Sharon Kam's
tone is even, controlled, and cool, though it is appropriately
explosive in the few passages where such effects are called for; she
effortlessly leaps around registers, and her passagework is clean and
light as a feather. The Sinfonia Varsovia is led by Gregor Bühl
who, overall, contributes a sensitive and well-balanced accompaniment
that never overpowers the soloist and provides support where it is
needed. Berlin Classics' recording is clear and attractively resonant,
though there is some transience in the signal during loud passages where
the clarinet register is bright and silvery. (Uncle Dave Lewis)
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Carl Maria von Weber. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Carl Maria von Weber. Mostrar todas las entradas
jueves, 3 de septiembre de 2020
sábado, 22 de agosto de 2020
martes, 21 de julio de 2020
miércoles, 8 de julio de 2020
Eric Hoeprich / London Haydn Quartet CARL MARIA VON WEBER - FRANZ KROMMER Clarinet Quintets
miércoles, 27 de mayo de 2020
sábado, 28 de marzo de 2020
lunes, 2 de diciembre de 2019
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra / Marek Janowski WEBER Der Freischütz
Maestro Marek Janowski leads a sensational cast — including star
vocalists Lise Davidsen and Andreas Schager — on this new recording of
Der Freischütz, the German Romantic opera par excellence. In the years
after its 1821 premiere, the catchy melodies, picturesque charm and
spooky scenes of Der Freischütz thrilled audiences throughout Europe.
Janowski’s inspired reading lifts out the symphonic qualities of Carl
Maria von Weber’s masterpiece, and makes clear why colleagues such as
Hector Berlioz and Richard Wagner raved about the work. The excellent
cast consists of Lise Davidsen (Agathe), Andreas Schager (Max), Sofia
Fomina (Ännchen), Alan Held (Kaspar), Markus Eiche (Ottokar) and
Franz-Josef Selig (Eremit). Janowski conducts the Frankfurt Radio
Symphony and MDR Radio Choir. For this recording, the original spoken
dialogues have been replaced by short narrations, written by Katharina
Wagner and Daniel Weber and recited by Corinna Kirchhoff and Peter
Simonischek.
Marek Janowski is one of the most celebrated conductors of our times,
and enjoys a vast PENTATONE discography, including complete recordings
of Bruckner’s symphonies and Wagner’s mature operas. Frankfurt Radio
Symphony has also released multiple albums on PENTATONE, including a
recording of Richard Strauss’s Salome (2017).
viernes, 22 de marzo de 2019
10forBrass OPERA
Everything is possible on stage. At least that’s our impression upon
hearing the members of the young, award-winning brass ensemble
10forBrass. On their new GENUIN release, no woodwind run is too
fast for them and no string pianissimo too soft: they are both witches
and kings, mermaids and jesters, angels and huntsmen. From Carl Maria
von Weber to Sergei Prokofiev, no music theatre work is safe from the
brass virtuosi – whatever isn’t bolted to the floor is fair game for the
sizeable brass ensemble. Each opera scene is more beautiful than the
next: simply ravishing!
lunes, 11 de marzo de 2019
Andreas Ottensamer / Yuja Wang BLUE HOUR
Born in 1989, Andreas Ottensamer comes from an Austro-Hungarian
family of musicians and was drawn to music early, receiving his first
piano lessons when he was four. At the age of ten he began studying the
cello at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna, then
changed to the clarinet under Johann Hindlerin in 2003.
Andreas Ottensamer gained his first orchestral experience as a deputy
in the orchestra of the Vienna State Opera and the Vienna Philharmonic
and as a member of the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester. In 2009 he
interrupted his Harvard studies to become a scholar of the Orchestra
Academy of the Berlin Philharmonic. He is now the principal
clarinettist of the Berlin Philharmonic.
A highlight of this season will be the Europakonzert of the Berlin
Philharmonic, in which Andreas Ottensamer will perform Carl Maria von
Weber’s Clarinet Concerto No.1 under Mariss Jansons.
martes, 12 de febrero de 2019
Paul Lewis WEBER - SCHUBERT Sonatas
Even if both of them were
destined to die tragically of illness at a very early age (Weber at 39,
Schubert just 31!), the two composers on this disc were healthy enough
when they wrote these works, and were even beginning to taste success.
Except that it was not to the piano sonata that they owed their fame:
not without a twinkle in his eye, Paul Lewis has coupled their works in
this genre in order to paint a different and highly elegant portrait of
two musical dramatists who were emblematic figures of Austro-German
Romanticism.
lunes, 29 de octubre de 2018
Carducci String Quartet / Julian Bliss MOZART Clarinet Quintet in A Major K. 581 WEBER Clarinet Quintet in B flat Major
Julian Bliss joins the Carducci String Quartet in performances of two
seminal works – Weber’s Clarinet Quintet in B flat Major, Op. 34 and
Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K.581.
Both Mozart and Weber were inspired by the artisty of performers of
their day (Anton Stadler in Mozart’s case, and Heinrich Baermann in
Weber’s). Their technical prowess, tonal quality and imaginative range
allowed each composer to expand the clarinet repertoire with these
works, which remain pre-eminent in the genre.
lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2018
Cristo Barrios / Andrew West DEEP LIGHT
We were inspired to gather together this collection of chamber works for
reasons beyond the obvious prestige of the individual composers and the
importance of their works. We wanted to present the listener with a
satisfying musical journey, as much through the formal variety as the
expressive content of the pieces, full of contrasts that are to be found
among different movements of the same piece, as well as among the five
works on the recording. Rather than offering a historical overview of
the programme, we would prefer to look briefly at our choice of title,
Deep Light, and its various meanings. On the one hand, it aims to evoke
the luminosity that lies in the depth of feeling, represented here by
two major works of the German Romantic clarinet repertoire, the Grand
Duo Concertant by Carl Maria von Weber and Robert Schumann’s
Phantasiestücke. Emotionally profound in their darker, slower movements,
these works also display an exalted brightness in their exuberant
finales. On the other hand, however, the deep and the light are simply
synonyms for the serious and the playful. Seen in this way, the two
German works provide the weight on the CD, while the three others fall
more into the second category. It is our hope that the contrasting
styles and the unusual juxtaposition of repertoire will stimulate those
familiar with these works into fresh ways of listening, and provide
those new to them with the delight of discovery. (Cristo Barrios / Andrew West)
sábado, 27 de enero de 2018
Isabelle Faust / Alexander Melnikov CARL MARIA VON WEBER Sonatas for Piano & Violin - Piano Quartet
The unjustly neglected piano quartet (J76) was completed in September
of the year 1809, which the 22-year-old Weber spent in Stuttgart. It
was originally offered to the publisher Hans Georg Nägeli, but he
rejected it, advising the composer that it created wanton ‘confusion in
the arrangement of its ideas’ and indeed too obviously imitated the
‘bizarreries’ of Beethoven. However, the work was issued a year later by
the Bonn firm of Beethoven’s friend and admirer Nikolaus Simrock, whose
ears were more receptive to the peculiarities of the score than Nägeli.
And in the following year, 1811, Simrock once again stepped into the
breach in the matter of the publication of the Six Violin Sonatas
(J99–104). These were written to a tight deadline in the late summer of
1810, on commission from the Offenbach publisher Johann Anton André, who
had in mind a collection of short pieces of moderate difficulty for the
domestic music-making of the upper middle classes. Unhappy with the
concomitant artistic limitations, Weber took the commission only
half-heartedly and repeatedly complained during the compositional
process of this ‘swine of a job’, which cost him ‘more sweat than the
same number of symphonies’. His annoyance was all the greater when André
rejected the finished work out of hand because it did not correspond to
his expectations. When Simrock finally published these pieces in
Bonn in two instalments under the title 'Progressive sonatas for
fortepiano with obbligato violin, composed for and dedicated to amateur
musicians', with the opus number 10, Weber had only remotely followed
André’s specifications. It is true that the technical demands on the
performers, especially the violin, are fairly modest, but in terms of
content the 6 short two- or three-movement sonatinas far outstrip mere
pedagogical intentions.They were written to please amateurs, but quite
as much to satisfy connoisseurs of any era. Isabelle Faust
follows up the success of recent recordings for hm [Bach volume 2, Berg
and Beethoven with Claudio Abbado] with regular partner Alexander
Melnikov and her brother Boris, currently principal viola of the Bremer
Philharmoniker, and Wolfgang Emanuel Schmidt of whom Mstislav
Rostropovich has said: ‘Wolfgang Emanuel Schmidt is one of the leading
cellists of his generation, of our time’.
viernes, 4 de agosto de 2017
Joyce El-Khoury / Carlo Rizzi / The Hallé ÉCHO
Of Joyce El-Khoury’s performance as Violetta in her recent Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (ROH) debut, the Independent wrote: “Her pianissimi are exquisite, her coloratura is bold, fearless and flawless, and the expressiveness of her sound grips the heart”. She is embracing her gift for bel canto repertoire with the release of her debut solo album ‘Echo’ with maestro Carlo Rizzi and The Hallé Orchestra (Opera Rara) later this summer.
It is impossible to know with any accuracy what Julie Dorus-Gras’s voice sounded like, though in her day she acquired a reputation for rare vocal greatness.
What is clear from the historical facts available is that she had a prodigious work ethic and was constantly refining and shaping her vocal technique to meet the requirements of the roles she sang. This iron discipline allowed her to perform a wider variety of roles than normal and placed her among the front rank of artists of the time. When composers of considerable prominence were looking for appropriate talent to debut their works, she was often the first choice.
I feel a strong kinship with Mme. Dorus-Gras. Like her, I consider myself a perennial student of this wonderful art form. Like her, I am always looking to grow, to expand my vocal palette in an effort to convey more truthfully the trials, tribulations and intricacies of the human condition.
There is no way to know whether my voice is similar to hers in tonal quality. What I do know, is that the repertoire she sang, some of which is featured on this disc, resonates deeply with me. Moreover, the vocal demands feel a natural fit for my voice and I simply love singing this music.
This recital recording is both a tribute and a gesture of gratitude to this wonderful artist, who pioneered so much repertoire that still has so much to say to modern-day audiences. I decided to call this disc Écho after noticing that this word is present in a few of the pieces, whether in French or Italian (as ‘eco’). is is especially spine-tingling for me: Mme. Julie Dorus-Gras’s work is still echoing today in the 21st century and inspiring artists such as myself.
I very much hope you enjoy listening to this marvellous music. (Joyce El-Khoury)
viernes, 29 de julio de 2016
Jonas Kaufmann THE BEST OF JONAS KAUFMANN
German tenor Jonas Kaufmann
came on the scene in the mid-1990s and has gradually risen to the top
rank of the operatic world. His is a remarkable voice in many ways. Like
Plácido Domingo,
to whom he is a sort of German opposite number, he excels in both
Italian and German opera and also sings well in French and English (in
an odd performance of a piece from Weber's Oberon, track 17). He adds freely dramatic shaping to lines of the big Verdi and Puccini
tunes, almost always defamiliarizing them in ways that seem personal
and passionate, with a bit of vocal gravel applied at just the right
moment. Kaufmann has done his part to rediscover a languishing repertory, in his case
verismo opera from around the turn of the century, and this Best of Jonas Kaufmann collection may be worth the price simply for the little-heard Ombra di nube of Licinio Refice
(track 15). The collection represents a good mix of standards and
innovative thinking. And, through it all, there's the kind of power that
just doesn't come along often. It took a while for general listeners to
wake up to the fact that Kaufmann
is close to the best out there. This collection draws on recordings
made between 2002 and 2010, with a variety of orchestras that are all
completely overshadowed by Kaufmann's
vocal artistry. It's a fine place to start with a singer well on his
way to becoming a household name like the great voices of the past. (James Manheim)
jueves, 28 de julio de 2016
Sharon Kam / Gregor Bühl / Sinfonia Varsovia THE ROMANTIC CLARINET
The clarinet made its bow in the eighteenth century and was the immediate beneficiary of Mozart's
attention, but the instrument came into its own in the nineteenth
century. Inasmuch as major clarinet literature from the nineteenth
century is concerned, works of Carl Maria von Weber dominate the field, but there was more to it than that, and clarinet virtuoso Sharon Kam
helps widen the perspective in her Berlin Classics effort The Romantic Clarinet. She starts out with a concerto -- and what a concerto -- by Julius Rietz, a close contemporary of Felix Mendelssohn. It is a superb work; stormy, intense, and involving and probably is to the clarinet what the E minor violin concerto of Mendelssohn is to the violin. On Max Bruch's Concerto for clarinet, viola, and orchestra in E minor, Op. 88 (1911), Kam is joined her brother, violist Ori Kam.
To be fair, the work is perhaps friendlier to the viola than it is to
the clarinet; much of the time the clarinet holds down the fort while
the viola goes gallivanting about. With the Weber
Quintet in B flat, Op. 34, we are entering more familiar territory, but
it is heard in the arrangement for clarinet and string orchestra,
recorded with some frequency, but not nearly as often as the chamber
version. In this piece, the Sinfonia Varsovia plays a stronger and more assertive role than in the others, which is definitely a plus for the music.
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