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It may seem surprising that after three decades of ‘early music’ research, critical discoveries can still be made about a great composer such as Mozart and particularly discoveries around his well-known masterpieces. This recording presents the première recording of the Grande Sonate, an anonymous arrangement for fortepiano and basset clarinet of Mozart’s beloved Clarinet Quintet in A major, K.581. Both the Clarinet Quintet and the Concerto in A major, K.622, were originally written for an instrument called the basset clarinet, which has four more chromatic notes at the bottom of its range than an ordinary clarinet. Since the manuscripts to both pieces were lost, clarinettists have had to make educated guesses about the passages that may have included these low notes. Significantly, this arrangement includes some of these basset notes, making it an important source for those wishing to restore the piece to its original form. In its incarnation as a sonata, it becomes a wonderful piece of chamber music which is especially compelling when played on instruments like those Mozart and Stadler (for whom it was composed) knew.


  • Wykonawca Veenhoff Anneke
  • Data premiery 2010-01-01
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista: 1. Do You Have Any Regrets?2. I Do3. Here Today4. Guess I'm Dumb5. Don't Worry Baby6. Aren't You Glad7. God Only Knows8. Don't Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)9. Good Vibrations10. Carolina, No11. I Just Wasn't Made for These Times12. You Still Believe in Me


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2016-04-29
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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Tracklista: 1. Everything Is Easy2. Shipboard Cook3. All the Souls4. Dopamine5. Rites of Passage6. Back to Zero7. Something in You8. Get Me Out of Here9. Blade10. All These Things11. Exiles12. Say It


  • Wykonawca Third Eye Blind
  • Data premiery 2015-11-20
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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  Following Ensemble Caprice’s first recording of Vivaldi’s sacred music ( Gloria! Vivaldi and his Angels) we return to Vivaldi’s Venice and find ourselves yet again within the confines of the Ospedale della Pietà orphanage where, beginning in 1703, Vivaldi, the Red Priest, not only taught the orphan girls violin and singing (!), but also composed many of his most dazzling concertos as well as a substantial part of his highly inspired corpus of sacred music. To this day, it seems almost unbelievable that these very demanding scores could be successfully performed by young women. However, their concerts must have been of a very high standard, judging from the celebrity status they enjoyed throughout Europe. Of course the picturesque scenario of young women performing in church undoubtedly fired the imagination of countless listeners who would come from far and wide to hear the orphans perform musical miracles in Venice. In 1720 an English traveler, Edward Wright, gives us the following account of those events: Every Sunday and holiday there is a performance of music in the chapels of these hospitals, vocal and instrumental, performed by the young women of the place, who are set in a gallery above and, though not professed, are hid from any distinct view of those below by a lattice of ironwork. The organ parts, as well as those of other instruments, are all performed by the young women. They have a eunuch for their master, and he composes their music. Their performance is surprisingly good, and many excellent voices are among them. And this is all the more amusing since their persons are concealed from view.  It was both absurd and comical for Wright to assume that the composer was a eunuch, but it shows how the imagination of the male listeners got carried away when hearing those celestial angelic sounds produced by an invisible female orchestra and choir. After having met Vivaldi in Venice in 1739, a French jurist, Charles de Brosse, reports that  …about forty girls take part in every concert. I vow to you that there is nothing so diverting as the sight of a young and pretty nun in white habit, with a bunch of pomegranate blossoms over her ear, conducting the orchestra and beating time with all the grace and precision imaginable. Further proof of the incredible quality (and attraction) of these concerts is provided by no less a celebrity than the sophisticated French philosopher (and part-time composer) Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who in 1743 had nothing but praise for the achievements of the young girls: Every Sunday, vocal music for a large chorus with a large orchestra, which is composed and directed by the greatest masters in Italy, is performed in barred-off galleries solely by girls, of whom the oldest is not twenty years of age. One can conceive of nothing as voluptuous, as moving, as this music.  Knowing for instance that J.S. Bach only heard his own sacred music sung publicly in church by boys and men and never by women, we can only assume how much the titillation of these exciting rumours about the female choir and orchestra in Venice must have stirred the imagination of music lovers north of the Alps. During the course of the present recording, we move from Vivaldi’s description of war to his musical depiction of the joys of peace.  Juditha triumphans Juditha triumphans from 1716 is the best known of the Vivaldi oratorios (of which only four have survived). Subtitled Sacrum Militare Oratorium, it relates the gruesome Old Testament story of Judith, a beautiful widow chosen by God to put an end to the life of the Assyrian general Holofernes – who was out to destroy her hometown – by decapitating him.  At the time the oratorio was composed, the Republic of Venice was engaged in its 6th war against the Ottoman Empire and despite its ultimate triumph in 1718, the situation looked rather bleak two years earlier after two successive crushing defeats by the strong Ottoman army. In a typical baroque crossover mingling religious and worldly matters on the same battlefield, the oratorio Juditha triumphans was obviously aimed at strengthening the war efforts of the Venetian Republic. We know that this oratorio was performed at the Ospedale della Pietà, with an all-(young)-woman cast on both vocal and instrumental parts. It could only have added to the already wide range of exotic sensations when the overwhelmed listener heard these young women in nun’s habits engaging in musical warfare. Gloria, RV 588 However, let us not forget that Vivaldi’s talent also radiated its light upon the depiction of peace. The intense plea Et in terra pax (from Gloria RV 588), with its gripping harmonic tensions, serves as a worthy final statement for this recording, where war is gradually replaced by the hope for peace. Psalms, Concertos, Motet On the road towards peace we encounter brilliant psalm settings with powerful rhythms in choir and orchestra (In exitu Israel RV 604, Laudate Dominum RV 606), two virtuoso concertos for multiple soloists (RV 566 and RV 563) and a beautiful solo motet O qui coeli terraeque serenitas RV 631, praising serenity in heaven and on earth.  Vivaldi entertained a close relationship with Dresden, the Florence of the Elbe, both as a performing artist and as a composer; indeed, his pieces were frequently performed at court. One of his illustrious colleagues in Dresden, Jan Dismas Zelenka, was obviously inspired by Vivaldi’s sacred music when he composed the heart-rending lament Misera Madre in which Mary’s suffering at the foot of the cross is set for high-voice choir. It becomes quite obvious from the striking dissonances in this piece that the transition from war to peace is not always an easy one… And just as our plea for peace is here put forward with music from the past, we fervently hope that peace will reign in our present time and the future: Et in terra pax! © Matthias Maute, Montreal, 2011  


  • Wykonawca Ensemble Caprice
  • Data premiery 2012-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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String Quartets, Op 17: performed from the London edition published by Welcker c1774 (Nos 1-6)Haydn’s String Quartets Op 17 were written during his most effusively productive period, during his tenure in the service of the Esterházy family. He had a magnificent group of musicians at his disposal, including the young virtuoso violinist Luigi Tomasini, whose genius can be traced throughout these works, particularly in the achingly beautiful melodies of the adagio movements. These string quartets mark Haydn’s emergence as an indisputably great composer. They have a seriousness of intent and an increasing mastery of rhetoric and thematic development that are a world away from the lightweight divertimento-quartets that he was formerly producing.They are performed here on period instruments by the dazzling London Haydn Quartet, whose disc of the Op 9 quartets drew the most extravagant praise from the critics. Their second disc has been eagerly awaited, and comes as part of Hyperion’s celebrations of ‘Haydn year’.


  • Wykonawca London Haydn Quartet
  • Data premiery 2009-09-15
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Help the Homeless2. Disappointed in You3. Children Are People4. Night Lives5. Glory, Glory6. Familiarity Breeds Contempt7. Some Hearts8. Tell the Truth9. You Can't Put Your Arms Around a Memory10. (She's So) Untouchable11. Hurt Me12. Are You Living?13. Intro. Ask Me No Questions/The Wizard14. Pipeline15. (I'm Not) Your Stepping Stone16. Great Big Kiss17. The 10 Commandments of Love18. These Boots Are Made for Walking19. Like a Rolling Stone20. Endless Party21. Pills22. (I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man23. Personality Crisis


  • Wykonawca Thunders Johnny
  • Data premiery 2009-01-26
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Caught Us Doing It2. Too Long3. Champagne Charlie4. Sugar in My Bowl5. Your Feet's Too Big6. Maple Leaf Rag7. My Pencil Won't Write No More8. Some of These Days9. Alabama Blues10. Beedle Um Bum11. Jesus Is a Dying Bed Maker12. Cincinnatti Flow Rag13. Making Whoopee14. Frisco Town15. He's in the Jailhouse Now


  • Wykonawca The Jake Leg Jug Band
  • Data premiery 2014-01-13
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: 1. Light Years2. If These Walls Could Speak3. Galveston4. Where's the Playground, Susie?5. MacArthur Park6. Wichita Lineman7. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress8. Sunshower9. Still Within the Sound of My Voice1. Excerpt from 'By the Time I Get to Phoenix'2. Jimmy Webb On Meeting Glen for the First Time3. Light Years4. Glen and Jimmy Discuss 'If These Walls Could Speak'5. If These Walls Could Speak6. Glen and Jimmy Discuss 'Galveston'7. Galveston8. Glen and Jimmy Discuss 'Where's the Playground Susie?'9. Where's the Playground Susie?10. MacArthur Park11. Excerpt from 'Almost Alright Again'12. Jimmy Webb On 'Wichita Lineman'13. Wichita Lineman14. Jimmy Webb On 'The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress'15. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress16. Jimmy Webb On 'By the Time I Get to Phoenix'17. Glen and Jimmy Discuss 'Honey Come Back' and 'Sunshower'18. Sunshower19. Still Within the Sound of My Voice


  • Wykonawca Campbell Glen , Webb Jimmy
  • Data premiery 2012-10-22
  • Nośnik CD+DVD
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Największe przeboje Paula Simona – amerykańskiego piosenkarza i gitarzysty rockowego, autora tekstów i kompozytora, jednego z najwybitniejszych i najbardziej znanych przedstawicieli stylu folk rock. Paul Simon to równiez połowa duetu Simon and Garfunkel, po którego rozpadzie prowadzi owocną karierę solową.CD 11. Mother And Child Reunion2. Loves Me Like a Rock3. Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard4. Duncan5. Kodachrome6. 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover7. Slip Slidin' Away8. Gone At Last9. Something So Right10. Late In The Evening11. Hearts And Bones12. Take Me To The Mardi Gras13. That Was Your Mother14. American Tune15. Peace Like A River16. Stranded In A Limosine17. Train In The Distance18. The Late Great Johnny Ace19. Still Crazy After All These YearsCD 21. Graceland2. Diamonds On The Soles Of Her Shoes3. The Boy In The Bubble4. You Can Call Me Al5. Under African Skies6. The Obvious Child7. Born At The Right Time8. The Cool, Cool River9. Spirit Voices10. Adios Hermanos11. Born In Puerto Rico12. Quality13. Darling Lorraine14. Hurricane Eye15. Father And Daughter16. Outrageous17. Wartime Prayers


  • Wykonawca Simon Paul
  • Data premiery 2012-09-04
  • Nośnik CD
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