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„Moondog, właśc. Louis Thomas Hardin (ur. 26 maja 1916 w Marysville, Kansas, USA, zm. 8 września 1999 w Münster, Niemcy) – niewidomy amerykański muzyk, kompozytor i poeta. Louis Hardin urodził się 26 maja 1916 r. w Marysville w stanie Kansas. W wieku 16 lat stracił wzrok od wybuchu zapalnika dynamitu. Jednak już rok później zaczął naukę gry na skrzypcach i wiolonczeli w Iowa School of Blind i postanowił zostać kompozytorem. W 1943 r. przybył do Nowego Jorku. Przez następnych 30 lat prowadził życie ulicznego dziwaka i poety, przebywając najczęściej w okolicach 6 Alei. Był znany także ze swojego wizerunku, a zwłaszcza rogatego hełmu wikinga, który stale nosił. Stał się sławny wśród nowojorskiego środowiska muzycznego, zwłaszcza jazzowego. Pierwsze nagrania zostały zarejestrowane dzięki Arturowi Rodzińskiemu, dyrygentowi New York Philharmonic. W 1947 r. Louis Hardin zaczął używać imienia Moondog, na pamiątkę swego psa, który wył podczas pełni księżyca. Nagrywał ze znacznym powodzeniem kompozycje z pogranicza muzyki poważnej, rocka i jazzu dla wytworni CBS, Prestige, Epic, Angel i Mars. Współpracował m.in. z Charlesem Mingusem i Allenem Ginsbergiem. Jeden z jego utworów „All Is Loneliness” nagrała Janis Joplin (album „Big Brother & The Holding Company” z 1967 r.). W 1974 r. Moondog wyjechał do Niemiec zachodnich na koncerty. Następne kilkanaście lat spędził w Europie. Koncertował i nagrywał kolejne płyty. Zmarł na atak serca w 1999 r.” -Wikipedia.pl Tracklista: 1. Dragon's Teeth - Voices Of Spring 2. Oasis 3. Tree Frog - Be A Hobo 4. Instrumental Round - Double Bass Duo - Why Spend The Dark Night With You? 5. Theme And Variations - Rim Shots 6. Suite 1 - First Movement/Second Movement/Third Movement 7. Suite 2 - First Movement/Second Movement/Third Movement  


  • Wykonawca Moondog
  • Data premiery 2018-01-28
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: CD 1. Watching You 2. So Long 3. Speaking A Different Language 4. Room Service 5. Lagonda Lifestyle 6. I Know It Now 7. Berlin 8. Carousel 9. One Voice 10. Pretty Paracetamol 11. Battalions Of Strangers 12. Marliese 13. Involuntary Movement 14. Relax 15. Wax Dolls DVD 1. Intro 2. Watching You 3. So Long 4. Speaking A Different Language 5. Room Service 6. Lagonda Lifestyle 7. I Know It Now 8. Berlin 9. Carousel 10. One Voice 11. Pretty Paracetamol 12. Battalions Of Strangers 13. Marliese 14. Involuntary Movement 15. Relax 16. Wax Dolls  


  • Wykonawca Watts John
  • Data premiery 2014-05-19
  • Nośnik CD+DVD
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After their highly acclaimed recording of Briten’s Cello Symphony (ONYX4058) Pieter Wispelwey and the Flanders Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Seiko Kim turn to two romantic cello concertos whose neglect is hard to fathom. Lalo unusually for a French composer in the mid nineteenth century was drawn to chamber music, and formed a string quartet (in which he played viola, and later second violin) that championed the works of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. His passion for chamber music developed to embrace large scale orchestral works – two violin concertos, the famous Symphonie espagnole for violin and orchestra, a symphony in G minor, the piano concerto and the concerto recorded here – his cello concerto in D minor of 1877. A strong work in the Germanic tradition, the central movement combines a slow movement and scherzo. It’s comparative neglect in the concert hall is difficult to understand as it is an impressive and well made work worthy of his contemporaries Franck and Saint-Saëns. The latter’s second cello concerto from 1902 is totally overshadowed by his impressive and dazzling first concerto dating from 1872. The later work has all of the composer’s flair for style, elegance and is possibly more challenging for the soloist than its A minor sibling. Advertising in BBC Music Magazine and Gramophone


  • Wykonawca Wispelwey Pieter
  • Data premiery 2013-05-01
  • Nośnik CD
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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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Tracklista:1. Arghawan (The Judas Tree)2. Dast Be Dast. Allah Hu (This Is God)3. I. Bahar-e Nastaran-bihag. Interlude I4. II. Bahar-e Nastaran-bihag. Movement I5. III. ShIrin Dokhtar-e Maldar. Interlude II6. IV. ShIrin Dokhtar-e Maldar. Movement II7. V. Watan Jan. Interlude III8. VI. Watan Jan. Movement III9. Qataghani Folksong10. Ay Shakhe Gul (Oh Flower Branch)11. Logari Folksong12. Pesta Faros (The Pistachio Seller)13. Ghunchai-e-sorkh (Red Rosebud)


  • Data premiery 2016-05-27
  • Nośnik CD / Album
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Tracklista: CD 1 1. Hymn. Christ the King 2. Ambiont Jungle 3. 1st Movement. 1,288 Wonderful Ways With Rice 4. 2nd Movement. The Good Egg 5. 3rd Movement. Port Arthur, Port Arthur 6. Hymn. Blessed Holy Spirit CD 2 1. Camp Concert II. Top Brass 2. Camp Concert III. Darkest Days 3. Meat Case Bass 4. Big Noise from Hawthorn 5. Work Song. The Long Carry 6. Hymn. Just As I Am 7. The Ambon Waltz 8. Field Recording. Di Sana Ada Tuhan


  • Wykonawca Swanton Lloyd
  • Data premiery 2016-07-08
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. More Sekele Movement (Papa Ni Mama)2. Dora3. Watcha Get Ma Day Dreams4. Sekelimania (Nku Bilam)5. The Sekele Movement6. As Far I Can Remember


  • Wykonawca Pasteur Lappe
  • Data premiery 2018-01-12
  • Nośnik Vinyl / 12" Album
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"The Love Movement" ukazała się w 1998 roku jako ostatnia jak dotąd płyta grupy. Od tamtej pory członkowie A Tribe Called Quest zajmują się karierą solową. Grupa ta uważana jest za jeden z najbardziej zasłużonych amerykańskich składów hip-hopowych.


  • Wykonawca A Tribe Called Quest
  • Data premiery 2006-03-07
  • Nośnik CD
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In 1773 the English music historian Charles Burney cautioned that the works of CPE Bach were ‘so uncommon, that a little habit is necessary for the enjoyment of [them]’. In fact, he claimed, many critics faulted Bach for writing works that were ‘fantastical’ and ‘far-fetched’. Burney, however, then rushed to Bach’s defence. ‘His flights are not the wild ravings of ignorance or madness, but the effusions of cultivated genius. His pieces … will be found, upon a close examination, to be so rich in invention, taste, and learning, that … each line of them, if wire-drawn, would furnish more new ideas than can be discovered in a whole page of many other compositions.’Indeed, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714–1788), second son of Johann Sebastian, was both revered and criticized by his contemporaries for his bold departures from conventional modes of musical expression. During his years as ‘first harpsichordist’ at the court of Frederick the Great of Prussia, and later as music director of the principal churches in Hamburg, Bach perfected a highly original and intensely personal compositional style known as the empfindsamer Stil (literally, the ‘sensitive style’). As the works on this recording show, Bach’s approach to musical expressiveness found voice in frequent mood changes, wide melodic leaps, abundant rests and ‘sighing’ motifs, irregular phrase structures, the juxtaposition of contrasting rhythmic figures, deceptive cadences, and dramatic, rhetorical harmonic interjections. Bach became particularly renowned for his ability to improvise fantasias—seemingly free-form, stream-of-consciousness flights of fancy characterized by unmeasured rhythm and distant harmonic excursions. Yet underlying even the most improvisatory of his compositions is a coherent structure. Bach himself instructed his students to construct such fantasias by first devising a strict harmonic foundation, and he even published an analysis of one of his own pieces in which he presented the skeletal framework lying beneath its surface irregularity.Emanuel Bach’s music thus breaks dramatically away from, yet also builds upon, the early eighteenth-century style perfected by his father. His compositions mark one of the first—and among the most inspired—repudiations of the Baroque aesthetic, in which a single unified mood dominates each movement. Significantly, however, Bach does not simply contrast two emotional states, as is typical in later Classical works, but rather explores a multitude of affects juxtaposed in close proximity and often set off by rests or dynamic changes. In fact, CPE Bach not only set in motion many of the changes that would become manifest in the music of Haydn and Beethoven, but also looked beyond the Classical period to many of the ideals of the nineteenth century. That is not to say that Bach could not compose works using a more traditional Baroque language. In fact, as we will see, several of the sonatas on this disc illustrate just such compositional versatility.All of the works on this recording were composed during the 1740s, while Emanuel Bach was in the service of King Frederick II of Prussia—who was not only a feared military potentate, but also a flautist of considerable ability. Bach began working for Frederick in 1738; and soon after Frederick ascended the throne in 1740, Bach was appointed court accompanist, a post he retained for over a quarter of a century. Although the appointment carried prestige, Frederick did not reward Bach with a particularly large salary. His pay, though comparable to that of many of the other court musicians, was less than a sixth that of Frederick’s flute teacher, Johann Joachim Quantz, for example. Frederick’s tastes were extremely conservative and he favoured above all the works of the competent, but far less imaginative Quantz and Carl Heinrich Graun. Bach, in turn, expressed a rather unflattering assessment of the king’s flute-playing, noting especially a disturbing unsteadiness of rhythm. Bach’s tenure at the court was thus marked by a tension that may well be reflected in the style of these early sonatas. After Telemann died in 1767, vacating the position in Hamburg, Bach was finally able to secure a more musically rewarding job.Emanuel Bach composed more than three hundred keyboard works during his lifetime. His sonatas are mostly in three movements—fast–slow–fast—with the finales tending to be lighter than the first two. Empfindsamer characteristics are most notable in the slow movements.The earliest three sonatas on the disc—H25, H27 and H29 (Wq48/2, 4, and 6)—appeared in Bach’s first published keyboard collection, the so-called Prussian Sonatas of 1742. The six sonatas in this collection made a major impact on keyboard-writing in Germany and were extolled by several of Bach’s contemporaries and followers, among them Joseph Haydn, who recalled being so entranced when he sat down to play them that he did not leave the keyboard until he had read through the entire set. Modern commentators as well have heralded these works as solidifying a new style of keyboard-writing. Peter Wollny in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2001) takes pains to note that the Prussian Sonatas and the Württemberg Sonatas (published two years later) ‘form a landmark in the history of keyboard music … In these collections Bach systematically, and for the first time, showed how it was possible to write affecting keyboard music freed from the suite tradition.’The three Prussian Sonatas recorded here show the principal traits of Bach’s music. Movements in the new empfindsamer Stil rub shoulders with more conservative, traditional ones; startling parenthetical insertions evoke surprise and wonder; irregular phrase structures form the foundation of musical invention; and improvisatory influences mark transitional passages.The opening movements of H25, H27 and H29 all exhibit the most notable characteristic of Bach’s early style. The music’s forward momentum is periodically interrupted by short rhetorical interpolations ranging from one to four bars in length, often marked piano, sometimes set off by rests, and always featuring interchanges of mode or dramatic harmonic discursions. Such interpolations create asymmetrical phrase structures and give the music the ‘quirky’ effect that provoked his contemporaries’ bewilderment. In several instances these interpolated asides could simply be lifted wholesale from the composition, but to do so would be to rob the works of their most poignant and interesting moments.The opening movement of the A major Sonata H29 is particularly replete with such interjections. An extended rest appears almost immediately—following the first two-bar truncated theme—as if Bach paused during the process of composition to gather his thoughts. In fact, recurrent interpolations seem to govern the movement’s overall structure, forming a kind of compositional logic underlying its surface irregularity. This movement also features another typical Emanuel Bach trait: a repeated-note accompaniment figure (first in the right hand, then in the left) that creates an agitated dominant pedal point.Rhetorical rests and frequent dynamic contrasts dominate the slow movement of the Sonata in B flat major H25, which also features another common trait of this composer: dotted-rhythm figures functioning as dramatic interjections that recall the accompanied recitatives of Baroque opera. Bach exploits this figuration most dramatically just before the end of the movement, where a diminished seventh chord is repeated in the left hand.The first movements of both H25 and H27 open with six-bar themes—a phrase structure Bach used not only in his keyboard sonatas but also in his works for other instruments (for example, the flute sonatas he composed for Frederick during this period). Indeed, the six-bar phrase in itself provides a feeling of asymmetry, as it generally arises from the expansion of a four-bar unit through extension at the end (H25) or interpolation in the middle (H27).Bach felt that an ability to extemporize was a crucial indicator of skill in composition. In fact, he wrote in his influential Versuch über die wahre Art das Clavier zu spielen that one could predict success in composition for anyone with an ability to improvise. The impact of improvisation is apparent in many of the works on the disc, even those that on the surface seem rigidly metrical, a good example being the second reprise in the opening movement of the C minor Sonata H27.In contrast to the style of these ‘sensitive’ movements several others show Bach’s skill in traditional forms. Among the most conservative, but also the most engaging, is the finale of H27, a virtuosic gigue in a standard rounded binary form. Yet even here Bach’s individual personality is well in evidence, particularly in the second reprise with its delightful two-bar interpolation marked piano and its diversion to a diminished seventh chord lead-up to the half cadence preceding the return. Another retrospective piece is the slow movement of the same work (H27). Here the dominant three-voiced texture evokes the ubiquitous Baroque trio sonata with its disposition of two treble instruments and accompanying bass. Similarly, the finale of the A major Sonata H29 shows Bach’s mastery of Baroque counterpoint. An inspired exploration of the so-called ‘learned style’, it also manifests Bach’s own idiosyncratic language. The insertion on this recording of French Baroque ornamentation on the repeat of each half reinforces the movement’s rococo character.Unlike the three sonatas from the early 1740s, the Sonata in G minor H47 (Wq65/17) from 1746—perhaps the most remarkable work on this disc—remained unpublished in Bach’s lifetime. The sonata begins with an unbarred fantasia that soon gives way to a strictly metred section featuring running semiquaver triplets in unison in the two hands. The strict metre, however, soon devolves into another unbarred section, after which a startling contrast appears: a galant motif in B flat major. Bach allows none of these motifs to reach a satisfying conclusion, however. Brief reappearances of the galant theme (often accompanied by echo effects) are interrupted by the unison triplets, and the rhythm repeatedly disintegrates into recollections of the fantasia. This extraordinary piece takes the listener on a wild journey into Bach’s ‘fantastical’ world, ending with a half cadence that ushers in a complete change of scenery: the gentle second-movement sarabande in G major. If this slow dance in triple metre, with its characteristic accent on the second beat, reminded Bach’s listeners in some ways of the early eighteenth-century suite, its harmonic excursions, dynamic contrasts, and moments of rhetorical interjection certainly did not. In short, the movement is a perfect example of Bach’s attempts to mould past influences into a new innovative language. The sonata ends with an equally extraordinary Allegro built around a descending chromatic motif whose pitches appear in an almost spasmodic off-kilter rhythm along with interjected higher notes. Several times Bach halts the momentum with rests followed by his typical parenthetical insertions, or with reminiscences of the first movement’s fantasia. The entire sonata presents a stunning example of Bach’s wild, highly eccentric language tempered by his heritage of rationality.Although the latest sonata on the disc—the E flat major H50 of 1747—exhibits many of the stylistic traits already discussed, its opening movement has a galant character that sets it apart from the other compositions. Here Bach’s language at times becomes almost Mozartian, showing his mastery of the late eighteenth-century aesthetic. Most notable in this sonata, however, is the poignant slow movement, the most stunning example of the empfindsamer style on this recording. Fragmented phrases interspersed with rests and underlaid with frequent contrasts of dynamics characterize the introspective opening eight-bar phrase. The second phrase, in contrast, becomes more continuous, until a melody in dotted-rhythm octaves in the left hand intrudes. These three thematic ideas recur throughout the movement, which ends with an improvisatory flourish leading to a fermata, elaborated on this recording by an extensive cadenza mirroring Bach’s own improvisational inspirations. The sonata then concludes with a virtuosic Presto in 3/8—a perpetual motion corrente recalling the Baroque suite, but filled with Emanuel Bach’s eccentricities.The slow movement of H50—and similar movements with notated dynamic contrasts—raises the question of the instrument for which Bach’s sonatas were intended. Clearly, much of his work at Frederick’s court involved harpsichord-playing, but the harpsichord could only effect quick dynamic contrasts through the use of a double manual. On the clavichord—an instrument Bach loved and which he used throughout his life—the player could create dynamic changes by variations in finger pressure, but the overall range was restricted to piano or softer. By the late 1740s, however, Frederick had still another keyboard instrument at his court: the fortepiano (a fact made particularly famous by JS Bach’s visit in 1747, on which occasion he improvised a fugue on one of these instruments using a theme provided by Frederick). Therefore, performance of these works by Emanuel Bach himself on the piano is not only possible, but even likely.The history of Western music is characterized by periodic solidification of compositional norms, followed by rebellions, and then by the establishment of new norms with contrasting aesthetic principles. The rebellious stages—that is, the transitionary years between the stable ‘periods’ designated by later historians—are the most unsettled, but often the most intriguing as well. Like Monteverdi before him and many others after him, Emanuel Bach disrupted the established practices of his past in a search for a new aesthetic expression. In fact, his experimentation with rapid mood change, harmonic surprise, rhythmic variety, and rhetorical outburst anticipates, in some ways, the Romanticism of the nineteenth century even more than the style of his immediate followers in the eighteenth. (Beethoven, for one, was highly influenced by Emanuel Bach, and critics have pointed out the composer’s effect on Schumann as well.) The juxtaposition of these traits with elements reminiscent of Bach’s high-Baroque heritage, however, made his works sit uneasily with many of his contemporaries. Even today, his keyboard music is rarely performed, not because the pieces are unworthy (they are, in fact, astonishing), but because to render them successfully requires a willingness to take risks with tempo, rhythm, articulation and dynamics. Doing so, however, opens up a world of expression that still sounds novel and refreshing, illustrating the richness of invention and ‘effusions of cultivated genius’ Burney heralded more than two hundred years ago.


  • Wykonawca Driver Danny
  • Data premiery 2010-05-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:CD 1: Romantic Freedom1. Greensleeves - Bugge Wessletoft2. Adagio, Concert A-Major - Joachim Kühn3. There Again - Michael Wollny4. Resignation - Brad Mehldau5. Prelude In D-Minor - Esbjörn Svensson6. Sancuts - Leszek Możdżer7. Musica Callada #15 - Richie Beirach8. My Foolish Heart - George Gruntz9. Sacred Circles - Kevin Hays10. Andalucia - Ramon Valle11. Poverty - Jens Thomas12. Exits - Eric WatsonCD 2: Joachim Kühn - Allegro Vivace1. Plein chant du premier Kyrie2. Chanconne3. Konzert in A, Allegro4. Konzert In A, Adagio5. Konzert In A, Rondo6. Lonnies Lament7. She And He Is8. Who Fenn Love9. Allotropes10. Elements Different11. Forms Or Same12. The Night13. Invisible Portrait14. Mar y SalCD 3: George Gruntz - Ringing The Luminator1. Movement Poetry Of Wheels2. Movement Poetry Of Lights3. Movement Poetry Of Links4. ILL used ILLusions5. Ecarroo Take 16. My Foolish Heart7. Well You Needn't8. Delusions Redeemed9. Ecarro Take 210. Blue Daniel11. I Loves You Porgy12. Intermezzo13. Under One Moon14. A Night In Tunisia15. Meeting PointCD 4: Kevin Hays - Open Range1. Open Range2. Homestead3. Desert Blues4. Humming Bird Song5. Improvisation6. You Are My Sunshine7. Fire Dance8. Nursery Rhyme9. Meditation10. Harmonium11. Sacred CirclesCD 5: Ramón Valle - Memorias1. Andalucia2. Andar por dentro3. La Comparsa4. Son-a-Tina5. Rumba Mejoral6. Free At Last7. Siboney8. Levitando9. No me mires ni me hables10. Reverso11. Aquella tarde12. Memorias


  • Wykonawca Kuhn Joachim , Gruntz George , Hays Kevin , Valle Ramon
  • Data premiery 2005-07-02
  • Nośnik CD