulated, whatever the speed. Montero's own works effortlessly complement the rest of the programme.” Classic FM Magazine, January 2011 ****

EMI - 6411442

(CD)

$16.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Rags & Tangos

Rags & Tangos


Lamb, J F:

Ragtime Nightingale

American Beauty Rag

Bohemia Rag

Topliner Rag

Nazareth:

Apanhei-te Cavaquinho (I have grabbed you, cavaquinho!)

Vitorioso

Odeon - Tango Brasileiro

Nove de Julho

Labirinto

Guerreiro

Plangente (Lamenting)

Cubanos

Fon-Fon!

Scott, James:

Evergreen Rag

Modesty Rag

Peace and Plenty Rag

Troubador Rag


Joshua Rifkin is a musical polymath - a Bach scholar and a Ragtime specialist. His performances of Ragtime are gentle and inviting and in this wonderful recording of Rags and Tangos (made in 1990 for Decca) he treats us to a Scott Joplin-free exploration of music from this genre.

Australian Eloquence - 4762445

(CD)

$10.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Ernesto Nazareth - Solo Piano Works

Ernesto Nazareth - Solo Piano Works


Nazareth:

Brejeiro (Mischievous)

Passaros em festa

Tenebroso (Gloomy)

Apanhei-te Cavaquinho (I have grabbed you, cavaquinho!)

Confidências (Confidences)

Sarambeque

Travesso

Coracao que sente

Odeon - Tango Brasileiro

Epônina

Cubanos

Cre e espera

Fon-Fon!

Vespers

Faceira

Batuque

Ameno Resedá


Nazareth was a Brazilian composer who explored the fusion of Afro-Brazilian musical elements and European classical traditions. His concerts were mainly at theatres, hotels, and cinemas; especially at the famous Cinema Odeon in Rio de Janeiro, where his performances would take place at the waiting room of the cinema and where he became so popular, that people used to go to the Odeon to hear Nazareth, instead of watching the films. “After I heard the music of Nazareth, I finally understood the meaning of Brazilian soul.” remarked Darius Milhaud to Villa-Lobos in his arrival in Rio de Janeiro in 1916.

Quartz - QTZ2066

(CD)

$15.00

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

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