Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Amandine Beyer. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Amandine Beyer. Mostrar todas las entradas
martes, 21 de enero de 2020
jueves, 9 de enero de 2020
Gli Incogniti / Amandine Beyer CORELLI The Complete Concerti Grossi
Amandine Beyer
Gli Incogniti
ARCANGELO CORELLI (1653-1713)
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.7 in D major
Concerto da camera Op.VI no.9 in F major
Sinfonia, WoO 1, to the oratorio Santa Beatrice d’Este in D minor
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.4 in D major
Concerto da camera Op.VI no.11 in B-flat major
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.2 in F major
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.8 in G minor, « Fatto per la notte di Natale »
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.6 in F major
Sonata a quattro in G minor, WoO 2
Concerto da camera Op.VI no.10 in C major
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.5 in B-flat major
Concerto da camera Op.VI no.12 in F major
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.3 in C minor
Concerto da chiesa Op.VI no.1 in D major
sábado, 27 de octubre de 2018
Marco Ceccato / Amandine Beyer / Gli Incogniti JOSEPH HAYDN Concerti per Esterházy
During his first years in the service of the Esterházy princes, Joseph
Haydn had every opportunity to show what he was capable of accomplishing
as both instrumental soloist (on violin or keyboard!) and composer; in
fact, all his concertos, most of which date from the 1760s, offer a
glimpse of a brilliant artist who gradually moved away from the style
galant by inventing a new musical dialogue soon to become the Classical
style. Tailor-made for specific virtuosos in Haydn's time, these works
now receive the undivided attention of Gli Incogniti with their inspired
soloists Amandine Beyer and Marco Ceccato. Their enthusiasm for this
delightful and demanding music is irresistible!
martes, 27 de febrero de 2018
Edna Stern / Amandine Beyer CHACONNE
martes, 4 de julio de 2017
Amandine Beyer / Leila Schayegh ANTONIO CALDARA Trios Sonatas
Two
former students of the Schola Cantorum in Basel, both now captivating
audiences each with their individual violinistic artistry, Amandine
Beyer and Leila Schayegh, join forces for a new SCB recording devoted to
the trio sonata music of Antonio Caldara, and issued with Glossa.
Though
he is known now (as for much of his life) primarily as a composer of
oratorios and operas, the Venetian Caldara made his name penning early
examples of the trio sonata form; his Opp. 1 and 2 sets were published
in 1693 and 1699 respectively. Caldara’s Op. 1 Trio Sonatas are
characterized by their contrasting use of fast and slow movements, those
from the second set by their incorporation of dances. Yet Caldara’s
melodic gift – which was to serve him so well in his musical posts in
various Italian states, in Barcelona, and as vice-Kapellmeister at the
Imperial Court in Vienna – is already evident in Beyer and Schayegh’s
selection from his instrumental publications; the composer was also
already noted as a virtuoso of the cello – and he also played the violin
and keyboard, and the awareness of all these instruments is greatly
evident in these trio sonatas.
The continuo team here
is made up of Jonathan Pesek, cello, Jörg-Andreas Bötticher,
harpsichord and organ, and Matthias Spaeter, liuto attiorbato. Beyer and
Schayegh both were taught at the SCB by Chiara Banchini and are
continuing their connection with the school as teaching successors to
Banchini. (GLOSSA)
viernes, 23 de septiembre de 2016
Amandine Beyer / Giuliano Carmignola / Gli Incogniti ANTONIO VIVALDI Concerti per Due Violini
Playing and recording Vivaldi’s concertos for two violins, I came to realise how much deeper my love for this repertory and this composer becomes with each new experience.
Beyond the notes and the formal stereotype, Vivaldi seems to me to be a composer endowed with humanity and a profound sense of the harmony of beings with nature. Whether he is composing for orchestra, for voice, for different solo instruments or, as here, for two violins, he always takes care to bring out the beauty of colours (of both timbres and harmonies), the wealth of combinations, and the versatility of the instruments which he puts through infinite transformations.
Here, in the interplay between the two violins and their partners in the orchestra, we witness all kinds of metamorphoses, and it’s a pleasure that I find hard to explain in words. The pleasure of dialoguing with Giuliano Carmignola, the enchanter who can give each note a diamantine reflection and each rhythm an infinite, joyous suppleness; the pleasure of turning into a bird into a bird that plays with others in its flock or sings in echo, of melting into a river like a drop of water tossed by the raging current, of feeling like a blade of grass in the breeze, like a splinter of glass illuminating a fleeting moment, a stone tumbling down a steep slope after its predecessor or a particle of the cascade that shoots forth like the ‘wasserfall’ in Rimbaud’s poem.1 Vivaldi has a gift for letting flowers say their name. And for letting us hear them.
(Amandine Beyer)
lunes, 18 de julio de 2016
Gli Incogniti / Amandine Beyer PACHELBEL Un orage d'avril
The title of this release and the glowering skyscape on its cover are
pure marketing – the piece from which the title comes is not about
April weather at all – but I don’t think anyone lured by it into buying a
disc of 17th-century chamber music need feel aggrieved. We don’t get
enough reminders that Pachelbel was a real composer of quality chamber
music, yet here is his complete Musikalische Ergötzung of 1695,
consisting of six ‘Parthien’ (or suites) for two violins and continuo.
Add in a seventh, unpublished suite, six secular songs and the Canon and
Gigue, and these are ‘musical pleasures’ indeed.
If April is a red herring, the presence elsewhere in the artwork of
Brueghel is more apt, for Pachelbel’s music has a strong sense of
connection with the world. The songs deal feelingly with death, the
perfidy of princes (that’s the April showers one), ‘Good Councillor
Walther’ and a nameless patron, while the suites, for all their restless
counterpoint, never lose touch with their grounded choreographic roots.
Fine music, then, but not rarefied.
In Gli Incogniti it finds itself in expert hands. There is depth and
sweetness to their sound, clarity and busyness to their counterpoint,
and buoyancy to their expression of rhythm and line. They are as able to
inhabit serious melancholy (in Partie IV for instance) as to access a
sense of fun for dances such as the Aria of the ‘Partie a 4’ (to which
they add a rat-a-tat finger-on-wood accompaniment) or in the occasional
playful burst of pizzicato. Likewise, in the unassumingly strophic
songs, they can quickly summon a mood, most movingly when
viola-comforted death is the subject; Hans Jörg Mammel’s clear but
plangent tenor helps, though I wish he had more ease of movement. The Canon is intelligently done, its slowly changing countenance subtly
observed, and closing not in grandiose climax but gentle farewell. Less
chiselled than London Baroque’s muscly 1994 recording, and more in tune
than that of Les Cyclopes (7/95), this release is well worth your time. (Lindsay Kemp / Gramophone)
miércoles, 11 de noviembre de 2015
Amandine Beyer / Gli Incogniti ANTONIO VIVALDI Teatro alla Moda
Already some years ago, Amandine Beyer is recognized as a reference in the
interpretation baroque violin
repertoire. Her recording of the
Sonatas & Partitas by J. S. Bach in
2012, has been awarded the best
international critics (Diapason d’or
de l’année, Choc de Classica de
l’année, Editor’s choice de
Gramophone, Prix Academie
Charles Cros, Excepcional de Scherzo....). The work in this masterpiece is being continued with the performance "Partita 2", choreographed and danced by Anne Theresa de Keersmaeker and Boris Charmatz.
She plays regularly in the most important halls and festivals worldwide (Théatre du Chatelet, Festival de Sablé, Innsbruck Festwochen Konzerthaus de Viena...). She shares her time between between different music ensembles were she takes part off : les Cornets Noirs, the duos with Pierre Hantai, Kristian Bezuidenhout or Laurance Beyer and her own ensemble: Gli Incogniti (their CD's devoted to Vivaldi's Four Seasons and Corelli's Concerti Grossi have been welcomed by the international critic
as new highlights in the performance of this repertoire).
Her other passion is teaching, giving lessons at the ESMAE of Porto (Portugal), as well as masterclasses worldwide (France, Taiwan, Brasil, USA, Canada). Since 2010 she teachs baroque violin at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Switzerland.
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