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Album prezentujący najlepsze nagrania Bryna Terfla, w specjalnej cenie!CD 1James P. Carrell (1787–1854) /David S. Clayton (1801–1854)1. Amazing Grace (John Newton)arr. by Chris HazellLondon Symphony Orchestra · Barry WordsworthAmerican Traditional2. Shenandoaharr. by Chris HazellNeil Martin pipes · London Symphony Orchestra · Barry WordsworthRalph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958)3. The Vagabond4. Whither Must I Wander?from Songs of Travel (Robert Louis Stevenson)Malcolm Martineau pianoJohn Ireland (1879–1962)5. Sea Fever (John Masefield)Malcolm Martineau pianoWolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)6. Le nozze di Figaro: Non più andrai, farfallone amoroso (FigaroThe English Baroque Soloists · John Eliot Gardiner · Live recordingCosì fan tutte7. Passeggiamo anche noi −                                                        8. Il core vi dono, bell’idolo mio (Guglielmo, Dorabella)                         Cecilia Bartoli mezzo-soprano · John Fisher harpsichordOrchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia · Myung-Whun Chung9. Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute): Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen (Papageno) 4:12Duncan Williams keyed glockenspielScottish Chamber Orchestra · Sir Charles Mackerras10. Io ti lascio, o cara, addio Concert Aria K. Anh. 245 (621a)(possibly composed in collaboration with Gottfried von Jacquin)Scottish Chamber Orchestra · Sir Charles MackerrasFranz Schubert (1797–1828)11. Erlkönig D 328 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)                                     12. Du bist die Ruh’ D 776 (Friedrich Rückert)                                      13. Der Musensohn D 764 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)Malcolm Martineau pianoFrederick Loewe (1901–1988) / Alan Jay Lerner (1918–1986)14. Little Prince (arr. by James Holmes)from The Little Prince15. They Call the Wind Mariafrom Paint Your WagonChorus of Opera North · Martin Fitzpatrick chorus masterEnglish Northern Philharmonia · Paul DanielRichard Rodgers (1902–1979) / Oscar Hammerstein II (1895–1960)16. Come Homefrom AllegroEnglish Northern Philharmonia · Paul DanielWelsh Traditionals17. Ar Hyd Y Nos (John Ceiriog Hughes)(All Through the Night)arr. by Chris Hazell18. Suo-Gân (Robert Bryan)arr. by Chris HazellThe Black Mountain Chorus · Mike Evans directorRisca Male Choir · Martin Hodson directorThe Orchestra of Welsh National Opera · Gareth JonesJohn Hughes (1873–1932)19.  Cwm Rhondda (William Williams, Ann Griffiths)arr. by Chris HazellThe Black Mountain Chorus · Mike Evans directorRisca Male Choir · Martin Hodson director The Orchestra of Welsh National Opera · Gareth JonesCD 2                                                                                   George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)1. Berenice: Sì, tra i ceppi e le ritorte (Demetrius)2. Dettingen Te Deum: Vouchsafe, O LordScottish Chamber Orchestra · Sir Charles MackerrasFelix Mendelssohn (1809–1847)3. Elijah: Lord God of Abraham, Isaac and Israel (Elijah)Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment · Paul DanielRalph Vaughan Williams4. Silent Noonfrom The House of Life (Dante Gabriel Rossetti)Malcolm Martineau piano


  • Wykonawca Terfel Bryn
  • Data premiery 2012-06-26
  • Nośnik CD
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Steven Mead – Euphonium. (1-3) Łukasz Długosz – Flute. (8-12) Aleksandra Gajecka Antosiewicz – Harpsichord. (4-7) Marek Moś – Conductor (13) Robert Kabara – Conductor (1-12) Aukso – Chamber Orchestra Of The City Of Tychy (13) The Silesian Chamber Orchestra (1-12)  Tracklista: Euphory Concerto For Euphonium And String Orchestra 1. Andante [5:05] 2. Allegretto Con Umore [3:09] 3. Presto Con Fermezza [3:46]   Silver Concerto For Harpsichord, String Orchestra And Sounds Of The Historic Silver Mine 4. Andante Armonioso [3:30] 5. Presto [4:25] 6. Andante Armonioso [5:41] 7. Allegro Con Bravura [4:04] Encore Concerto For Flute And String Orchestra 8. Presto Con Bravura [4:11] 9. Andante Con Armonico [6:38] 10. Allegro Con Forza  [1:49] 11. Adagio Maestoso [6:08] 12. Allegro Con Umore [4:08] 13. Industrial Sinfonia For String Orchestra And Multimedia [15:29]


  • Wykonawca Silesian Chamber Orchestra , Długosz Łukasz
  • Data premiery 2020-03-23
  • Nośnik CD
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Limitowany, 60-płytowy zestaw, zawierający wszystkie operowe nagrania, których Claudio Abbado dokonał dla Deutsche Grammophon: - 20 kompletnych oper, wybór arii, uwertur oraz dwa recitale galowe - nagrania w wykonaniu orkiestr, z którymi Abbado łączyła bliska współpraca: Orchestra Mozart, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, London Symphony Orchestra, Berliner Philharmoniker, Wiener Philharmoniker, Mahler Chamber Orchestra oraz Lucerne Festival Orchestra - słowo wstępne autorstwa Jamesa Jolly’ego (redaktora naczelnego magazynu Gramophone) Współpraca Claudio Abbado z Deutsche Grammophon rozpoczęła się blisko 50 lat temu. W ciągu ponad 4 dekad włoski mistrz dokonał niezliczonej ilości nagrań, których maestria wciąż pozostaje niedościgniona. Abbado inspirował. Grając z nim muzycy wznosili się na wyżyny swoich umiejętności, co zaowocowało wieloma ponadczasowymi albumami. Abbado był bez wątpienia jednym z najwybitniejszych dyrygentów symfonicznych XX wieku. Był też człowiekiem teatru, a opera zajmowała centralne miejsce w jego sercu. Włoch w szczególności umiłował sobie dorobek trzech kompozytorów: Mozarta, Rossiniego oraz Verdiego. Słuchając oper dyrygowanych przez Abbado czuje się, że ich bohaterowie są prawdziwi i przemyślani w każdym, najdrobniejszym szczególe. Batutą Abbado kieruje miłość do muzyki, a także niezrównane wyczucie dramatyzmu chwili. Box Claudio Abbado The Opera Edition jest świadectwem geniuszu, a zarazem wspomnieniem niezrównanego artysty.


  • Wykonawca Abbado Claudio
  • Data premiery 2017-10-13
  • Nośnik CD

Rosyjscy kompozytorzy wnieśli wielki wkład w rozwój muzyki na wiolonczelę i orkiestrę. Na płycie znajdujemy wspaniałe przykłady takich utworów skomponowane przez XIX-wiecznych twórców - Piotra Czajkowskiego, Mikołaja Rimskiego-Korsakowa i Aleksandra Głazunowa. Wykonawcy to Li-Wei Qin - wiolonczela oraz Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice pod dyrekcją Michaela Halásza.


  • Wykonawca Halasz Michael
  • Data premiery 2019-01-18
  • Nośnik CD
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Ludwig van Beethoven jest jednym z najważniejszych herosów muzycznych. Jako kompozytor był prekursorem, niekiedy rewolucjonistą. Jako człowiek triumfował nad głuchotą, a owocem tego jest imponująca ilość arcydzieł. Przez minione dwa stulecia jego kompozycje zachwycały, zaskakiwały, zadziwiały i poruszały słuchaczy. Na trzech winylach znalazł się wybór najwspanialszych przejawów jego wszechstronnego geniuszu - od heroicznych  do intymnych.     Tracklista: LP 1 Side A Symphony No.5 in C minor Op.67 1. I. Allegro con brio 7.23 Chamber Orchestra of Europe / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Recorded: 29.VI.1990 (LIVE), Stefaniensaal, Graz 2. Coriolan Overture Op.62 8.02 Philharmonia Orchestra / Otto Klemperer Recorded: 21.X.1957, Kingsway Hall, London Piano Concerto No.5 in E-flat Op.73 “Emperor” I. Allegro (excerpts) 3. opening 4.58 4. conclusion 1.51 András Schiff piano Staatskapelle Dresden / Bernard Haitink Recorded: 1996, Lukaskirche, Dresden 5. “Für Elise” in A minor WoO 59 2.43 Rudolf Buchbinder piano Recorded: 1977, TELDEC-Studio, Berlin Side B Piano Sonata No.8 in C minor Op.13 “Pathétique” 1. II. Adagio cantabile 5.33 Stephen Kovacevich piano Recorded: V.1997, Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London Symphony No.9 in D minor Op.125 “Choral” 2. IV. Finale (excerpt: Presto – Allegro assai “Ode to Joy”) 7.01 Charlotte Margiono soprano · Birgit Remmert mezzo-soprano Rudolf Schasching tenor · Robert Holl bass Arnold Schoenberg Chor chorus master Erwin Ortner Chamber Orchestra of Europe / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Recorded: 21.VI.1991 (LIVE), Stefaniensaal, Graz Symphony No.6 in F Op.68 “Pastoral” 3. I. Allegro ma non troppo 13.22 Chamber Orchestra of Europe / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Recorded: 1.VII.1990 (LIVE), Stefaniensaal, Graz LP 2 Side C Symphony No.7 in A Op.92 1. II. Allegretto 8.11 2. IV. Allegro con brio 8.19 Chamber Orchestra of Europe / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Recorded: 5.VII.1990 (LIVE), Stefaniensaal, Graz Symphony No.3 in E-flat Op.55 “Eroica” 3. II. Marcia funebre: Adagio assai (excerpt) 4.23 Chamber Orchestra of Europe / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Recorded: 3.VII.1990 (LIVE), Stefaniensaal, Graz Mass in D Op.123 “Missa solemnis” 4. II. Gloria in excelsis Deo 5.25 Elisabeth Söderström soprano · Marga Höffgen contralto Waldemar Kmentt tenor · Martti Talvela bass New Philharmonia Chorus chorus master Wilhelm Pitz New Philharmonia Orchestra / Otto Klemperer Recorded: 30.IX & 1, 4–8, 11–13.X.1965, Kingsway Hall, London Side D Piano Sonata No.14 in C-sharp minor Op.27 No.2 “Moonlight” 1. I. Adagio sostenuto 6.35 2. III. Presto 7.06 Stephen Kovacevich piano Recorded: XII.1999, Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London Violin Sonata No.5 in F Op.24 “Spring” 3. III. Scherzo: Allegro molto 1.08 Renaud Capuçon violin · Frank Braley piano Recorded: 16–20.IX.2009. L’Heure Bleue, Salle de Musique, La-Chaux-de-Fonds String Quartet No.7 in F Op.59 No.1 “Razumovsky” 4. I. Allegro 9.50 Artemis Quartet Heime Müller violin I · Natalia Prishepenko violin II Volker Jacobsen viola · Eckart Runge cello Recorded: 23–26.VI. & 2–3.VII.2005, Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin    


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2020-02-21
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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Sony Classical ma zaszczyt zaprezentować bezprecedensowy wybór nagrań jednego z najwybitniejszych kompozytorów i dyrygentów XX wieku Igora Strawińskiego. 3 płytowy zestaw nagrań dzieł Strawińskiego pod batuta kompozytora wydany został w ramach Sony Classical Master Series.Tracklista:CD 1 1. Symphony In Three Movements / I. Overture - Allegro2. Symphony In Three Movements / II. Andante - Interlude: L'istesso tempo3. Symphony In Three Movements / III. Con Moto4. Symphony In C / I. Moderato alla breve5. Symphony In C / II. Larghetto concertante6. Symphony In C / III. Allegretto7. Symphony In C / IV. Largo - Tempo giusto, alla breve8. Symphony Of Psalms / Part I9. Symphony Of Psalms / Part II10. Symphony Of Psalms / Part IIICD 2 1. Symphony In E-Flat Major, Op.1 / I. Allegro moderato2. Symphony In E-Flat Major, Op.1 / II. Scherzo - Allegretto3. Symphony In E-Flat Major, Op.1 / III. Largo4. Symphony In E-Flat Major, Op.1 / IV. FInale - Allegro molto5. Concerto In E-Flat For Chamber Orchestra Dumbarton Oaks / I. Tempo giusto6. Concerto In E-Flat For Chamber Orchestra Dumbarton Oaks / II. Allegretto7. Concerto In E-Flat For Chamber Orchestra Dumbarton Oaks / III. Con moto8. Concerto en Re (pour orchestre a cordes) Basle Concerto / I. Vivace9. Concerto en Re (pour orchestre a cordes) Basle Concerto / II. Arioso - AndantIno10. Concerto en Re (pour orchestre a cordes) Basle Concerto / III. Rondo - Allegro11. Ebony Concerto / I. Allegro moderato12. Ebony Concerto / II. Andante13. Ebony Concerto / III. Moderato - con motoCD 3 1. Concerto For Piano And WInd Instruments (Revised version, 1950) / I. Largo - Allegro - Maestoso2. Concerto For Piano And WInd Instruments (Revised version, 1950) / II. Largo3. Concerto For Piano And WInd Instruments (Revised version, 1950) / III. Allegro4. Movements For Piano And Orchestra / I. Eighth Note = 110 - Igor StravInsky / Charles Rosen5. Movements For Piano And Orchestra / II. Quarter Note = 52 - Igor StravInsky / Charles Rosen6. Movements For Piano And Orchestra / III. Eighth Note = 72 - Igor StravInsky / Charles Rosen7. Movements For Piano And Orchestra / IV. Eighth Note = 80 - Igor StravInsky / Charles Rosen8. Movements For Piano And Orchestra / V. Eighth Note = 104 - Igor StravInsky / Charles Rosen9. Capriccio For Piano And Orchestra / I. Presto - Philippe Entremont10. Capriccio For Piano And Orchestra / II. Andante rapsodico - Philippe Entremont11. Capriccio For Piano And Orchestra / III. Allegro capriccioso ma tempo guisto - Philippe Entremont12. Concerto In D Major For Violin And Orchestra / I. Toccata - Igor StravInsky / Isaac Stern13. Concerto In D Major For Violin And Orchestra / II. Aria I - Igor StravInsky / Isaac Stern14. Concerto In D Major For Violin And Orchestra / III. Aria II - Igor StravInsky / Isaac Stern15. Concerto In D Major For Violin And Orchestra / IV. Cappricio


  • Wykonawca Stravinsky Igor
  • Data premiery 2015-10-30
  • Nośnik CD

Richard Strauss’s last stage work is something of a curiosity. It has no action, no development, almost no plot, and none of the intricate characterization of the earlier operas. Capriccio is described as a ‘conversation piece for music in one act’. It was something of a self-indulgence for the ageing Strauss—a long consideration of the relative merit of words and music, a subject to which composers since Monteverdi had given much time and thought. Capriccio was written during 1940/41, to a libretto by Strauss’s friend the conductor Clemens Krauss, and first performed in Munich in October 1942, though the Sextet had been given privately some months before.Strauss devises a play-within-a-play and sets the opera in a pre-Revolution French château. At the start, the Sextet is heard off-stage: it opens a concert devised by the composer Flamand for the birthday of the Countess Madeleine. Flamand and the poet Olivier respectively personify music and poetry; both seek the approval and love of the Countess and both watch for her reaction to this pure music.As an independent piece, the Sextet is a welcome supplement to the meagre string sextet repertoire; by using two violins, two violas and two cellos Strauss acknowledges the Sextets of Brahms, whose chamber music he had loved since his student days. The thematic material of this prelude is later recalled in an orchestral interlude before the final scene, and again as the countess confronts her own reflection in a mirror and concludes that there is no answer to her questions and musings, and that words and music have equal merit.A glance through the catalogue of the works of Anton Bruckner reminds us of his musical upbringing and environment: choral conductor, organist, then—having heard the music of Wagner—symphonist. His early works include music for military band and for orchestra, though their harmonic conception is firmly rooted in the organ loft. Of his very few pieces of chamber music, an early string quartet was written as a student exercise for a cellist with the Linz Municipal Theatre from whom Bruckner had taken lessons in composition. It remained undiscovered until long after the composer’s death. Some time after its composition, the violinist Joseph Hellmesberger asked Bruckner to write a work for his string quartet. It was not until seventeen years later that Bruckner planned a string quintet using Mozart’s scheme of quartet with an extra viola.The Quintet was begun in December 1878, shortly after revisions to the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies. Bruckner was fifty-four. It was finished in July 1879 and shown to Hellmesberger. He was ‘not impressed’ with the Scherzo and refused to play the work, saying it was too difficult. Bruckner, ever compliant and anxious to please, wrote an Intermezzo which was completed several months later. The first performances were given without the Finale—in Cologne in December 1879 by the Heckmann Quartet, and by the Winkler Quartet in Vienna the following November. The Winkler Quartet was led by Josef Schalk and the second viola was played by his brother Franz, who (though a friend and admirer of Bruckner) was later to wreak such havoc on the Fifth Symphony by making inartistic cuts and adding music of his own. In May 1883 the Winkler Quartet gave the first complete performance with the original Scherzo and the Finale. Hellmesberger’s quartet finally played it (Scherzo and all) in May 1885.What of the Quintet’s subsequent history? It was published in 1884 by Albert Gutmann and dedicated to Duke Max Emanuel of Bavaria. The Duke sent a diamond tie-pin in return; Bruckner received nothing from his publisher. The Quintet had over twenty public performances in Bruckner’s lifetime, and though it remains something of a curiosity in his total output it has a respectable reputation in the chamber repertoire and is unfamiliar to audiences merely because of its scoring and relatively unspectacular part-writing.The first movement is arguably the most appropriate to the chamber music medium. It has the ‘feel’ of a chamber work, with intricate, leaping counterpoint and chromatic figures that would be lost in an orchestral texture. There are three distinct thematic strands—a broad melody heard at the outset, a dotted figure which is passed between various instruments, and a soft curving melody. Short rhythmic motifs abound in the exposition, which ends quietly after a climax in F sharp; the development uses several of these short figures and the movement ends firmly in F major.The Scherzo has been described as both grotesque and endearing. Its jaunty D minor theme has the pulse of a country dance, though the modulations and wide leaps are redolent of a more intimate, sophisticated medium than that of the village band. The lyrical Trio is in E flat; it has a slower pulse, with a distinctive pizzicato accompaniment that recalls more symphonic writing.It is difficult to see why Hellmesberger found this movement unacceptable—his players must have known the quartets of Beethoven, some of which have part-writing which is as technically and musically demanding as Bruckner’s Scherzo. A more likely reason for his antipathy to the work was his unwillingness to show public approval of Bruckner’s work which, privately, he admired.The sublime Adagio is in G flat and forms the emotional centre of the whole work. Its effect is as profound as any of Beethoven’s late quartets or Bruckner’s own symphonic slow movements, and it is conceived on a similar scale. Indeed, the movement might easily be mistaken for a transcription of a symphonic slow movement, so confident is the handling of thematic material. There are three distinct episodes, and the movement ends in a mood of great peace and serenity.In the Finale the string players battle with over-adventurous counterpoint and an orchestral texture. Bruckner appears to be writing a towering symphonic movement for solo strings, and the effect can easily sound strained and unconvincing. The movement begins in F minor with a second subject in E major, and a fugato development incorporates short motifs from the main thematic material. The recapitulation shows masterly use of the richness of the middle-heavy ensemble, and the Quintet ends briskly and sonorously in F major.The Intermezzo has the same trio as the Scherzo which it originally replaced, and its genial directness conveys the mood of the Austrian Ländler. It has been even more neglected than the Quintet and there is no record of a public performance before 1904.John Mayhew © 1994


  • Wykonawca The Raphael Ensemble
  • Data premiery 2011-02-01
  • Nośnik CD
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