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Nicolaus à Kempis was a composer active in Brussels in the middle of the 17th century. Not much is known about this oddly-named man. He was born around 1600, but it is unknown where. Some musicologists think that he came from northern Italy, perhaps from Florence. He died in 1676.The earliest extant piece of biographical information about him is his nomination as organist of the cathedral of Saints Michael and Gudule in Brussels around 1626. His son, Joannes Florentius, succeeded him there in 1670. Between 1644 and 1649, he published in Antwerp several volumes of Symphoniae amounting to 98 short instrumental pieces and eight motets. He wrote sonatas ranging from pieces for solo instrument and continuo to pieces in six parts. Nicolaus à Kempis was the first musician to import the Italian viol style and techniques of Girolamo Frescobaldi, Marco Uccellini, Giovanni Battista Fontana and Dario Castello in the southern Low Countries.


  • Wykonawca Snellings Dirk , Van Dyck Stephan , Scheen Celine
  • Data premiery 2011-02-01
  • Nośnik CD
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  This recording unites familiar works (Handel, Telemann, J. F. Fasch) with rarities recovered from their archival sleep of centuries. The Thieme sonata is one of the first pieces ever written for solo trumpet(s); this and all the other pieces presented here display the level of virtuosity attained by the courtly trumpet repertoire of the Baroque period. It is well known that the Baroque trumpet, due to its emblematic significance, occupied a special position in the hierarchy of musical instruments. It was the symbol of celestial and earthly power. For this reason, trumpet literature of that time is nearly always splendid and joyful; sad emotions were not its domain. Within these boundaries there was nevertheless a broad gamut of expressive possibilities, from the chamber-music intimacy of the Telemann concerto and the gallant finesse of C. F. C. Fasch’s triple concerto to the cosmopolitan elegance of the Handel suite and the festive opulence of Endler’s sinfonia. On this recording, works have been assembled to demonstrate the musical splendour of German courts. An apparent exception is the Handel suite, but the connection of the house of Hanover with the British crown and Handel’s own origins justify this work’s acceptance into the German cultural tradition, even despite its French style.  


  • Wykonawca Tarr Edward , Franz Liszt Chamber Orchestra
  • Data premiery 2011-08-01
  • Nośnik CD
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There have only been two occasions when English composers have profoundly affected the course of European musical history. The first was in the early fifteenth century when the motets, Mass movements and chansons of John Dunstable and his contemporaries became the models for subsequent developments in Flanders and Burgundy. The second was two centuries later, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, when a number of English composers and instrumentalists found work at northern European courts. They went abroad for three main reasons. Some, like Peter Philips and Richard Dering, were religious refugees, in flight from Queen Elizabeth’s persecution of Catholics. Some, such as William Brade and Thomas Simpson, were probably attracted by the lucrative opportunities available in the prosperous small courts and city states of northern Europe. Others were associated with the English theatre companies that began to tour the Continent in the 1580s and ’90s following the 1572 Act of Parliament that restricted the activities of ‘common players in interludes and minstrels’. Henceforth, actors were forbidden to work in England unless they were under the patronage of the Queen or a prominent courtier.John Dowland probably had mixed motives for leaving England in 1594. He had just been turned down for a post as a court lutenist, but he also had Catholic sympathies. He worked first at Wolfenbüttel and Kassel, and in 1598, after a second attempt to obtain a court post, he joined the group of English musicians in the service of Christian IV, King of Denmark. He remained in Copenhagen until 1606, though he visited London in the summer of 1603 ‘on his own business’, as a Danish court clerk put it. By 1603 he was one of the most famous lutenists in Europe and could reasonably have expected a court post in the wake of Queen Elizabeth’s death in March of that year, for the wife of the new King James I was Anne of Denmark, sister of Christian IV. In the event, it still eluded him, perhaps, as Peter Warlock once suggested, because Anne did not wish it to be thought that she had poached one of her brother’s musicians. When he finally became one of James I’s lutenists in 1612 he had long left the Danish court. Dowland probably hoped to attract Anne’s attention by dedicating Lachrimae, or Seaven Teares to her. In the dedication he states that he had ‘access to your Highnesse at Winchester’ (the court was there in September and October 1603), and that he had twice tried to sail back to Denmark but had been compelled to winter in England ‘by contrary windes and frost’.Dowland broke new ground with the publication of Lachrimae. At the time, dance music was usually written or printed in sets of separate quarto parts, but Lachrimae is a folio volume and has the parts for each piece distributed around each side of a single opening, so that in theory they could be performed around a table from a single copy. Dowland may have adopted this format, the one he used for his lute songs, because he included a lute part in tablature, which could not easily be accomodated in a small set of part-books. Lachrimae is certainly the first English collection of five-part dance music, manuscript or printed, to include a lute part, though lutes often appear in contemporary pictures of violin bands accompanying dancing.Lachrimae is normally thought of as belonging to the English consort repertory, but part of it, at least, was composed in Copenhagen. In the dedication Dowland informed the Queen that it was written partly in her homeland: ‘I have presumed to Dedicate this worke of Musicke to your sacred hands, that was begun where you were borne, and ended where you raigne.’ It is likely, in fact, that it was partly written for, and reflects the practice of, a group of English expatriates at the Danish court, including the composers and string players William Brade and Daniel Norcombe, the dancing-master (and presumably violinist) Henry Sandam, the harpist ‘Carolus Oralii’ (an Irishman, Charles O’Reilly?) and, perhaps, ‘Bendix Greebe’ (also known as ‘Benedictus Grep’), who may have been an Englishman, Benedict Greave or Greaves. Lachrimae is typical of the Anglo-German consort repertory in that great prominence is given to pavans. They take up most of the time in a complete performance, and attention is inevitably concentrated on the ‘passionate pavans’ that open the collection. English expatriates tended to use the pavan for their most serious thoughts, perhaps because most were string players or lutenists rather than organists or choirmasters—who wrote much of the consort repertory in England and used the fantasy as their main form.The collection is also typical of the Anglo-German repertory in that it is scored specifically for strings. According to the title-page it is ‘set forth for the Lute, Viols, or Violons, in five parts’. It is normally played today on viols, but professional string groups would have played sets of viols and violins as a matter of course, choosing the most appropriate according to circumstances. It is unlikely that Dowland intended the two families to be combined in a mixed consort; the normal practice was to use complete sets of instruments as alternatives on a musical menu, rather than as ingredients in a single dish. The whole collection can be played as it stands by the standard five-part violin consort of the time, consisting of a single violin, three violas and bass—the arrangement preserved well into the Baroque period by the French royal orchestra, the Vingt-quatre Violons. But one of the pieces, ‘M. Thomas Collier his Galiard’, has two equal treble parts and requires the more modern scoring of two violins, two violas and bass, and the situation is complicated by the fact that, with one exception, the pieces divide into two high- and low-pitched groups, about a fourth apart. The former (all the lighter pieces except ‘Sir John Souch his Galiard’) work well as they stand, but the rest are consistently too low to be effective on violins. Therefore we have transposed them up a fourth, which brings the seven ‘passionate pavans’ into D minor, the key of the earliest consort settings of ‘Lachrimae Antiquae’. The exception, ‘M. John Langtons Pavan’, is midway between the two groups in its ranges, and so we have transposed it up a tone, the key chosen by Thomas Simpson for his consort setting, published in 1610. Professional instrumentalists at the time would have made such transpositions as a matter of routine to suit the ranges and the character of different types of instrument, and a number of sixteenth-century dances survive in more than one key, presumably for this reason. We cannot be sure why Lachrimae is divided into high- and low-pitched pieces, but an obvious possibility is that it reflects the different requirements of particular groups, perhaps in Copenhagen and London.Lachrimae was drawn largely from music already composed by Dowland in other media. It was not uncommon for lutenists and keyboard players to produce consort versions of pieces they had already worked out for their own instruments. Thus, of the twenty-one pieces, eleven exist as lute solos, sometimes under different titles: ‘M. Henry Noel his Galiard’ was also known as ‘Mignarda’, while there is an early version of ‘M. Buctons Galiard’ with the title ‘Susanna Galliard’, a reference to the fact that the tune is derived from Lassus’s famous chanson Susanne un jour. ‘The King of Denmarks Galiard’ circulated in several early versions, as ‘Mr. Mildmays Galliard’ and ‘The Battle Galliard’ (the piece uses ideas drawn from several sixteenth-century battle pieces), and was finally published in 1610 by Robert Dowland in his Varietie of Lute-Lessons. The same publication also contains the Landgrave of Hessen-Kassel’s fine pavan in honour of Dowland, based on ‘Lachrimae Antiquae’. Robert Dowland wrote that it was ‘from him sent to my Father, with this inscription following, and written in his GRACES owne hand: Mauritius Landgrauius Hessiae fecit in honorem loanni Doulandi Anglorum Orphei’ (‘Moritz, the Landgrave of Hesse, wrote it in honour of John Dowland, the English Orpheus’). It is usually thought of as an original lute piece by the Landgrave, but the divisions are remarkably sophisticated and adventurous in style and were perhaps added by the dedicatee himself.Some pieces in the collection were also well known as songs. ‘The Earle of Essex Galiard’, ‘Sir John Souch his Galiard’ and ‘Captaine Digorie Piper his Galiard’ are in Dowland’s First Booke of Songes (1597) as ‘Can she excuse my wrongs’, ‘My thoughts are winged with hope’, and ‘If my complaints could passion move’, while ‘M. Henry Noel his Galiard’ appears as ‘Shall I strive with words to move’ in A Pilgrimes Solace (1612). We have provided ‘Captaine Digorie Piper his Galiard’ with its pavan, from a recently discovered manuscript at Kassel. It (and a pre-publication version of ‘Lachrimae Antiquae’) are probably souvenirs of Dowland’s activities at the Landgrave of Hesse’s court in the 1590s. Also, we have paired ‘Sir John Souch his Galiard’ and ‘M. Giles Hobies Galiard’ because they both borrow melodic and harmonic material from a galliard by James Harding, a piece that was often paired with ‘Lachrimae Antiquae’. Like most sixteenth-century publications of dance music, Lachrimae is organized by genre, the pavans followed by the galliards and the almans. The seven ‘passionate pavans’ need to be heard as a sequence, but we have arranged the other pieces by key so that they form suites, with the graver pieces leading to the lighter, following the example of several collections in the Anglo-German repertory.‘Lachrimae Antiquae’, Dowland’s most popular piece, circulated in many forms, and was published as ‘Flow my tears’ in The Second Book of Songs (1600). We can presume, however, that the matchless sequence of ‘passionate pavans’ that follow it are late works, perhaps written specially for the publication, for only one of them is found in another source. They are unique works, too, in another sense. Elizabethan composers frequently derived galliards from pavans, and it was common for pavans to allude to well-known examples of the genre. A good example is the third strain of ‘Semper Dowland semper dolens’ (‘Always Dowland, always doleful’), which has a ‘synthetic’ cantus firmus in the manner of Peter Philips’s famous 1580 Pavan. But only Dowland created a variation suite of seven pavans, linked by the opening four-note descending theme and by a subtle web of thematic and harmonic inter-relationships.The precise significance of the Latin titles is not entirely clear. ‘Lachrimae Antiquae’ (‘The Old Tears’) and ‘Lachrimae Antiquae Novae’ (‘The Old Tears Renewed’) are straightforward enough, but it is not immediately obvious from the music why the others are entitled ‘Lachrimae Gementes’ (‘Sighing Tears’), ‘Lachrimae Tristes’ (‘Sad Tears’), ‘Lachrimae Coactae’ (‘Crocodile Tears’), ‘Lachrimae Amantis’ (‘A Lover’s Tears’), and ‘Lachrimae Verae’ (‘True Tears’), though ‘Lachrimae Tristes’ is certainly one of the saddest and most passionate of the set, and it may be significant that ‘Lachrimae Coactae’ is a harmonic parody of it.Lachrimae seems to have had little influence on the subsequent development of consort music in England. The fashion for grave pavans and galliards soon passed, to be replaced by the light almans, corants and masque dances of the Jacobean age. Yet Dowland’s memory was kept alive on the Continent. Samuel Scheidt produced several elaborations of ‘The King of Denmarks Galiard’, doubtless attracted by its battle imitations, and a corrupt version of the tune of ‘The Earle of Essex Galiard’ is still found in eighteenth-century Dutch collections.


  • Wykonawca Tarling Judy , The Parley of Instruments
  • Data premiery 2006-03-07
  • Nośnik CD
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1. The Seasons - Prelude I2. The Seasons - Winter3. The Seasons - Prelude II4. The Seasons - Spring5. The Seasons - Prelude III6. The Seasons - Summer7. The Seasons - Prelude IV8. The Seasons - Fall9. The Seasons - Finale (Prelude I)10. Metamorphosis - I11. Metamorphosis - II12. Metamorphosis - III13. Metamorphosis - IV14. Metamorphosis - V15. In a Landscape16. Ophelia17. Two Pieces for Piano (ca. 1935, rev. 1974) - I Slowly18. Two Pieces for Piano (ca. 1935, rev. 1974) - II Quite fast19. Quest20. Two Pieces for Piano (1946) - I21. Two Pieces for Piano (1946) - II


  • Wykonawca Cage John , Henck Herbert
  • Data premiery 2005-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: CD 1 1. Tumbania 2. Sancho 3. Reencuentro 4. Pantera 5. Tranquilidad 6. Polka And Son 7. Reencuentro 8. Hay Gritos 9. Momo CD 2 1. E'mi Eledda 2. Ibu 3. Sumu-Gaga 4. Oni 5. Rumba Callejera 6. Danza De Lyon 7. Obbana CD 3 1. Shining Of Both The Lanterns And Moon 2. The Greens 3. Hunting Tigers Up On The Mountain 4. Conqueror Xiang Yu Toward His Fail Finality 5. Memories Of The Beijing City 6. Crying 7. Big Wild Goose Catching The Swan CD 4 1. Qinglian Pieces Of Pipa Music 2. Waves Scouring The Sands 3. The Sounds 4. To Set Up An Overall Ambush 5. Verses For The Moon Night 6. Music Of The Taoist Cemetry 7. Sunny Spring With Snow White 8. Dancing Melody Of Chinese Yi Tribe 9. Customs Along The Wei River


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2018-02-23
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: 1. Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In A Minor-Major (Arr. S. Proulx For Guitar) - VI. La Triomphante 2. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In E Minor (Arr. J.-F. Delcamp For Guitar) - VI. Rigaudons I & II - Double 3. Platee - Menuet (Arr. A. Segovia For Guitar) 4. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In A Minor-Major - VII. Venitienne (Arr. J.W. Duarte For Guitar) 5. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In E Minor (Arr. J.-F. Delcamp For Guitar) - V. Le Rappel Des Oiseaux 6. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In D Minor-Major - VII. Les Tourbillons (Arr. V.G. Velasco For Guitar) 7. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In D Minor-Major - I. Les Tendres Plaintes (Arr. S. Proulx For Guitar) 8. Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In G Major-Minor - II. L'indifferente (Arr. J.W. Duarte For Guitar) 9. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In A Minor-Major - VI. Sarabandes I & II (Arr. V.G. Velasco For Guitar) 10. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In D Minor-Major - X. La Boiteuse (Arr. J.W. Duarte For Guitar) 11. Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In G Major-Minor - I. Les Tricotets (Arr. J.-F. Delcamp For Guitar) 12. Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In G Major-Minor - VI. Les Sauvages (Arr. S. Nogrette For Guitar) 13. Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In D Minor-Major - IX. Le Lardon (Arr. J.-F. Delcamp For Guitar) 14. Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavecin, Suite In A Minor-Major (Arr. S. Proulx For Guitar) - VII. Gavotte Avec Doubles 15. Minuet En Rondeau (Arr. J.W. Duarte For Guitar) - Menuet En Rondeau  


  • Wykonawca Proulx Sylvie
  • Data premiery 2018-09-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: 1. 4 Morceaux, Op. 43: No. 3. Prelude 2. Romance in D Major, Op. 100 (arr. for violin and piano) 3. 3 Pieces, Op. 89: No. 3. Abendlied 4. 6 Pieces, Op. 32: No. 3. Rustle of Spring 5. Romance in E Minor, Op. 30 6. I. Marcato 7. II. Andante doloroso 8. III. Menuetto 9. IV. Allegretto 10. V. Un poco maestoso 11. No. 2. Elegy 12. No. 3. Ballade 13. Abendstimmung, Op. 120a (arr. for violin and piano)


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2016-03-11
  • Nośnik CD
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Sony Classical zaprasza do wysłuchania 4-płytowego zestawu nagrań utworów Beli Bartóka, Perra Bouleza, Igora Stravinskiego, Arnolda Schoenberga i Antona Weberna w doskonałym wykonaniu amerykańskiego pianisty i popularyzatora muzyki Charlesa Rosena. Charles Rosen rozpoczął naukę gry na fortepianie w wieku lat czterech, zaś dwa lata później rozpoczął naukę w słynnej Julliard School. W wieku 11 lat opuścił Julliard, aby podjąć prywatną naukę u Moritza Rosenthala i jego żony Hedwig Kanner. Obok ugruntowywania swojej pozycji, jako wybitnego pisarza muzycznego, Charles Rosen pozostaje symbolem jednej z najwybitniejszych ikon pianistycznych zeszłego stulecia...Tracklista:CD 1Igor Stravinsky1. Serenade for Piano in A Major2. I. Hymne3. II. Romanza4. III. Rondoletto5. IV. Cadenza Finala6. Piano Sonata7. I. Quarter Note = 1128. II. Adagietto9. III. Quarter Note = 11210. Piano Piece, Op. 33a11. Piano Piece, Op. 33b12. Arnold Schoenberg13. Suite for Piano, Op. 2514. I. Präludium - Rasch15. II. Gavotte - Etwas langsam, nicht hastig16. III. Musette - Rascher17. IV. Intermezzo18. V. Menuett - Moderato - Trio19. VI. Gigue – Rasch20. Igor Stravinsky21. Movements for Piano and Orchestra22. I. Eighth Note = 11023. II. Quarter Note = 5224. III. Eighth Note = 7225. IV. Eighth Note = 8026. V. Eighth Note = 104CD 2Elliott Carter1. Double Concerto for Harpsichord and Piano with Two Chamber Orchestras2. I. Introduction - Cadenza for Harpsichord3. II. Allegro scherzando - Adagio - Presto - Cadenzas for Piano4. III. Coda5. Piano Sonata6. I. Maestoso7. II. AndanteCD 31. Pierre Boulez2. Piano Sonata No. 13. I. Lent - Beaucoup plus allant4. II. Assez large - Rapide5. Piano Sonata No. 36. Trope7. Elliott Carter8. Double Concerto for Piano, Harpsichord and Two Chamber Orchestras9. I. Introduction - Cadenza for Harpsichord10. II. Allegro scherzando - Adagio - Presto - Cadenzas for Piano11. III. CodaCD 4Anton Webern1. Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 32. I. Dies ist ein Lied für dich allein3. II. Im Windesweben4. III. An Baches Ranft5. IV. Im Morgentaun6. V. Kahl reckt der Baum7. Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 48. I. Eingang9. II. Noch zwingt mich Treue10. III. Ja Heil und Dank dir11. IV. So ich traurig bin12. V. Ihr tratet zu dem Herde13. Four Pieces for Violin and Piano, Op. 714. I. Sehr langsam15. II. Rasch16. III. Sehr langsam17. IV. Bewegt18. Three Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 1119. I. Mäßige Achtel20. II. Sehr bewegt21. III. Äußerst ruhig22. Vier Lieder für Gesang und Klavier, Op. 1223. I. Der Tag ist vergangen24. II. Die geheimnisvolle Flöte25. III. Schien mir's, als ich sah die Sonne26. IV. Gleich und gleich27. Quartet, Op. 2228. I. Sehr mäßig29. II. Sehr schwungvoll30. Drei Lieder aus "Viae inviae", Op. 2331. I. Das Dunkle Herz32. II. Es stürzt aus Höhen Frische33. III. Herr Jesus mein34. 3 Lieder nach Gedichten von Hildegard Jone, Op. 2535. I. Wie bin ich froh!36. II. Des Herzens Purpurvogel37. III. Sterne, Ihr silbernen Bienen38. Variations for Piano, Op. 2739. I. Sehr mässig40. II. Sehr schnell41. III. Ruhig fliessend


  • Wykonawca Rosen Charles
  • Data premiery 2017-04-28
  • Nośnik CD
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