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Tracklista: CD 1, 2 & 3 1. Harpsichord Music by the Young J. S. Bach CD 4 1. Toccatas CD 5 1. Concerto, Fantasia & Fugue – Keyboard Works from the Weimar Period CD 6 1. Inventions and Sinfonias CD 7 & 8 1. Bach as Teacher – Keyboard Works from the Cöthen Period CD 9 1. Zweyter Theil der Clavier Übung CD 10 1. Works for the Lute Harpsichord CD 11 & 12 1. Original and Transcription CD 13 & 14 1. Concerti – Arrangements of Various Other Composers Works CD 15 & 16 1. Goldberg Variations CD 17 & 18 1. English Suites CD 19 & 20 1. French Suites CD 21 & 22 1. Six Partitas CD 23, 24, 25, 26 1. The Well-Tempered Clavier


  • Wykonawca Levin Robert , Pinnock Trevor , Hill Robert , Watchorn Peter , Aldwell Edward , Koroliov Evgeni
  • Data premiery 2018-02-01
  • Nośnik CD

Michel Petrucciani zmarł 6 stycznia 1999 roku. Jego śmierć pozostawiła niezapełnioną pustkę wśród entuzjastów jazzu. Nie trzeba mówić, że Michel Petrucciani był wybitnym autorem tekstów i niezwykle płodnym kompozytorem, który w swej karierze napisał ponad 140 utworów. Z okazji 20. rocznicy jego śmierci, pięciu legendarnych muzyków - Charles Lloyd, Ahmad Jamal, Marcus Miller, Lenny White i Steve Gadd - postanowiło złożyć hołd temu wybitnemu pianiście. W ten sposób przygotowano 18 kompozycji, które na potrzeby 16-stronicowej płyto-książki wybrał Pascal Anquetil. W zestawie znalazł się nigdy wcześniej niepublikowany utwór "Montelimar" z udziałem French Jazzman Eddy Louiss. Tracklista:      CD 1 1. Colors 2. Looking Up (Live) ( 2007 - Remaster) 3. Rachid (Live) 4. Hidden Joy 5. September Second (Live) 6. Brazilian Like (Live) 7. Home (Live) 8. Love Letter (Live) ( 2007 - Remaster) 9. Guadeloupe CD 2 1. Cantabile (Live) 2. Little Peace in C for U 3. Trilogy in Blois (Live) ( 2007 - Remaster) 4. Charlie Brown 5. Petite Louise 6. She Did It Again (Live) ( 2007 - Remaster) 7. Even Mice Dance 8. Romantic but not Blue (Live) ( 2007 - Remaster) 9. Montelima    


  • Wykonawca Petrucciani Michel
  • Data premiery 2019-11-01
  • Nośnik CD
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It is fair to say that David Briggs is probably the only person in the world—at least outside France—for whom, at the age of just nine, the death of Marcel Dupré was a major event. Other nine-year-olds, back in 1971, might have registered the deaths of Nikita Khruschchev and Ogden Nash, or more mainstream musicians such as Igor Stravinsky, Jim Morrison and Louis Armstrong. But the passing of one of French music’s legendary organist-improviser-composers would surely have passed every other single-digit youth by.Improvising at the keyboard—and, by association, that very special form of keyboard improvising at the console of a French electro-pneumatic organ—is in Briggs’ bloodstream. His grandfather, Lawrence Briggs, was a well-known liturgical improviser in Birmingham, where he was Organist of St Jude’s Church on Hill Street for over forty years. ‘I always loved to improvise, since I was six years old, and I remember very well the day Marcel Dupré died’, David Briggs remarks. ‘And nowadays, hearing famous improvisers like Olivier Latry, Philippe Lefebvre, Pierre Pincemaille, Jean Guillou and Daniel Roth is a source of endless stimulation and excitement.’In the same year as Dupré’s death, Briggs encountered another huge musical presence on the Parisian scene: Pierre Cochereau (1924–1984), Organist Titulaire at Notre-Dame Cathedral from 1955 until his death. ‘I first became addicted to Cochereau’s sound-world as a nine-year-old chorister at Birmingham Cathedral, when John Pryer (the Sub-Organist, himself a brilliant improviser) lent me an LP of the maître improvising a set of Variations on Alouette, gentille Alouette. I heard Cochereau three times at Notre-Dame in the early eighties, and each occasion was a life-changing experience.’A few years before Briggs’ own close encounters with Cochereau, Stephen Layton was also in Notre-Dame being transported by the cataclysmic blast of Cochereau’s playing. As a ten-year old chorister in Winchester Cathedral Choir, he vividly remembers Cochereau anointing their presence at High Mass with a gradually climaxing, throbbing processional. Those moments in Paris, spine-tingling and affirming, set something off for Layton too. Both he and Briggs ended up, many hundreds of hours’ organ practice later, at King’s College, Cambridge; Briggs was Organ Scholar from 1981 to 1984, Layton from 1985 to 1988 (with Richard Farnes, now Music Director at Opera North, as the link-man from 1983 to 1986).Layton, since, has focused on conducting (though he still ascends to the organ loft once in a while, always keen to improvise). Briggs, though starting out post-Cambridge in the English cathedral Kapellmeister world, now immerses himself totally in the life of a virtuoso organist-composer. And although he now lives in the USA, he may as well have a French passport. Rather like an Olympic ski champion from the United Arab Emirates, or a prize bull-fighter from the vegetarian heartlands of Totnes, Briggs has broken through robust barriers—infiltrating another culture to the point that he instinctively inhabits it. But amidst that incense-smoked air of the French liturgical organ tradition, he brings to it, significantly, the complementary riches of a very different, equally strong tradition from the other side of La Manche. How extraordinary that socio-historical events across many centuries (Reformations, Revolutions) conspired to create such different musical cultures separated by just twenty-one miles of sea. With its blend of the English liturgical choral tradition and the unique role the organ plays in French liturgy as ersatz choir, this disc is a musical Entente Cordiale indeed.To inhabit a musical world as much as Briggs does requires what he himself acknowledges as ‘addiction’. In 1984, newly arrived as Assistant Organist at Hereford Cathedral and taking lessons from Jean Langlais, he started transcribing a recording of Cochereau’s improvisations from Christmas Eve 1968. This was ‘primarily with the intent of sharpening my own aural senses, as well as examining in some detail the ravishing and generous harmonic and emotional language which was (and is) unique to Cochereau. I didn’t realize at the time that this was to be the beginning of an extended eleven-year process, on an almost daily basis. It was certainly a labour of love, and it’s not something you get quicker at—I worked out that the average time to transcribe one minute’s music was four hours.’ He should compare notes with two other kinds of musical transcribers of our time: on the one hand, the keyboardists of Progressive Rock tribute bands (notably, facsimiles of Genesis and Yes), whose ambitious, fiddly roles for Hammond organ and synthesizer have to be picked out, note by note, from original recordings; and on the other, the re-creators of film soundtracks whose original manuscripts have been lost or discarded. The most heroic of these is the conductor John Wilson, who has brought back to life several sumptuous MGM film scores in the last decade (the originals’ somewhat tragic destiny was as landfill for a Californian golf course). Like Briggs, Wilson knows how laborious this transcription process can be: he once spent four hours deciphering the pitches and orchestration of a single bar from The Wizard of Oz.The Messe pour Notre-Dame on this disc is a fusion of Cochereau transcription and Briggs’ own compositional voice. ‘About 15% is based on some wonderful Cochereau improvisations for the Feast of the Assumption in 1962’, he says. ‘I transcribed them from an unedited reel-to-reel recording made in Notre-Dame that day by Fred Tulan, a well-known American organist and great friend of Pierre. You can hear—in the ‘Domine Deus’ section of the Gloria and introductions to the Sanctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei—Cochereau’s incredible invention and ravishing harmonies. I’ve tried to make the link into my own music as imperceptible as possible, but it is for others to say if it’s successful or not!’ Additionally, this recording of the Mass intersperses four movements of David Briggs’ own improvisations—the Introït, Offertoire, Élévation and Sortie. Very much aligned with French liturgical practice, this is Briggs captured in the heat of the improvised, unedited moment—in some cases performing with suitably awestruck members of the Trinity Choir bearing witness in the organ loft.Messe pour Notre-Dame was indeed conceived specifically for the great Parisian cathedral and its mighty 1868 Cavaillé-Coll organ. The choir it was written for was an English one, however—commissioned by Neil Shepherd and the choir of Keynsham Parish Church, near Bristol, they performed it with Briggs in Notre-Dame on 28 July 2002. What a magnificent gift to that most endangered musical species of the early twenty-first century, the English Parish Church Choir.In February 2002, when the Mass was composed, Briggs’ musical home and employer was Gloucester Cathedral (though it was a period of transition, swapping roles with his Assistant Organist and Choirmaster, in preparation for his subsequent freelance existence as organist and composer). Gloucester’s organ is unique in English cathedrals, as its reeds are voiced in the French classical style. This was the result of major rebuilds of the 1660 Thomas Harris organ by Hill, Norman and Beard (1971) and Nicholson (1999). Controversial at the time, this Gallic voicing and lower, Continental European wind pressure ensured a snappy start to the note and an ‘open-vowelled’ tone. Free and brassy, with that gloriously flatulent, fairground sound at full blast, it is an instrument à la française that is uniquely apt in Britain for this recording.For Briggs, ‘composition is the same as slowed-down improvisation—it comes from exactly the same place, although of course you have the opportunity to hone and refine your thoughts’. In the same way, improvisation is composition in real time: a captured instant of creativity, and in the hands of masters—be they Cochereau, Briggs, Jimi Hendrix, Mozart impersonator Robert Levin or any jazzer you can think of—a jaw-droppingly wonderful firing of split-second impulses from brain to fingers and feet. Briggs’ improvisations on this recording—before, in the midst of and following the Mass movements, and as responses to the choral plainchant of the Te Deum—display a masterful range of mood and colour. There is delicacy, reflection and repose, alongside mighty bombast and truly gothic ‘shock and awe’ that humble an American president’s bellicose use of the words.Just as the Mass takes its lead from settings by Vierne, Widor and Langlais, immediate comparisons with Cochereau’s teacher Duruflé are tempting in the setting of Ubi caritas et amor. Briggs takes the plainchant in different directions harmonically, however, and avoids a mere refurbishment of the Duruflé setting. This a cappella motet, like the Mass, was composed for a Bristol church—Bristol City Church—and first heard too in Notre-Dame de Paris, at Grand-Messe on 30 July 2006.A few days earlier, in Devon’s Buckfast Abbey, the Exon Singers and conductor Matthew Owens performed Briggs’ setting of Psalm 121 for the first time on a BBC Radio 3 broadcast of Choral Evensong. Without the Frenchified flavours of Briggs’ organ-writing to underpin this work, I will lift up mine eyes is a more overtly English piece, very much in the Anglican mould and sans ail.Perhaps because the evening canticles are so intrinsic to that Anglican choral tradition, Briggs’ Trinity Magnificat and Nunc dimittis—even with organ accompaniment—feel closer to Dover than to Calais. With a fine sense of architecture and alternations of choral texture, this pairing is the most recent work here—composed for the forces on this recording in 2008.Briggs’ musical ocean crossing is the English Channel, but for several years now the Atlantic forms the divide between his earlier British life and his current residence in Boston, Massachusetts. The final work on this disc was composed for that remarkable island of musical Anglicanism amidst the bustling commerce of Manhattan. St Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue, sustains a fine choir of boys and men, and it was for these forces and their conductor John Scott that Briggs wrote O Lord, support us in 2005. Commissioned by the then Assistant Organist Jeremy Bruns for his wife Kathy, this setting of an exquisite evening collect from the Book of Common Prayer is a tender wash of unashamed loveliness.Meurig Bowen © 2010


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2010-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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1: I Like Chinese2: Spanish Inquisition Part 13: Cheese Shop4: Cherry Orchard5: Architect's Sketch6: Spanish Inquisition Part 27: Spam8: Spanish Inquisition Part 39: Comfy Chair10: Famous Person Quiz11: You Be The Actor12: Nudge Nudge13: Cannilbalism14: Spanish Inquisition Revisited15: I Bet You They Won't Play This Song On The Radio16: Bruces17: Bookshop18: Do Wot John19: Rock Notes20: I'm So Worried21: Crocodile22: French Taunter23: Marilyn Monroe24: Swamp Castle25: French Taunter Part 226: Last Word1: Introduction2: Constitutional Peasant3: Fish Licence4: Eric The Half-A-Bee Song5: Finland Song6: Travel Agent7: Are You Embarrassed Easily?8: Australian Table Wines9: Argument10: Henry Kissinger Song11: Parrot (Oh, Not Again)12: Sit On My Face13: Undertaker14: Novel Writing (Live From Wessex)15: String16: Bells17: Traffic Lights18: Cocktail Bar19: Four Yorkshiremen20: Election Special21: Lumberjack Song22: Untitled Track23: Untitled Track24: Untitled Track


  • Wykonawca Monty Python
  • Data premiery 1987-11-30
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: 1. Radar Tower2. 14 Packs (Feat. Smoke DZA)3. The Visitor4. On the Water (Feat. Street Wiz)5. Modena Moves (Feat. French Montana)6. Scarab 38 (Feat. Action Bronson)7. Sundown in Eleuthera8. The Count (Feat. Wiz Khalifa)


  • Wykonawca Currende , Fraud Harry
  • Data premiery 2018-08-17
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in G Major2. Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra in C Major3. Concerto in B Flat Major for Clarinet and Orchestra4. Concerto for French Horn in B Flat Major5. Concerto in E Flat Major for Trumpet and Orchestra


  • Data premiery 2010-10-04
  • Nośnik CD / Album
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1. A FRENCH GALLEASSE 2. ON DEMETER 3. THE LAST LIGHT 4. KENTUCKY NOCTURNE 5. HONEYSUCKLE SUITE 6. SUGAR MAPLE 7. ELM 8. SWEETGUM 9. ARTEMISIA 10. OLD ROAD 60 11. AN EVENING OF LONG GOODBYES 12. CUTS THE METAL COLD 13. THE MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEAR


  • Wykonawca Rachel's
  • Data premiery 1999-06-07
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Nest of Nerves2. Offering3. Test Tone4. Until I Fall5. The Gambrels of the Sky6. Apollo7. Love Me Today8. The Devil9. Bending Away (Remove Your Mind)10. Down, Down, Down11. Protection Poem12. Still Life13. I Want to See Sparks14. French Goth


  • Wykonawca Liam Singer
  • Data premiery 2018-07-20
  • Nośnik CD
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