Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Arne Nordheim. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Arne Nordheim. Mostrar todas las entradas
viernes, 6 de noviembre de 2020
martes, 27 de noviembre de 2018
Hermine Horiot BORÉALES
Boréales is the second album of cellist
Hermine Horiot, recently released for the 1001 Notes label. A vast solo
cello crossover, in the heart of six Nordic and Baltic countries,
spanning more than a century of music. From Sibelius to Arvo Pärt,
through contemporary creation and the rediscovery of unfairly unknown
works outside their borders, Boréales goes out to meet geniuses from the
cold, with dreamlike, complex and luminous language. Like the aurora of
the same name, the changing lights of these music rise from the silence
to come to bloom in the ear of the listener. Their colors will be
different for everyone, that's the strength of the music.
The merger of the cello and the electronics accentuates this dimension, with the piece Fratres by Arvo Pärt, in an unprecedented adaptation of Julien Podolak, validated by the composer.
At the end of their work for Arvo Pärt's Fratres, Hermine Horiot and Julien Podolak came up with a live version of Boréales, in which the electronics are fully integrated into the recital in a single breath: slipping between the pieces it creates links, sometimes breaks.
During the concert, a duet is formed between the cello and the electronics: a dreamlike dialogue, a sound and moving architecture, different for each performance.
The merger of the cello and the electronics accentuates this dimension, with the piece Fratres by Arvo Pärt, in an unprecedented adaptation of Julien Podolak, validated by the composer.
At the end of their work for Arvo Pärt's Fratres, Hermine Horiot and Julien Podolak came up with a live version of Boréales, in which the electronics are fully integrated into the recital in a single breath: slipping between the pieces it creates links, sometimes breaks.
During the concert, a duet is formed between the cello and the electronics: a dreamlike dialogue, a sound and moving architecture, different for each performance.
lunes, 6 de junio de 2016
Ksenija Sidorova CLASSICAL ACCORDION
The accordion is an underexploited resource in western classical music. Like a number of "marginal" instruments it needed a champion before composers began to take it seriously: Andrés Segovia and the guitar is an obvious parallel. Although the concertina, first patented in 1829, could call on a repertoire of classical compositions from the mid-nineteenth century onwards, thanks chiefly to the efforts of Giulio Regondi (1822-72), it was not until the early twentieth century and the invention of the free-bass accordion "which much expanded the tonal and harmonic resources of the instrument" that the stimulus for a modern concert repertoire was perceived. The musician who picked up that challenge was the Dane Mogens Ellegaard (1935-95), who began to play the accordion when he was eight. In an interview in 1990 he looked back on the conditions with which he initially had to contend:
When I started, there was absolutely no accordion culture.
Unless you define accordion culture as "oom-pah-pah", or the Cuckoo Waltz that sort of thing. The free-bass accordion didn't exist! it was entirely unknown when I was a child. At that time the accordion world was living in splendid isolation. No contact at all with the outside musical world. Concerts for us consisted of Frosini, Deiro1 repertoire or folkloristic music. The possibilities of getting a formal, quality education [on accordion] were nil. The accordion was not accepted at any of the higher music institutions.... The possibilities for a soloist, for the best players, would be variety "night club" work, Saturday night shows.... This is what I was doing when I was very young.
In 1953, while still a student, Ellegaard acquired one of the first free-bass accordions in Denmark and within four years the light-music composer Vilfred Kjaer had written a concerto for him: a work of light character, but anyway a beginning. At that concert, also by coincidence, Ole Schmidt [1928-2010] was sitting in the audience. He didn't like Kjaer's composition, but liked the instrument, and told me this bluntly afterwards. So I challenged him to write something better. In 1958 he wrote Symphonic Fantasy and Allegro, Op. 20, for accordion and orchestra, which was the first really serious work for accordion written by a good composer. The search for a modern repertoire for the accordion was now underway, and over the next four decades Ellegaard's commissions built it up from scratch, with his students in turn commissioning further works. Of course, accordionists have also worked backwards, transcribing earlier keyboard works for their instrument which gives Baroque music in particular a new lease of life. This CD mines both the old and new veins in the modern accordion repertoire.
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