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Violinist Philippe Graffin’s second recording for Onyx sees him partnered once again by pianist Claire Désert, in Schumann’s highly charged second violin sonata and the delightful 3 Romances by Clara Schumann, composed for Joseph Joachim.The concerto is a rarity – not the D minor violin concerto op. posth, but the composer’s arrangement of his much-loved cello concerto op.129.Unusual and intelligent programming from Philippe Graffin, who is rapidly gaining a reputation as one of the most insightful and inquisitive violinists of our time.BBC Music MagazineNovember 2010****“Most of [the transcription] works well enough...and there are even one or two gains...Graffin makes a very appealing case for it...Clara Schumann's Three Romances are much more than salon sweetmeats, and Graffin and Claire Désert play them elegantly and with feeling.”


  • Wykonawca Graffin Philippe
  • Data premiery 2011-05-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. First Music - First Aire 00:01:27 2. First Music - Second Aire 00:01:05 3. Second Music - First Aire 00:01:00 4. Second Music - Second Aire (Hornpipe) 00:00:57 5. Curtain Music And Overture: Overture 00:03:35 6. Prologue and Act I: Trumpet Tune 00:00:39 7. Act I - Solo (Boy): Wake, Quivera, Wake 00:02:24 8. Act I - Solo (Girl): Why Should Men Quarrel 00:01:26 9. Act I - Solo (Boy): By Ancient Prophesies 00:00:50 10. Act I - Duet (Boy and Quivera): If These Be They 00:03:38 11. Act I - Trumpet Tune 00:00:46 12. Act II - The Masque of Fame and Envy: Symphony 00:04:06 13. Act II - Solo (Fame) and Chorus: I Come to Sing 00:01:16 14. Act II - Trio (Envy and Two Assistants): What flatt'ring noise 00:00:52 15. Act II - Solo (Fame): Scorn'd Envy 00:00:57 16. Act II - Solo (Envy): I Fly from the Place 00:01:16 17. Act II - Solo (Fames): Begone, Curst Fiends of Hell 00:01:05 18. Act II - Dance, Solo (Fame) and Chorus: I Came to Sing Great Zempolla's S 00:02:02 19. Act III - Dance 00:00:58 20. Act III - Solo (Ismeron): You Twice Ten Hundred Deities 00:05:01 21. Act III - The God of Dreams Rises 00:01:11 22. Act III - Solo (God of Dreams): Seek Not to Know 00:03:07 23. Act III - The God of Dreams Descends 00:01:15 24. Act III - Trumpet Overture 00:02:40 25. Act III - Duet (Aerial Spirits): Ah! How Happy We Are 00:02:05 26. Act III - Duet (Another Two Aerial Spirits) and Chorus: We the Spirits of the Air 00:01:35 27. Act III - Solo (Zemoalla): I Attempt from Love's Sickness 00:03:23 28. Act III - Third Act Tune (Rondeau) 00:02:06 29. Act IV - Prelude and Song (Orazia): They Tell Us That Your Mighty Powers 00:06:13 30. Act V - Symphony 00:00:33 31. Act V - Chorus: While Thus We Bow 00:01:13 32. Act V - Solo (High Priest) and Chorus: You, Who at the Altar Stand 00:01:17 33. Act V - Symphony and Chorus: All Dismal Sounds 00:02:37 34. The Last Act - Trumpet Symphony 00:00:59 35. The Last Act - Solo (Hymen): To Bless the Genial Bed 00:01:13 36. The Last Act - Solo (A Follower of Hymen) and Chorus: Come, All, Come at My Call 00:01:39 37. The Last Act - Duet (Two Married People): I Am Glad I Have Met Him 00:00:43 38. The Last Act - Solo (Hymen): Good People 00:00:32 39. The Last Act - Duet (Two Married People): My Honey 00:01:08 40. The Last Act - Solo (Cupid): The Joys of Wedlock 00:02:43 41. The Last Act - Solo (One of Cupid's Followers): Sound the Trumpet 00:01:47 42. The Last Act - Two of Cupid's Followers: Make Haste to Put on Love's Chain 00:01:08 43. The Last Act - Trumpet Air 00:00:37 44. The Last Act - Chorus: Let Loud Renown 00:01:31


  • Wykonawca Scholars Baroque Ensemble
  • Data premiery 1998-01-01
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:1. Arcana 00:18:36 2. I. Assez lent 00:02:31 3. II. Tres vif et nerveaux 00:01:55 4. III. Grave 00:02:20 5. Chanson de La - haut 00:03:29 6. La Croix du Sud 00:03:44 7. Integrales 00:11:00 8. Deserts 00:03:57 9. First Electronic Interpolation (beginning) 00:02:58 10. First Electronic Interpolation (conclusion) 00:08:18 11. Second Electronic Interpolation (beginning) 00:02:11 12. Second Electronic Interpolation (conclusion) 00:01:54 13. Third Electronic Interpolation (beginning) 00:04:12 14. Third Electronic Interpolation (conclusion) 00:03:41


  • Wykonawca Castets Maryse
  • Data premiery 2001-07-02
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. The Dawn of Time. Part 1, of Light2. The Dawn of Time. Part 2, of Origins3. The Dawn of Time. Part 3, of Evolution4. The Dawn of Time. Part 4, of Sky5. The Dawn of Time. Part 5, of Life6. Concerto for Drums. First Movement7. Concerto for Drums. Second Movement8. Concerto for Drums. Third Movement9. Concerto for Drums. Fourth Movement10. Requiem for Humanity11. The Winds of War. First Movement12. The Winds of War. Second Movement13. The Winds of War. Third Movement14. Prelude No. 1


  • Wykonawca Virgil Donati
  • Data premiery 2018-04-20
  • Nośnik CD / Album
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Pochodzący z Kuby wybitny jazzman Omar Sosa, urodzony w 1965 roku w Camaguey. Artysta jest kompozytorem i pianistą jazzowym. Odłamy jazzu jakie usłyszmy w repertuarze artysty to: afro-cuban jazz, world music, latina jazz, free jazz. Aktywny na scenie muzycznej od 1993 roku. Tracklista: 1. Elegguá 2. Takes a second 3. Mother Africa 4. Nino divino 5. Cha-Amarillo 6. Sleeping lion 7. Blanco en Africa 8. Twice as sad 9. Why so complicated 10. Fragile 11. Desde Allá 12. Prietos 13. Misa  


  • Wykonawca Sosa Omar
  • Data premiery 2004-10-21
  • Nośnik CD
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Drugi album australijskiego zespołu indie, który zadebiutował w 2018r. świetnie przyjętą płytą „Hope Downs”. Brzmienie zespołu porównywane jest czasem do The Go-Betweens. Dowodzona przez gitarzystę kompozytora Toma Russo grupa po wyczerpującej trasie koncertowej powróciła do rodzimej Australii, by skoncentrować się na pracach nad nowy materiałem. Początkowy pomysł, by stworzyć konceptualne utwory o kondycji współczesnego świata zostały jednak porzucone na piosenek o miłości. Na całe szczęście. Tracklista: 1. The Second Of The First 2. Falling Thunder 3. She’s There 4. Beautiful Steven 5. The Only One 6. Cars In Space 7. Cameo 8. Not Tonight 9. Sunglasses At The Wedding 10. The Cool Change  


  • Wykonawca Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever
  • Data premiery 2020-06-12
  • Nośnik CD
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On this new release, the Doric String Quartet turns to the music of Franz Schubert. It is the Quartet’s fifth release for Chandos, and the discography has gone from strength to strength. MusicWeb International said of the recent Korngold release (CHAN 10707): ‘The Doric Quartet seem to have a Midas touch, and any repertoire they commit to disc comes out sparkling’. Their Schumann release (CHAN 10692) was ‘Recording of the Month’ in both Gramophone and BBC Music Magazine.In March 1824, despite describing himself as ‘the most unhappy and wretched creature in the world’, Schubert completed not only the great Octet, but also the two String Quartets recorded here.The String Quartet in D minor is considered the greatest of Schubert’s late quartets, mainly on account of its raw emotional honesty, which reaches an almost unendurable pitch in the second movement, a set of variations based on Schubert’s song Der Tod und das Mädchen. All four movements are driven by extensively repeated rhythmic figures, reminiscent of the musical style of Schubert’s great idol, Beethoven.Full of Schubertian ambivalence, the String Quartet in A minor is a deeply intimate work. The opening, expressing brooding sadness, is played by the first violin over a restless accompaniment, and subsequently interrupted by flurries of almost manic energy. In the second movement, Schubert ‘borrowed’ the main melody from the second Entr’acte of his incidental music to the play Rosamunde, Fürstin von Zypern (1823) by Wilhelmine von Chézy.In 2012/13, the Doric String Quartet will perform these works by Schubert as part of appearances in the Netherlands, the UK, Sweden, Denmark, and Canada.


  • Wykonawca Doric String Quartet
  • Data premiery 2012-10-01
  • Nośnik CD

  By the early 1780s Haydn had been in the employ of Prince Nikolaus Esterházy for some twenty years. Yet, although his duties kept him at court for much of the year, his music and his reputation had already reached right across Europe, as far as Spain and England. Since there were no copyright laws to speak of in those days, dissemination of music was often through the work of publishers who had no compunction in re-engraving pirated versions of orchestral parts (the usual form of publication) if they could lay their hands on manuscript versions by disreputable copyists. Haydn, though obviously averse to publications of his music that gave him no financial reward, was astute enough a businessman often to have his works brought out by more than one publisher. Such was the case with Symphonies 76, 77 and 78, issued in the early 1780s by no fewer than three companies: Torricella in Vienna, Boyer in Paris and Forster in London. (Mozart tried a similar ploy by selling a manuscript to one publisher and then writing the music out again from memory to sell to another.) These three symphonies, not only the first since numbers 6, 7 and 8 to be written as a set (a publishing rather than a performing practice) were also the first Haydn wrote expressly for performance outside the confines of Eszterháza. They were intended for a concert tour to London, a trip that Haydn never made (he had to wait until the prince’s death in 1790 for the impresario Johann Peter Salomon finally to lure him to London). In 1781 (the year he began his association with the publisher William Forster) Haydn appears to have been invited to introduce in person some of his operas and symphonies to the London musical public. His Symphony No 53 had been performed with great success at one of the Bach-Abel concerts (run by the ‘London Bach’, Johann Christian and Karl Friedrich Abel, both of whom had taught Mozart on his visit to London in 1764) and The Morning Herald reported in November 1781 that Haydn ‘the Shakespeare of musical composition is hourly expected.’† He had still not arrived by February 1783 when the Herald again bemoaned that ‘we have got neither him nor his music—however the music is certainly to come—the musician, most probably, will remain in Vienna’. The English music historian Dr Charles Burney also wrote in a letter at about the same time, I have stimulated a wish to get Haydn over as opera composer—but mum mum—yet—a correspondence is opened, and there is a great likelihood of it, if these cabals, and litigations ruin not the opera entirely … Two years later, when the composer was still anxiously awaited, it was even lightheartedly mooted that he might be kidnapped, as the following, from another journal, the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, suggests: This wonderful man, who is the Shakespeare of music, and the triumph ot the age in which we live, is doomed to reside in the court of a miserable German Prince, who is at once incapable of rewarding him, and unworthy of the honour … would it not be an achievement equal to a pilgrimage, for some aspiring youths to rescue him from his fortune and transplant him to Great Britain, the country for which his music seems to be made? In his letter offering the three symphonies to Boyer in Paris, Haydn describes them as ‘beautiful, elegant and by no means over-lengthy … they are all very easy, and without too much concertante’. They do indeed stand out from the surrounding Eszterháza works, lacking some of the idiosyncracies that, although suitable for his own performances at the court, might have deterred foreign performers. That is not to say, however, that they lack anything in originality or quality. Symphony No 76, like the other two, has the standard four movements and, unlike many of his other symphonies, no slow introduction to the first. Here we are launched straight into the first subject, an alternation of vigorously arpeggiated chords and a restrained, downward-moving phrase. There is no second subject as such, unless we include the brief pianissimo phrase (in the tonic key) that follows the second appearance of the falling idea. The Adagio begins with the strings alone, making the entrance of the wind on a pianissimo chord all the more effective; they return at the climax of the movement, a fortissimo tour de force of demisemiquavers and staccato semiquavers. The Minuet is followed by a lighthearted Rondo, featuring some brief woodwind solos before the final coda. The most notable thing about Symphony No 77 is its finale, one of the first examples of a sonata-rondo form, literally a combination of sonata form with the rondo in which the C section of the A–B–A–C–A comprises a development of earlier material rather than a new theme. The preceding movements are no less distinctive: an opening Vivace with, this time, a true second subject; a leisurely, often restrained Andante sostenuto with the strings muted; and a Minuet of a vigour that looks forward to the true scherzo. The first movement of Symphony No 78 has an urgency in keeping with its key, C minor. The second subject turns to the relative major, E flat, and it this key rather than the tonic that ultimately dominates the exposition. The development features some fine contrapuntal writing where fragments of both subjects are tossed between the various instruments. The Adagio returns to E flat major. Unlike the slow movements of the other two symphonies, the wind instruments are integrated lnto the texture from the start, while the stateliness of the music itself looks forward to the late ‘London’ symphonies. The C major Minuet is followed by a Presto rondo whose thinly scored B section turns to C major. When the same theme reappears later, so does the major mode, which remains to the end of the symphony. Matthew Rye © 1991  


  • Wykonawca Hanover Band
  • Data premiery 2006-03-07
  • Nośnik CD