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Tracklista: CD 1 1. Stormy Monday 2. Worried Life Blues 3. Early in the Morning 4. Have You Ever Loved a Woman 5. Wonderful Tonight 6. Kind Hearted Woman 7. Double Trouble 8. Driftin' Blue 9. Crossroads 10. Further On Up the Road 11. County Jail Blues 12. Floating Bridge 13. Blow Wind Blow 14. To Make Somebody Happy 15. Before You Accuse Me CD 2 1. Before You Accuse Me 2. Mean Old World 3. Ain't That Loving You 4. The Sky Is Crying 5. Cryin' 6. Have You Ever Loved a Woman 7. Alberta 8. Early in the Morning 9. Give Me Strength 10. Meet Me


  • Wykonawca Clapton Eric
  • Data premiery 1999-06-28
  • Nośnik CD
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1. America2. My Love of This Land3. Stay One Jump Ahead4. Unto the Ends of the Earth5. The Calling6. Obsession7. Tiahuanaco8. Outside the Gate9. May Day10. My Love of This Land (Early Version)11. Obsession (Early Version)12. Unto the Ends of the Earth (Instrumental Version)13. Jihad (Single B - Side)14. America (Extended Mix)15. Stay One Jump Ahead (Dub)


  • Wykonawca Killing Joke
  • Data premiery 2008-01-28
  • Nośnik CD
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The piano trio gained popularity in the second half of the 18th century with the introduction of the pianoforte. The new instrument, more expressive than its predecessors, thrilled musicians and fans alike. Composers rushed to create works showcasing its possibilities resulting in the creation of chamber music intended for performance within the family or among friends. Mozart composed half a dozen works for the new ensemble throughout his career. An early attempt, the Divertimento K. 254 from 1776, might be considered a sonata for accompanied piano, the violin conversing with the pianist’s right hand and the cello supporting the left. Later works however show the composer breaking away from the conventional dictates of sonata form, introducing broader formal dimensions and dramatic elements: a richly ornamented cantilena here (in the Trio K. 502), a contrasting theme with Bohemian accents there (in the Trio K. 542 finale), or taking us into the operatic universe of Le Nozze di Figaro (Trio K. 548). If Beethoven’s Op.1 trios demonstrate a young musician still influenced by Haydn’s teachings, then the trios of Op. 70 are doubly impressive for the skill with which the musician from Bonn transcends these lessons in works imbued with theatricality (“Ghost” Trio), and subtlety of emotion (Op. 70, No. 2). The “Archduke” Trio, composed just three years later, is a true masterpiece. Featuring a particularly dense structure in which the chords become interior voices, the “Archduke” Trio succeeds in establishing an expressive balance and dialogue between the piano and strings. Schubert waited until the last year of his short life to offer two highlights of the piano trio repertoire: No. 1 in B-flat major, D. 898 and No. 2 in E-flat major, D. 929. His only other works for the form are Sonatensatz D. 28, a graceful work he wrote while studying with Salieri, and a late Notturno of troubling beauty, D. 897, probably a discarded slow movement from his Trio D. 898. Along with his authoritative String Octet Op. 20, Mendelssohn’s two trios with piano represent a summary of his chamber music production. A mature work, the Trio in D Minor balances dense contrapuntal passages with subtle instrumental textures, imbuing the piece with light, finesse, expressivity, and a certain mischief reminiscent of his A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Six years later, his Trio in C Minor marks another major achievement in the trio repertoire. The slow movement evokes the most sublime Songs Without Words, while the Finale is positively orchestral, with the pianist abandoning the role of accompanist to become orator. Shostakovich wrote music for the genre just twice. In the Trio Op. 9 one can hear the both enthusiasm of a student at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, and the very foundations of the composer’s characteristic language - a juxtaposition of anxiety and humour not lacking in romanticism. Written 21 years later, in 1944, his Op. 67 wavers between austerity, fluidity, latent sadness and borrowings from Jewish folklore (a subtle reference to the horror of the Nazi death camps of Treblinka), as the immediately preceding years had deposited their weight of pain. Any decision to record the complete works of a single composer holds particular interest for performers. Especially when these works encompass the whole of an artist’s career, they allow the listener to trace a striking portrait of the evolution of the composer’s language. The works recorded here by the Gryphon Trio are snapshots of the composer’s lives. They invite us to join them on an interior journey. Juxtaposed with the early works, the mature works speak to us in a new way: exciting in the listener a desire to understand more deeply musical evolution of their creators. © Lucie Renaud Translation : Annie P. Prothin


  • Wykonawca Gryphon Trio
  • Data premiery 2012-11-01
  • Nośnik CD
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1. Pieces (3) for orchestra, Op. 6 19:482. Lyric Suite, for orchestra (arr. from Nos.2-4 of string quartet version) 16:313. Violin Concerto 27:434. Chamber Concerto, for piano, violin, and 13 wind instruments 30:055. Piano Sonata, Op. 1 11:366. Pieces (4) for clarinet and piano, Op. 5 7:497. Adagio, for clarinet, violin & piano (arr. of 2nd mvt. of "Chamber Concerto") 12:308. Wein, Weib und Gesang (Wine, Women and Song), waltz for orchestra (with voice ad lib), Op. 333 (RV 333) 13:119. Lyric Suite, for string quartet 27:0410. String Quartet, Op. 3 18:4611. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 1. Nacht 4:3512. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 2. Schilflied 2:1813. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 3. Die Nachtigall 2:1914. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 4. Traumgekrönt 2:3315. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 5. Im Zimmer 1:0116. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 6. Liebesode 1:5317. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 7. Sommertage 1:4718. Schliesse mir die Augen beide (2 settings), song for voice & piano 1:1919. An Leukon, song for voice & piano (from "Jugenlieder") 1:3220. Schliesse mir die Augen beide (2 settings), song for voice & piano 1:4721. Songs (4) for voice & piano, Op. 2 8:5422. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 1. Nacht 4:1023. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 2. Schilflied 2:2324. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 3. Die Nachtigall 2:1525. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 4. Traumgekrönt 2:4226. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 5. Im Zimmer 1:1027. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 6. Liebesode 2:0028. Early Songs (7), for voice & piano: 7. Sommertage 1:4629. Altenberg Lieder, collection of 5 songs for voice & orchestra, Op. 4 11:1030. Der Wein, concert aria for soprano & orchestra 13:0531. Lulu, suite (from the opera), for soprano & orchestra 32:1632. Lulu, opera 2:51:0133. Wozzeck, opera, Op. 7 1:29:23


  • Wykonawca Boulez Pierre
  • Data premiery 2003-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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The music of Josef Suk, pupil of Dvorak and married to the elder composer’s daughter, is only now beginning to be recognized for its true worth. Presented here are three relatively early works, brimming with youthful enthusiasm but already showing considerable individuality, a highly developed approach to structure, and, occasionally, a touch of the melancholy introspection which was to inform many of the composer’s later works. A talented violinist, Suk lends to his chamber compositions a true understanding of the genre, while his thoroughly ‘Czech’ musical upbringing ensures strong representation for the folk and dance influences to be found in the music of many of his contemporaries.As our understanding of the tradition of Czech music expands both forward and backward from the national revival of the nineteenth century, it is informed by a great diversity of riches. Janácek and Martinu are now well established in the international repertoire, while the Czech composers of the eighteenth century are seen as an important part of the context in which Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven worked. In all of this, the presence of Josef Suk has not loomed large, but is now beginning to come much more to the fore.The facts of Suk’s life are well known. Like many contemporary Czech musicians, he was initially tutored by his family in a musically literate setting; compositional success arrived at an early stage during studies at the Prague Conservatory. A favourite pupil of Czech music’s greatest luminary, Antonín Dvorák, he joined that august composer’s family when he married Dvorák’s daughter Otilie in 1898. A talented violinist, he became a founder-member of one of Europe’s most important string quartets, the Czech Quartet, and over the years was seen as a senior figure in Czech music and a mentor for many, including Martinu.Although Suk, given his similar educational background and sensibility as both string player and performer, might seem the ideal successor to Dvorák, there are many differences between the two. Unlike Dvorák, Suk did not compose operas and despite a tendency among commentators to see his music in a line of descent from the older composer, their musical languages were quite different; one of the great qualities of Dvorák’s teaching is that he ensured his pupils were no mere imitators. Even in Suk’s early works there is considerable individuality and a highly developed approach to structure. There is also a tendency towards expressive melancholy perceptible well before the dual tragedies of Dvorák’s death and that of Otilie, in 1904 and 1905 respectively. This watershed experience turned introspection into an eloquence found in the symphony Asrael (1905–6) and subsequent orchestral works that, once discovered, speak to an audience with a force comparable to that of Mahler.Many of these qualities are already evident in the Piano Quintet in G minor Op 8; although it was published in 1915 it was, in fact, composed in 1893, relatively early in Suk’s career. Another strand is also apparent in the Quintet: it is dedicated to Brahms, an old friend of Dvorák, who had already given Suk advice and encouragement. The influence of the German composer can be felt in the rhetoric of certain passages, notably in the first movement. But the Quintet is far from being a compendium of youthful enthusiasms for the work of more venerable composers; many aspects of the melodic style, in particular, are typical of Suk throughout his career.The Quintet’s first movement opens in robust fashion with vigorous motion in all parts and soaring lines for viola and cello. Throughout this bracing movement the impetus rarely flags, although there are moments of repose; the last of these is in an extended passage based around G major. This leads into a bouncy coda which, just before the major-key close, broadens out into a grand final peroration. The Adagio lives up to its secondary marking, Religioso, with an inspiring chant-like opening in which chords for the strings alternate with sweeping arpeggios for the piano. The cello leads the melodic material of a central section which results in a remarkably ardent climax.An airy pentatonic theme, a common feature in Czech music since the early days of Smetana and Dvorák, introduces an extended scherzo which, while embracing counterpoint and energetic development, provides an aspiring, almost bardic theme for the viola. Unsurprisingly, there is a passing homage to Dvorák’s great A major Piano Quintet in the trio, but Suk’s youthful adventurousness takes his attractively harmonized main theme in unexpected directions before the return of the scherzo. Dvorák’s Quintet seems to be a presence again in the a tempo introduction to the finale, perhaps also in the fugato passage in the development. But Suk’s individuality is evident at many stages, not least in some piquant harmony and the inventive transformation of the main theme of the first movement, which provides much of the finale’s material.The Four Pieces for violin and piano Op 17 were composed in the spring of 1900 and dedicated to Karel Hoffmann, a fellow violinist in the Czech Quartet. The structure of these movements is simple, but their wide-ranging rhetoric proclaims a clearly sophisticated compositional temperament. The first movement, beginning with near-Impressionist colouring, also embraces extravagant romantic gestures in its central section. There is a hint of the national accent in the emphatic cross-rhythms which characterize the outer sections of the Appassionato second movement; these frame a passage of rapt lyricism entirely typical of Suk’s early maturity. This tendency is echoed in the intense opening of the third movement, although once again Suk, somewhat in the manner of alternation favoured by Dvorák in his Dumka movements, mingles seriousness with a brisker style of writing owing something to the Polka. The finale adopts the manner of a perpetuum mobile, drawing in a pastiche of the Classical manner amid the instrumental pyrotechnics.Suk’s three-movement Piano Quartet in A minor is his Op 1 and was dedicated, appropriately enough, to his teacher Dvorák. Composed in the early 1890s, it is no surprise that it was taken up by the Prague publisher Urbánek, since it is brimming with character and confidence. The very opening idea of the first movement, which looks forward to that of the Piano Quintet, is both striking and original. Equally effective is the writing for the instruments, particularly in the lead-up to the movement’s secondary material. A wide-ranging and challenging development shows the young Suk to be completely in command of his ideas. Inevitably there are hints of his teacher’s style, but there is much that is entirely characteristic of Suk, including a tendency toward introspection, even in the outwardly confident opening Allegro appassionato. The slow movement, led off by the cello and piano, has a nocturne-like quality; an expressive central section, marked to be played a little quicker, has something of the ardent, fairy-tale atmosphere Suk later brought to his music for the play Radúz and Mahulena. The last movement combines the characteristics of scherzo and finale. A bold, march-like opening idea introduces a number of episodes, some gently yearning in manner, before an ebullient close.


  • Wykonawca The Nash Ensemble
  • Data premiery 2012-07-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. I've Come Too Far With You (To Turn Back Now)2. How Can You Lose Something You Never Had3. Mama Was a Bad Seed4. You Better Keep What You Got5. I Can Feel My Love Comin' Down6. For That Man of Mine7. It's Nice to Know8. That Hurts9. Willow Weep for Me12. A Woman's Way13. Who You Gonna Love (Your Woman Or Your Wife)14. Holding the Losing Hand15. Chained and Bound16. Can't You Just See Me18. To Love Somebody19. (I Like Making That) Early Morning Love20. It's Been So Nice21. How Can You Lose What You Never Had22. I Can Feel My Love Comin' Down23. I've Come Too Far With You (To Turn Back Now)10. Understand My Man11. Mine Was Real


  • Wykonawca Rozetta Johnson
  • Data premiery 2016-10-28
  • Nośnik Audio-CD
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Tracklista: CD 1 1. Bad Dreams Blues 2. Sad And Disappointed Jill 3. Indian Giver 4. Too Tight Mama 5. Little Miss Muffet 6. Don't Try To Fool Me 7. Gabbin' Blues 8. Rain Down Rain 9. Way Back Home 10. Just Want Your Love 11. Send For Me 12. Jinny Mule 13. Maybelle's Blues 14. My Country Man 15. I've Got A Feelin' 16. You'll Never Know 17. My Big Mistake 18. I'm Gettin' 'Long Alright 19. Ain't No Use 20. Don't Leave Poor Me 21. One Monkey Don't Stop No Show 22. Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On 23. Such A Cutie 24. The Other Night 25. New Kind Of Mambo 26. Candy CD 2 1. That's A Pretty Good Love 2. Tell Me Who 3. Mean To Me 4. I Don't Want To Cry 5. All Of Me 6. Rock House 7. Jim 8. Ring Dang Dilly 9. So Long 10. Blues Early, Early (Parts 1 & 2) 11. Silent Night 12. White Christmas 13. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home 14. Say It Isn't So 15. A Good Man Is Hard To Find 16. Pitiful 17. Some Of These Days 18. I Understand 19. I Got It Bad 20. Until The Real Thing Comes Along 21. I Ain't Got Nobody 22. Goin' Home Baby 23. There I've Said It Again 24. Ramblin' Blues 25. Stay As Sweet As You Are 26. If I Could Be With You 27. I Could Make You Care


  • Wykonawca Big Maybelle
  • Data premiery 2016-05-06
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Woke Up Clipped2. After You've Gone3. Sleep4. Linger Awhile5. Memories Of You6. Just A Riff7. Blue Skies8. Kat's Fur9. I Surrender Dear10. Rug Cutter's Swing11. Tea For Two12. Early Session Hop13. Cadillac Slim14. Mobile Baby15. Linger Awhile


  • Wykonawca Webster Ben
  • Data premiery 2002-11-09
  • Nośnik CD
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Since its foundation at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis (Basel, Switzerland) and international debut in 2000, LA MORRA has been performing late Medieval and early Renaissance music in prestigious festivals such as the Belgian Festival van Vlaanderen, the Dutch Holland Early Music Festival and Netwerk Oude Muziek, the Swiss Freunde Alter Musik in Basel, the French Rencontres de Musique Médiévale du Thoronet, the North-Italian Il Canto delle Pietre, and has given concerts in numerous other early music events across Europe.The ensemble's debut CD »Le Jardin de Plaisance« (Raumklang), which opened the new recording series from the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in 2003, was warmly welcomed by the international press, as were two following recordings released in 2005, »Dame de Deuil« (Et'Cetera) and »Ex Libris Doctoris Amerbachii« (Musiques Suisses). The present recording marks the beginning of the ensemble's cooperation with the Ramée label.


  • Wykonawca La Morra
  • Data premiery 2013-03-02
  • Nośnik CD
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