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Tracklista: 1 I. Andante cantabile  2:36    2 II. Allegro con moto  1:44    3 III. Largo  2:06    4 IV. Lento  3:03    5 V. Andantino grazioso  1:21    6 VI. Allegro risoluto  2:16    7 VII. Andante cantabile  1:24    Alexander Tansman Symphonie No. 4 8 I. Adagio – Allegro deciso – Un poco meno mosso  11:01    9 II. Adagio tranquillo  8:05    10 III. Allegro giocoso  8:17    Alexander Tansman Quatre danses polonaises 11 I. Polka. Vivo e ben marcato  3:06    12 II. Kujawiak. Andante  3:02    13 III. Dumka. Lento  2:31    14 IV. Oberek. Molto vivace  2:30    Alexander Tansman Deux chorals de Johann-Sebastian Bach 15 Que la Sauveur des paiens vienne Maintenant (z cyklu / from: Deux chorals de Johann-Sebastian Bach, 1939)


  • Wykonawca Nałęcz-Niesiołowski Marcin
  • Data premiery 2006-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Pochodzący z Niemiec kompozytor Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach urodzony w 1788 w Hamburgu, był również wirtuozem pianina i klawesynu. Jest to drugi potomek Jana Sebastiana Bacha, znany również jako Bach berliński lub hamburski. Artysta jednak nie od razu zajął się działalnością muzyczną, w 1731rozpoczął on studia na kierunku prawa, które zakończył w 1738 we Frankfurcie. Ukończywszy naukę zdecydował się na karierę muzyczną, po propozycji złożonej mu przez księcia Ferdynanda. 


  • Wykonawca Heumann Friederike
  • Data premiery 2005-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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  This recording of the Saint John Passion by the Bach Choir of Bethlehem – America’s oldest Bach society -- is an acknowledgement of an important part of its history. In 1888, fresh from studying with Reinberger in Munich, J. Fred. Wolle conducted the Bethlehem Choral Union in the first complete American performance of this Passion in Bethlehem’s Moravian Church. Ten years later, the Choral Union morphed into the Bach Choir that came into being to perform the B Minor Mass in 1900. Although there were a few gaps in the early years, the annual Bethlehem Bach Festival continues to bring the music of Bach to thousands of people from across the United States and beyond. Bach’s Saint John Passion is one of the masterworks of the choral repertory, but it took time for it to be acknowledged as the masterpiece it truly is. It was re-discovered after Mendelssohn’s performance of the Saint Matthew Passion in 1829 had stunned the music world, awakening it to the superlative quality of Bach’s vocal music, and, at the same time, creating an upsurge in the performance of choral music in general, which continues to this day.    The interest generated by the Saint Matthew Passion threw the spotlight on the other Passion that Bach composed, the Saint John Passion. The comparison with the Saint Matthew Passion often meant that the Saint John Passion was thought to have been a more simple work, in that it called for less complexity in terms of the vocal and instrumental resources. But the differences between the two Passions are not because one is superior to the other but because they are settings of two different narratives, each one written from a different perspective. The Passion narrative in Saint Matthew’s Gospel is interpretative and deals with the cosmic implications of the tragedy. The Passion narrative in Saint John’s Gospel is more dramatic and displays the unfolding details of the suffering of Jesus – and their effect on those caught up in it – in personal terms. Thus Bach’s setting of the Saint Matthew Passion is somewhat detached, distant and reflective, like looking down on an event from high above, whereas his Saint John Passion is dramatic, immediate and compelling, like being on the edge of an apron stage for the performance of a Shakespeare play – so close that you are virtually part of the action. Bach’s Saint Matthew Passion is more measured, with places of rest, where the action stops and the significance of what has just taken place is interpreted. In contrast, the Saint John Passion is almost breathless in its progress through the sequential events of the Passion, and the chorales and arias heighten this intensity. The Saint Matthew portrays the Passion something like a tableau to be observed: the Saint John, as a sequence of events to be experienced.   Today Bach’s Passions are heard very differently from how they were first heard in Leipzig. Contrary to what one might think, they are liturgical music. The Saint John Passion was not written as an independent oratorio, though that is how we usually hear it – in the same way we hear Handel’s Messiah, Haydn’s Creation, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, or Britten’s War Requiem. But Bach wrote it for a community at worship, not an audience at leisure. It was composed for a liturgical service, vespers on Good Friday. It was designed to be heard in the context of prayer, preaching and congregational song. The two halves were not meant to incorporate an intermission but an hour-long sermon on the Passion of Jesus.    When we hear this work, we hear it out of context. We do not hear it as part of the Holy Week music. We do not hear it as liturgical music, performed at vespers on Good Friday. We hear it in an entirely different context – modern, non-ecclesiastical, and in a concert hall setting (even though it may take place in a church), or disembodied through speakers or ear-buds – where the music comes to us detached from its original context and is heard in isolation and judged on its own terms and for its own sake.    We can be historically informed in our performance, by using period instruments. We can learn the appropriate performance practices associated with this music. But what we cannot do is hear this music with 18th-century ears. We have 21st-century ears that cannot pretend to have unheard the sounds of Schoenberg, Stravinsky and Stockhausen. We have 21st-century minds that cannot fabricate the limitations of an 18th-century world-view. Therefore we have to create our own context in which to hear this work. In philosophical terms, we have to interpret what we hear so that it makes sense in our modern world, and each one has to create our own philosophical context.   Some will hear this music – as indeed it is – as a statement of Christian faith, still powerful, even though it is heard outside of its original liturgical and theological contexts. Others, who do not share this belief, will ignore its text and subject matter and receive it as marvelous music. But even though it is magnificent music, it is disturbing music. It is, after all, the musical exposition of the trial and execution of one who is innocent, while everyone else in the story is less than perfect. But it is not an exercise in despair. This music proves beyond all doubt that, while human nature might be seriously flawed, it is nevertheless capable of creating works of art that give us hope to live by. Just listen to that closing chorale, almost entirely in the major mode, whereas most of the Passion that precedes it has been in the minor. So at the end, hope conquers despair, death is followed by resurrection.   Robin A. Leaver  


  • Wykonawca Doyle Julia , Taylor Daniel , Butterfield Benjamin , Daniels Charles , Sharp William , Nomura Christopheren , Newman David
  • Data premiery 2012-03-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: CD 1 1. The Sacred Genius Of Bach 79.03 CD 2 1. Bach The Church Musician 77.52 CD 3 1. Bach The Impresario 77.15 CD 4 1. The Dazzling Concertos Of Bach 79.08 CD 5 1. Bach The Chamber Musician 75.54 CD 6 1. Bach The Virtuoso 78.02


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2007-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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During the period from which these three cantatas come, Bach no longer presented a new cantata of his own every Sunday. Instead he made extensive use of compositions by others, including his own second cousin Johann Ludwig Bach, court composer at Meiningen. In several instances, Bach also reused texts set by Johann Ludwig for his own compositions, including two of the cantatas here, Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot and Es wartet alles auf dich. Both of these follow a pattern which falls into two parts, with the opening text of each section being taken from the Old and the New Testament respectively. The third cantata, Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott, is also unusual in its structure, in that it utilizes five strophes of a single hymn, word for word. The hymn strophes are respectively used for an opening chorus, three arias and a closing chorale, with the first and fifth movement – resplendently scored with trumpets and timpani – utilizing the same hymn melody, although in very different ways. The three arias (for bass, soprano and alto) are more intimate in size, but also highly varied, addressing in turn Christ, the Holy Spirit and the full Trinity. The disc closes with a movement for solo violin and orchestra, thought to be an opening sinfonia for an unknown cantata. It is possibly a late arrangement of an early work, as the highly virtuosic solo part seems to suggest influences from the Italian violin concertos that were making such an impact in Germany during the first decades of the 18th century. With this disc the cantata series of Bach Collegium Japan and Masaaki Suzuki reaches its 45th instalment, to ever-growing acclaim, as exemplified by a recent review regarding Volume 42: ‘a recording which shows Suzuki maturing along with Bach … another fine instalment in this most consistent of series’ (International Record Review).


  • Wykonawca Nonoshita Yukari , Blaze Robin , Kooij Peter
  • Data premiery 2009-01-01
  • Nośnik SACD
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Tracklista:  Bach 1. Toccata e-Moll, BWV 914  Scarlatti 2. Klaviersonate C-Dur, K 132 (L 457) 3. Klaviersonate Es-Dur, K 193 ( L142) 4. Klaviersonate h-Moll, K 87 (L 33)  Beethoven 5. Klaviersonate Nr. 32 c-Moll, Op. 111  Schumann 6. Bunte Blätter, Op. 99 7. Abegg-Variationen, Op. 1  Debussy 8. Douze Etudes, L 136 9. Etüde L 136 Nr. 10 10. Etüde L 136 Nr. 7  Ravel 11. Sonatine für Klavier fis-Moll


  • Wykonawca Haskil Clara
  • Data premiery 2018-02-01
  • Nośnik CD
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The distinguished Soviet pianist Tatiana Nikolayeva is a name familiar to many as one of the greatest forces behind the wealth of piano talent to flood from the former Soviet Union during the twentieth century. She was born on 4 May 1924 and began playing the piano at the age of three, subsequently entering the Moscow Conservatoire to study with Alexander Goldenweiser and Yevgeny Golubev. She retained her close connection with the Moscow Conservatoire all her life. Indeed, her name was inscribed twice on the marble Roll of Honour there, first as a pianist, then as a composer. After winning the 1950 Bach Leipzig Piano Competition, Nikolayeva built up a phenomenal volume of repertoire, ranging from Bach to Bartók and beyond. Her interpretation of Bach on record won great critical acclaim. Whilst others used so-called 'original' instruments, Nikolayeva preferred to play Bach on a modern Steinway - always with great success. Her long working association with Shostakovich, and her great understanding of all aspects of his music, made her one of the leading sources of contemporary knowledge about that great composer. It was Nikolayeva for whom Shostakovich wrote his 24 Preludes and Fugues, inspired by hearing her Bach-playing at the 1950 Bach bicentenary Competition in Leipzig (he was on the jury), and it was she who premiered them in Leningrad in 1952.'The remarkable Tatiana Nikolayeva ... uncovers Bach's revelations as if they were her own' (The Independent)'Absolutely superb. Certainly I can think of no finer recording of this endlessly fascinating masterpiece, whatever the medium. Highly recommended' (CDReview)


  • Wykonawca Nikołajewa Tatjana
  • Data premiery 2006-03-07
  • Nośnik CD

1. Blumen die Menschen, nur Blumen... (...sich umschlingende Tone) (VIII/I, 3A)2. J.S. Bach: Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir (BWV 687)3. Präludium und Choral (V, 14)4. Knoten (II, 33)5. Antiphone in fis (II, 34)6. Klagegesang 1 (III, 38)7. Hommage a Christian Wolff (im Halbschlaf) (III, 39)8. Spiel mit Obertonen (III, 46)9. Perpetuum mobile (objet trouve) (I, 25A)10. ...und noch einmal: Blumen die Menschen... (VIII/I, 25B)11. Schläge - Zank (VIII/I, 20B)12. Studie zu 'Holderin' (VIII)13. J.S. Bach: Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit / Sonatina aus 'Actus tragicus' (BWV 106)14. Glocken (Hommage a Strawinsky) (IV, 4)15. Zorniger Choral (IV, 2)16. Hoquetus (I, 24)     00:34     Hoquetus (I, 24)17. Mit den Handflächen (I, 2A)18. Glockenblume (II, 23)19. Distel (III, 14)20. Häschen Trotzig (III, 44)21. Harmonika (Hommage a Borsody László) (III, 41)22. Hommage a Domenico Scarlatti (III, 40)23. Aus der Ferne / Alfred Schlee zum 80. Geburtstag (V, 9)24. J.S. Bach: Triosonate in Es-Dur I, 1 (BWV 525)25. Klagegesang 1a (VIII)26. Klagegesang 2 / In memoriam Ligeti Ilona (V, 24)27. Hampeln - Strampeln (III, 16)28. Hommage a Kurtág Márta (III, 50)29. J.S. Bach: O Lamm Gottes unschuldig (BWV Deest)30. Petruschkas Beschworung (Hommage a Farkas Ferenc 3) (III, 30)31. Liebe im Herzen, bittere Schmerzen... (Hommage a Farkas Ferenc 4) (III, 32)32. Hommage a Soproni / In memoriam matris carissimae (IV, 8)33. Hommage a Halmágyi Mihály (IV, 6)34. Erinnerungsbrocken aus einer Kolindenmelodie (Hommage a Farkas Ferenc 2) (III, 28)


  • Wykonawca Kurtag Gyorgy
  • Data premiery 1997-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Portret wyjątkowej artystki, w powstanie którego osobiście zaangażowała się sama Hilary Hahn. Zawiera utwory z większości albumów, które skrzypaczka nagrała dla Deutsche Grammophon. Na płycie Retrospective znajduje się też niemal 30 minut premierowego materiału. Jest to zapis części koncertu, podczas którego Hahn wykonała sonatę skrzypcową K379 Mozarta. Utwór ten nigdy wcześniej nie znajdował się w jej repertuarze. Album zawiera też nowe nagrania trzech utworów (ich wcześniejsze wersje znalazły się na krążku Encores – patrz: spis utworów). Retrospective ma również swoją wersję winylową (podwójna płyta analogowa). Jeden z krążków został nagrany za pomocą legendarnej już technologii ‘direct-to-disc’, zapewniającej wyjątkowe doznania brzmieniowe, szczególnie istotne w repertuarze koncertowym. Hilary to pierwsza współczesna artystka Deutsche Grammophon, której album nagrany jest za pomocą tej technologii. Poprzednio krążki rejestrowane tą metodą ukazywały się podczas złotej ery płyty gramofonowej. Tracklista: CD 1 1.-3. Violin Sonata in G minor K 379, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) I Adagio II Allegro III Tema. Andante cantabile – Var. I–V – Tema. Allegretto 4. Blue Curve of the Earth, Tina Davidson (1952) 5. Mercy, Max Richter (1966) 6. Double Concerto for 2 Violins, Strings and Continuo in D major BWV 1043, J. S. Bach (1685–1750) - ii Largo ma non tanto 7. The Lark Ascending, Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958) 8. Sonata for Violin and Piano in A major K 526, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) - iii Presto 9. Violin Concerto No. 1 in D major op. 6, Niccolò Paganini (1782–1840) - iii Rondo CD 2 1 Violin Concerto op. 36, Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951) - i Poco Allegro 2. St Matthew Passion, J. S. Bach (1685–1750) - ii Aria: Gebt mir meinen Jesum wieder 3. Violin Concerto (Dedicated to Hilary Hahn), Jennifer Higdon (1962) I 1726 4. Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1, Charles Ives (1874–1954) - i Andante – Allegro vivace 5. Godot, Hahn & Hauschka 6. When A Tiger Meets A Rosa Rugosa, Du Yun (1977) 7. Two Voices, Nico Muhly (1981) 8. Violin Concerto No. 4 in D minor op. 31, Henri Vieuxtemps (1820–1881) - ii Adagio religioso


  • Wykonawca Hahn Hilary
  • Data premiery 2018-01-19
  • Nośnik CD
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