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Swedish Radio Choir, Peter Dijkstra – Brahms: Mass & Motets (2014) [nativeDSDmusic DSF DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Johannes Brahms – Mass & Motets – Swedish Radio Choir, Peter Dijkstra (2014)
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz | Time – 57:25 minutes | 2,3 GB | Genre: Classical
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 57:25 minutes | 0,99 GB
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: nativeDSDmusic | Booklet, Front Cover |  © Channel Classics Records B.V.
Recorded: September 2013, Engelbrekts Church, Stockholm

This programme features highlights of German Romanticism and one of the most familiar and frequently performed composers: Johannes Brahms. More particularly, Brahms’s choral music ‘in all its pureness’, the genre that made him so well-known and well-loved among the countless choirs of the time in Germany and Austria. Four years before Brahms was born in Hamburg, Felix Mendelssohn dusted off Bach’s St Matthew Passion and had it performed again, a hundred years after the premiere in 1729. Brahms likewise cherished the remembrance of Bach. In Vienna he performed his motets and throughout Brahms’s life, Bach remained his primary source of inspiration.
With its 32 professional singers, the Swedish Radio Choir forms an instrument with a range from the most delicate a cappella tones to oratorios of enormous power and versatility. Every individual is allowed his or her place in the group, resulting in an exclusive expressiveness – the Swedish Radio Choir’s unique sound. The Swedish Radio Choir, which is one of the world’s most respected a cappella ensembles, was founded in 1925, but it was not until 25 years later (1952), under the leadership of their new principal conductor Eric Ericson, that the choir began to develop into the flexible instrument that it has now become. And every principal conductor after him has also contributed to the character of the choir, adding new colour and accomplishments. The present principal conductor, since the autumn of 2007, is Peter Dijkstra.

This release on the Dutch audiophile Channel Classics label offers some real Brahms rarities: a rare thing in a marketplace where this composer’s work has been pretty exhaustively explored. The Swedish Radio Choir under Peter Dijkstra does not quite make a case for any of these works as counterparts to Ein deutsches Requiem, Op. 45, but the music is interesting enough and in several cases unlike anything else Brahms ever wrote. Mostly short, these a cappella works reflect more than almost any others by Brahms his engagement with early music: not only Bach, but Heinrich Schütz, Giovanni Gabrieli, and even Palestrina in the fragmentary Missa Canonica (tracks 6-8), which did not have its premiere until 1983. The Fest-und Gedenksprüche (say that fast five times), Op. 109, are responsorial structures intended for outdoor performance; other works are simple and declamatory in the manner of a chorale, but characteristic of Brahms’ harmonic world. The late Three Motets, Op. 110, have the economy of the composer’s late chamber music, and the longer Two Motets, Op. 74, especially the first piece, Warum ist das Licht gegeben, achieve a Romantic extension of Bach’s language in an entirely different way from Mendelssohn, who seems to be the direct ancestor but not the model for many of these works. The music is not pious in mood, which one might expect from a composer of whom Dvorák said, “Such a man, such a fine soul — and he believes in nothing! He believes in nothing!” Instead, Brahms engages in dialogue with musical ancestors who did not show up directly in his music, but are there nonetheless. The album is something of a labor of love for Dijkstra, who elicits from the Swedish Radio Choir a sound with a lot of texture, but with clear rendition of the texts. The sound from a Stockholm church is a major attraction: appropriate to the music’s subject, but leaving the choir fully intelligible. Those who do not speak German might wish for translations of the texts in the booklet, or at least a link to them, in place of photos, coupons, a discography, and even a credit for the cables used by the engineers, but this is on balance an intriguing find for those who love Brahms. –AllMusic Review by James Manheim

Tracklist:
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Zwei Motetten opus 74 (1877)
1. Warum ist das Licht gegeben 11.47
2. O Heiland, reiss die Himmel auf 5.21
Fest-und Gedenksprüche opus 109 (1888-89)
3. Unsere Väter hofften auf dich 2.19
4. Wenn ein starker Gewappneter 3.13
5. Wo ist ein so herrlich Volk 4.41
Missa Canonica opus posth. (1856-1862)
6. Sanctus 2.49
7. Benedictus 2.00
8. Agnus Dei 4.36
Zwei Motetten opus 29 (1856 -1860)
9. Es ist das Heil uns kommen her 5.10
10. Schaffe in mir, Gott, ein rein Herz 6.56
Drei Motetten opus 110 (1889)
11. Ich aber bin elend 2.56
12. Ach, arme Welt, du trügest mich 2.03
13. Wenn wir in höchsten Nöten sein 3.24

Personnel:
Swedish Radio Choir
Peter Dijkstra, conductor

DSD64

mqs.link_BrahmsMassMotetsSwedishRadioChoirPeterDijkstra2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsMassMotetsSwedishRadioChoirPeterDijkstra2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsMassMotetsSwedishRadioChoirPeterDijkstra2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part3.rar


Maurizio Pollini, Quartetto Italiano – Brahms: Piano Quintet Op.34 (1980/2016) [e-Onkyo FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Johannes Brahms – Piano Quintet Op.34 – Maurizio Pollini, Quartetto Italiano (1980/2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 43:47 minutes | 846 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Booklet, Front Cover | © Deutsche Grammophon
Recording: January 1979, Residenz, Herkulessaal, Munich, Germany

As I remarked when reviewing the Bartok/Ranki version (Hungaroton), your choice in this work is likely to depend on your priorities. I did not review this Pollini version when it first appeared, but a friend of mine played me just the slow movement and I thought it marvellous: however, when I heard the whole performance on this newly transferred CD, I realized that that movement is by far the best of it and that, for the rest, the balance is too variable and too dominated by the pianist to be anything like ideal. So you will only go for this version if you are a Pollini fan or are primarily interested in the piano playing, which is superb.
The Musikverein Quartet with Previn on Philips is the best balanced recording and together they give a wonderfully well integrated and perceptive performance. It is the most recent of these recordings and is my own choice. But I did start by referring to priorities and if your own is for quantity of music for your money, then it (and the Pollini for that matter) is poor value at only just over 41 minutes (the Pollini is a couple of minutes longer) compared with Hungaroton who couple it with the Clarinet Quintet. The Hungarian sound quality is not very good—it dates from the mid-1970s but it remains a fine buy for those who want value.’ –Gramophone

Tracklist:
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Klavierquintett f-moll Op. 34
1. I. Allegro Non Troppo ‎– Poco Sostenuto ‎– Tempo I 15:52
2. II. Andante, Un Poco Adagio 8:57
3. III. Scherzo. Allegro ‎– Trio 7:36
4. IV. Finale. Poco Sostenuto ‎– Allegro Non Troppo ‎– Tempo I ‎– Presto, Non Troppo 10:51

Personnel:
Maurizio Pollini, PIANO
Quartetto Italiano:
Paolo Borciani, 1 violine
Elisa Pegreffi, 2 violine
Dino Asciolla, viola (alto)
Franco Rossi, violoncello

Download:

mqs.link_BrahmsPianoQuintetOp.34MaurizioPolliniQuartettoItaliano19802016eOnkyo2496.rar

Budapest Festival Orchestra, Ivan Fischer – Brahms: Symphony no. 2 (2014) [nativeDSDmusic DSF DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Johannes Brahms – Symphony no. 2, Tragic Overture, Academic Festival Overture – Budapest Festival Orchestra, Ivan Fischer (2014) 
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz | Time – 01:07:45 minutes | 2,7 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: nativeDSDmusic | Booklet, Front Cover |  © Channel Classics Records B.V.
Recorded: Palace of Arts, Budapest, February 2012

A remarkable, transparent purity can be heard in Brahms’s Second symphony. It is a sharp contrast to the huge arsenal of ideas collected in the First Symphony, which Brahms had worked on for many years. Here in his Second he shows us his masterful skill in developing large-scale architecture from the simplest motifs. To give the first of these to the horns is a logical choice; Brahms always used natural horns and resisted the more modern instruments. Horns can ideally explore the purest of all musical ideas: the journey through the overtones.
Similar purity is present in all the themes. When at the start the basses step down a semitone and step back again, nobody could guess what a rich new world would develop from this cell. The last movement is also built on a simple tool: repeated, equal notes follow each other in regimental order (a classical tradition often heard in final movements by Haydn or Mozart). Is this Brahms’s most nature-related symphony? Considering the complicated organisms that develop from the simplest cells, yes, it is. Brahms certainly has the divine, creative talent to show us how this process can work in music. –Iván Fischer

“indeed Fischer and his players seem content to let the untroubled optimism of the symphony shine through…The six-minute scherzo, often likened with some justification to Schubert, is a particular delight…Fischer’s brass are, once again, on top-notch form here – neither too timid nor too ostentatiously forceful.” –Presto Classical
“Who needs another Brahms Second Symphony? Well, after Iván Fischer’s exhilarating Brahms No 1, we can all benefit from the intense freshness and lyricism that his Budapest forces bring to this music, along with their roots in eastern Europe…Fischer is superb at clarifying the textures.” –The Observer
“it is even more integrated in thematic structure than the First, and it is that balance between detailed focus and spontaneity that Ivan Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra strike so convincingly here. Fischer’s moderate speeds ensure that his subtle tempo modifications always sound natural.” –BBC Music Magazin

Tracklist:
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Symphony no. 2 in D major, opus 73 (1877)
1 Allegro non troppo 20.06
2 Adagio non troppo 9.00
3 Allegretto grazioso 5.38
4 Presto ma non assai 9.33
5 Tragic Overture in d, opus 81 (1880) 12.54
6 Academic Festival Overture in c, op.80 (1880) 10.34

Personnel:
Budapest Festival Orchestra
Iván Fischer, conductor

DSD64

mqs.link_BrahmsSymphonyNo.2BudapestFestivalOrchestraIvnFischer2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsSymphonyNo.2BudapestFestivalOrchestraIvnFischer2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsSymphonyNo.2BudapestFestivalOrchestraIvnFischer2014nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part3.rar

Christian Tetzlaff, Tanja Tetzlaff, Lars Vogt – Brahms: The Piano Trios (2015/2016) [nativeDSDmusic DSF DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Johannes Brahms – The Piano Trios – Christian Tetzlaff, Tanja Tetzlaff, Lars Vogt (2015/2016)
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz | Time – 01:22:57 minutes | 3,27 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Booklet, Front Cover |  © CTI2xHD/Ondine Oy, Helsinki
Recorded: Sendesaal Bremen, 27 – 29 May 2014

Award-winning violinist Christian Tetzlaff and pianist Lars Vogt are joined together with Tanja Tetzlaff in this exciting new recording of the Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Piano Trios.
The Brahms Piano Trios belong to the very core of the romantic chamber music repertoire. They span a period from the 1850s (the 1st version of Op. 8) to the 1880s, Op. 101 being completed during the last decade of Brahms’ active career as a composer. Piano Trio No. 1 was also revised by the composer as late as in 1889.
Christian Tetzlaff has been considered as one of the world’s leading international violinists for many years, and still maintains a most extensive performing schedule. Musical America named him “Instrumentalist of the Year” in 2005 and his recording of the violin concertos by Mendelssohn and Schumann, released on Ondine in 2011 (ODE 1195-2), received the “Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik”. Gramophone Magazine chose his recording of the Schumann Violin Sonatas with Lars Vogt (ODE 1205-2) as “Disc of the Month” in January 2014. In addition, in 2015 ICMA awarded Christian Tetzlaff as the “Artist of the Year”.
Chamber music plays a significant part in Tanja Tetzlaff’s career. She gives regular recitals in renowned concert series and festivals. In addition to successes in many international competitions, she has collaborated with world-renowed orchestras and conductors.
Lars Vogt was appointed the first ever “Pianist in Residence” by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2003/04 and enjoys a high profile as a soloist and chamber musician.

Tracklist:
Johannes Brahms (1833–1897)
Piano Trio No. 2 in C major, Op. 87
1. I. Allegro 09:14
2. II. Andante con moto 07:55
3. III. Scherzo: Presto 04:51
4. IV. Finale: Allegro giocoso 06:09
PianoTrio No. 3 in C minor, Op. 101
5. I. Allegro energico 07:07
6. II. Presto non assai 03:28
7. III. Andante grazioso 04:06
8. IV. Allegro molto 05:46
PianoTrio No. 1 in B major, Op. 8 (Revised 1889 version)
9. I. Allegro con brio 13:39
10. II. Scherzo: Allegro molto 06:30
11. III. Adagio 07:42
12. IV. Allegro 06:32

Personnel:
Christian Tetzlaff, violin
Tanja Tetzlaff, cello
Lars Vogt, piano

DSD64

mqs.link_BrahmsThePianoTriosChristianTanjaTetzlaffLarsVogt2015nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsThePianoTriosChristianTanjaTetzlaffLarsVogt2015nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsThePianoTriosChristianTanjaTetzlaffLarsVogt2015nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part3.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsThePianoTriosChristianTanjaTetzlaffLarsVogt2015nativeDSDmusicDSD64.part4.rar

Christian Tetzlaff, Lars Vogt – Brahms: The Violin Sonatas (2016/2017) [e-Onkyo FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Johannes Brahms – The Violin Sonatas – Christian Tetzlaff, Lars Vogt (2016/2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 01:12:26 minutes | 3,27 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Source: e-Onkyo | Booklet, Front Cover | © 2xHD/Ondine Oy, Helsinki
Recorded: Sendesaal Bremen, 24–26 August 2015

Award-winning violinist Christian Tetzlaff together with pianist Lars Vogt offer an exciting program of Violin Sonatas by Johannes Brahms (1833–1897). This new release continues a successful series of recordings of violin chamber works by the artist duo.
Johannes Brahms’ Violin Sonatas are among the greatest masterpieces in 19th century chamber music. Brahms wrote these sonatas between 1878 and 1888, at the height of his creative powers. With these powerful works Brahms brought the genre of violin sonatas into a new dimension. Included is also Scherzo movement from the F. A. E. Sonata which Brahms contributed to a composite sonata with Robert Schumann and Albert Dietrich in 1853.
Christian Tetzlaff is considered one of the world’s leading international violinists and maintains a most extensive performing schedule. Musical America named him ‘Instrumentalist of the Year’ in 2005 and his recording of the violin concertos by Mendelssohn and Schumann, released on Ondine in 2011 (ODE 1195-2), received the ‘Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik’. Gramophone Magazine was choosing the recording of the Schumann Violin Sonatas with Lars Vogt (ODE 1205-2) as ‘Disc of the Month’ in January 2014. In addition, in 2015 ICMA awarded Christian Tetzlaff as the ‘Artist of the Year’. His most recent recording on Ondine with Brahms’ Trios (ODE 1271-2D) received a GRAMMY nomination.
Lars Vogt was appointed the first ever “Pianist in Residence” by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2003/04 and enjoys a high profile as a soloist and chamber musician. His debut solo recording on Ondine with Bach’s Goldberg Variations (ODE 1273-2) was released in August 2015 and has been a major critical success. The album’s tracks have also been streamed online over 5 million times.

Tracklist:
Johannes Brahms (1833–1897)
Violin Sonata No. 1 in G major, Op. 78
1 I. Vivace ma non troppo 10:47
2 II. Adagio – Più andante – Awdagio 7:22
3 III. Allegro molto moderato 8:26
Violin Sonata No. 2 in A major, Op. 100
4 I. Allegro amabile 8:02
5 II. Andante tranquillo – Vivace – Andante – Vivace di più – Andante – Vivace 6:28
6 III. Allegretto grazioso (quasi andante) 5:21
Violin Sonata No. 3 in D minor, Op. 108
7 I. Allegro 7:46
8 II. Adagio 4:19
9 III. Un poco presto e con sentimento 3:01
10 IV. Presto agitato 5:25
Violin Sonata in A Minor ‘F-A-E’
11 III. Scherzo in C Minor, WoO2 5:23

Personnel:
Christian Tetzlaff, violin
Lars Vogt, piano

Download:

mqs.link_BrahmsTheViolinSonatasChristianTetzlaffLarsVogt2016eOnkyo24192.part1.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsTheViolinSonatasChristianTetzlaffLarsVogt2016eOnkyo24192.part2.rar
mqs.link_BrahmsTheViolinSonatasChristianTetzlaffLarsVogt2016eOnkyo24192.part3.rar

Julie Steinberg, David Abel – Brahms, Debussy, Bartok: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (1987/2014) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/176,4kHz]

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Brahms, Debussy, Bartok – Sonatas for Violin & Piano – Julie Steinberg, David Abel (1987/2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/176,4 kHz  | Time – 47:08 minutes | 1,23 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Booklet, Front Cover | © Wilson Audiophile Recordings
Recorded: Mills College Concert Hall by David A. Wilson

“This is perhaps the most exquisitely natural recording ever made. All in all, this Wilson record is a triumph of the analog recording art.” — International Audio Review
David Abel, violin. Julie Steinberg, piano. Perhaps the most transcendent of David Wilson’s brilliant recordings, this remarkable album of solo violin accompanied by piano comes as close to putting the two performers in the listening room as any ever made, writes The Absolute Sound, of Sonatas for Violin & Piano.
Recorded on Wilson’s Ultramaster Recorder, built by John Curl, and using a spaced pair of Schoeps microphones driving vaccum tube electronics, the recording has a close perspective that heightens transparency and engagement as well as wonderfully capturing the beautiful tonality of Abel’s Guarnerius violin and Steinberg’s Hamburg Steinway without exaggering their size.
Chamber music is meant to be performed and enjoyed in a relatively small room, as opposed to an expansive concert hall. Therefore, the perspective of this recording is close… as though the artists are creating the music in your listening room.
The musical instruments used in this recording are of superb quality, complementing the talents of the artists, and enhancing the color and expressiveness of the literature. The piano is a 9 foot Hamburg Steinway model D concert grand, selected for its almost magical harmonic warmth and evenness of tone. The Hamburg Steinway is Ms. Steinberg’s chosen instrument. The violin is a Guarnerius, built in Cremona, Italy in 1719. The Guarnerius sings with speed, focus, and sweetness.

Tracklist:

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Violin Sonata No. 1 in G major, Op. 78
1 I. Vivace ma non troppo 10:42
2 II. Adagio 08:41
3 III. Allegro molto moderato 08:46

Claude Debussy (1862-1918)
Violin Sonata in G minor
4 I. Allegro vivo 04:24
5 II. Intermede: Fantastique et leger 03:57
6 III. Finale 04:21
Béla Bartók (1881-1945)
7 Roman nepi tancok (Romanian Folk Dances), BB 68 (arr. for violin and piano) 05:29

Personnel:
David Abel, violin
Julie Steinberg, piano

Download:

mqs.link_BrahmsDebussyBartkSonatasforViolinPianoJulieSteinbergDavidAbel19872014HDTracks241764.part1..rar
mqs.link_BrahmsDebussyBartkSonatasforViolinPianoJulieSteinbergDavidAbel19872014HDTracks241764.part2..rar

Jack Liebeck, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins – Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 2 & other works (2017) [Hyperion FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Max Bruch – Violin Concerto No. 2 & other works – Jack Liebeck, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:08:19 minutes | 1,192 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: hyperion-records.co.uk | Booklet, Front Cover | © Hyperion Records
Recorded: December 2014, City Halls, Candleriggs, Glasgow, Scotland

The ‘justly celebrated’ Jack Liebeck (as described by The Strad) follows in the footsteps of Heifetz and Perlman in championing Bruch’s now neglected Violin Concerto No 2, originally written for Sarasate. Three shorter concertante works for violin and orchestra complete the album (Bruch thought the Adagio appassionato one of his best works) which marks volume 21 in our highly regarded Romantic Violin Concerto series.

There’s much to admire in Jack Liebeck’s patrician account of Bruch’s D minor Violin Concerto. His playing is virtually flawless in its technical ease, scintillating articulateness and purity of tone—very much, in fact, like James Ehnes’s dazzling CBC recording. Liebeck is most impressive in the concerto’s introspective passages: the plaintive opening, for example, and also in the first movement’s coda, where he finds a touching vulnerability. Like Ehnes, though, he’s more than a touch too sober. Heifetz, in his benchmark version from 1954 (RCA, 6/56), invested the music with an intensity that made up for any lack of tenderness. Liebeck’s restraint is not quite as convincing. Take the way he sails through the finale’s lovely, lyrical second theme without relaxing the tempo at all, for instance. Ulf Wallin is a more forceful advocate, and I think this music requires that kind of extra love and care.
Wallin’s disc also includes the elegiac, proto-Elgarian In memoriam and the odd, two-movement Konzertstück (essentially a concerto sans finale). Again, I prefer the BIS recording in the former work, but Wallin weighs down the Konzertstück, presumably in an attempt to compensate for the lopsided structure. Liebeck’s lighter touch can’t overcome the fact that the score is unsatisfying—that’s Bruch’s fault—but his sensitive attention to detail makes it sublimely pleasurable. Listen, for instance, to the ravishing, quiet sincerity of his playing at the beginning of the second movement. Missing from Wallin’s disc is the Adagio appassionato, a sombre showpiece composed for Joseph Joachim. Liebeck’s finespun performance could use more appassionato but is affecting in its noble restraint.
Martyn Brabbins is entirely in sync with Liebeck, interpretatively, and elicits lustrous playing from the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. Certainly, in terms of recorded sound, this Hyperion disc is the best ever lavished on Bruch’s unjustly neglected Second Concerto. –Andrew Farach-Colton, Gramophone

Tracklist:
Max Bruch (1838-1920)
Violin Concerto No 2 in D minor Op 44
1 Adagio ma non troppo[12’02]
2 Recitativo: Allegro moderato[4’09]
3 Allegro molto[9’20]
Konzertstück in F sharp minor Op 84
4 Allegro appassionato –[8’52]
5 Adagio, ma non troppo lento[9’02]
6 In memoriam in C sharp minor Op 65[15’14]
7 Adagio appassionato in F minor Op 57[9’40]
Jack Liebeck, violin
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins, conductor

Download:

mqs.link_BruchViolinConcertoNo.2JackLiebeckBBCSSOMartynBrabbins2017Hyperion2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_BruchViolinConcertoNo.2JackLiebeckBBCSSOMartynBrabbins2017Hyperion2496.part2.rar

Carrie Newcomer – The Slender Thread (2015) [DSF DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Carrie Newcomer – The Slender Thread (2015)
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz  | Time – 49:45 minutes | 1,97 GB | Genre: Folk, Rock
Source: ISO SACD | © Stockfisch Records

Once upon a time there was a singer from a far-off country who was fair of face and sang with the voice of an angel. Her name was Newcomer, although she possessed a rich store of artistic experience. The master troubadours of Stockfisch heard of this wonderful songstress, and because in a fairy-tale nothing is impossible, they waved their wands and whisked her over the wide, wide ocean to ultimately land in the fabled acoustic cavern of Northeim. There they enhanced her golden voice with lutes, flutes and other fabulous instruments …
The wonderful thing is: this is not a fairy tale, or more correctly, for the poets, dreamers, and connaisseurs (actually for all of us), this is a fairy-tale come true! With its warm, catchy tunes and mellow, autumnal glow, The Slender Thread, Newcomer’s debut album on Stockfisch, can easily become a habit …
One can’t help getting the impression – Carrie Newcomer has a gift for happiness. For the artist herself, incidentally, her songs are old friends – they stand for her friendship with life, people and not least with music. The Slender Thread beckons with the promise of a good friend in the making – or perhaps a whole group of good friends in these songs and melodies that are sure to get stuck in your head.
Despite all harmony – more reflective themes are touched upon too. But in such a way that her gift of happiness is contagious: it rubs off on us too!

Tracklist:
1 I Believe 4:31
2 There Is A Tree 4:42
3 Geodes 3:33
4 The Slender Thread 3:33
5 Cedar Rapids 10 a.m. 3:39
6 If Not Now 3:51
7 Sparrow 3:00
8 The Wind Does Not Understand Glass 3:53
9 Longing 3:52
10 The Gathering Of Spirits 3:56
11 Haunted 3:08
12 The Weight Of Water 4:11
13 Bare To The Bone 3:58

Personnel:
Carrie Newcomer – lead and harmony vocals, acoustic guitar
Gary Walters – piano, marimba
Ian Melrose – guitar, percussion
Jean Kelly – Irish harp
Lutz Möller – keyboards
Jens Kommnick – tin-whistle, ocarina, mandola
Manfred Leuchter – accordion
Beo Brockhausen – hang
Lea Morris – backing vocals
Sven von Samson – percussion
Hans-Jörg Maucksch – fretless bass

Download:

mqs.link_CarrieNewcmerTheSlenderThread2015DSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_CarrieNewcmerTheSlenderThread2015DSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_CarrieNewcmerTheSlenderThread2015DSD64.part3.rar


Cecil Taylor – Live in the Black Forest (1979/2015) [HighResAudio FLAC 24bit/88,2kHz]

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Cecil Taylor – Live in the Black Forest (1979/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 51:08 minutes | 918 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: highresaudio.com | Front Cover | © MPS
Recorded live on 3 June 1978 in SWF-Radio JazzConcert in Kirchzarten, Black Forest, West Germany

A leader in the revolution that overtook jazz in the late 50’s and early 60’s, pianist Cecil Taylor’s ‘Unit’ groups reflect the move towards total ensemble Play. The concept of soloist and accompanist is abolished; instead, the improvisations consist of a continual interchange of ideas between players. Alto saxophonist Jimmy Lyons played with Taylor from 1961 until Lyon’s death in 1986. Heavily influenced by Charlie Parker, his lyrical style helped tie Taylor’s style to more traditional jazz roots. Trumpeter Ralphe Malik worked with Taylor throughout the 70’s on into the 80’s. “A superb, incendiary performer”, Malik also recorded a series of critically acclaimed albums of his own. Drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson and bassist Sirone are the only musicians to have performed and recorded with the three prime shapers of free jazz, Cecil Taylor, Ornette Coleman, and Albert Ayler. The themes are loosely played melodic phrases used as a starting point for improvisation. In The Eel Pot, Taylor’s sparse, foreboding lines lead into the ensemble’s free interpretation of the theme. The piece proceeds to run the gamut of emotions, with extreme use of dynamics and space. Sperichill On Calling begins with an exquisite piano solo, moves to an ensemble march on into Lyon’s slashing solo accompanied by staccato violin. Movements vary from tender reflection to a seething maelstrom. Intense music that has retained its exploratory depth.

A retrospective look at the sixty-year career of Cecil Taylor, in progress at the Whitney Museum of American Art, incorporates the museum’s unobstructed spaces and impressive views of New York City with multimedia documentation of the great composer/pianist’s sixty years of creative invention. That openness is emblematic of Taylor’s own absence of artistic boundaries. He has worked with dancers, poets, filmmakers and playwrights all while creating the most innovative avant-garde music that modern jazz has to offer. Throughout his career he has been the author of arguably the most challenging free jazz produced, some of which is incomprehensible to an average listener, but still, his music is impossible to ignore.
Live in the Black Forest was originally released in 1978 on the MPS label. The live album consists of two, twenty-five minute pieces that had been recorded earlier that year for a German radio station but had never before been released in a digital format. The German label, Edel, acquired the tapes and the quality of this recording is excellent. Though they were not yet billed as such, the sextet here would later be known as the “Cecil Taylor New Unit” and included trumpeter Raphe Malik, Jimmy Lyons on alto saxophone, Ramsey Ameen on violin, bassist Sirone (Norris Jones) and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson. This collective, however, was short lived and the earlier …”Unit,” a highly regarded version of the ensemble that appeared on Unit Structures (Blue Note, 1966), included only Lyons from this group.
“The Eel Pot” is harmonically unimpeded creativeness and demonstrates why Taylor favored his long association with Lyons who immerses himself in this dynamic improvisation with the acrobatic skill necessary for a live collaboration with Taylor. Malik’s commanding, vibrato flashes are a preternatural mélange of warmth and unruliness punctuating Taylor’s snippets of melody and torrents of notes. “Sperichill On Calling” opens with a briefly melodic piano solo joined by Lyons for a bluesy into to an intense collective jam. Jackson aggressively precipitates frantically fast paced hyper-activity that briefly slows with Ameen’s searching solo. He and Taylor command the remaining ten minutes of the performance as the piece shifts in tempo, Lyons and Malik and Sirone abruptly moving in and out of focus.
Even among his fan base, Taylor has been the quintessential riddle wrapped in an enigma. His music is dense and sometimes overwhelming and though Live in the Black Forest is sometimes cited as a more accessible Taylor primer, it is no less complex than the body of his work. Taylor has always had critical detractors but often for no more than the irritating inability to explain his music. Live in the Black Forest is for Taylor fans, particularly those who favor the pianist outside his preferred solo formation. Like most everything Taylor has recorded, this once hard-to-find recording requires patience and open ears. –Karl Ackermann, All About Jazz

Tracklist:
1. The Eel Pot 25:27
2. Sperichill On Calling 25:41

The New Cecil Taylor Unit:
Cecil Taylor, piano
Jimmy Lyons, alto saxophone
Raphe Malik, trumpet
Ramsey Ameen, violin
Sirone (Norris Jones), bass
Ronald Shannon Jackson, drums

Download:

mqs.link_CecilTaylrLiveintheBlackFrest19792015HRA2488.2.rar

Chantal Chamberland – Autobiography (2016) [DSF DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Chantal Chamberland – Autobiography (2016)
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz  | Time – 54:30 minutes | 2,15 GB | Genre: Jazz
Source: ISO SACD | © Evolution Media Ltd.

The Hamilton Music Award winner Chantal Chamberland releases her ‘Best of’ compilation album, Autobiography. Her trademark smoky, sultry jazz vocal is perfectly expressed in a wonderful diversity of genres, moving from sultry and soulful to bluesy and brassy with graceful ease.

Her previous success with Soirée, hitting #1 on the HMV Hong Kong Jazz Charts cements her role as one of the nest female interpreters of jazz today. The Best of compilation has all of Chantal’s nest tracks in one, featuring tracks La Mer, Besame Mucho, Hit The Road Jack, Fever, You Are My Hero and more. Together with an all-new recording, Chantal’s take on Ed Sheeran’s heart-warming hit, Thinking Out Loud, performed with touch of tender affection and charm.

Tracklist:
1 Feeling Good 4:05
2 Thinking Out Loud 4:29
3 La Mer 3:50
4 How Deep Is Your Love 3:54
5 Hit the Road Jack 4:11
6 Besame Mucho 4:33
7 Time After Time 4:06
8 Je l’aime À mourir 3:27
9 Fever 4:53
10 You’re My Hero 5:14
11 At Seventeen 5:24
12 Les Champs-Èlysées 2:47
13 Crazy 3:28

Personnel:
Chantal Chamberland – Guitar, Vocals
Robi Botos – Fender Rhodes, Piano
Eric Boucher, John Kenyon – Piano
Bob Doige – Cello, Flugelhorn, Guitar, Mellotron, Shaker, Trumpet
Amy King – Vocals (Background)
Dan Lockwood – Drums
Mark McIntyre, Marc Rogers – Bass
Mark McLean – Drums, Percussion
Steve Pelletier – Bass (Acoustic), Bass (Electric)
Rob Piltch – Guitar
Sal Rosselli – Guitar, Saxophone
Paul White – Sax (Alto)

Download:

mqs.link_ChantalChamberlandAutbigraphy2016DSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_ChantalChamberlandAutbigraphy2016DSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_ChantalChamberlandAutbigraphy2016DSD64.part3.rar

Chicago – Chicago II (1970/2017) {Steven Wilson Remix} [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Chicago – Chicago II (1970/2017) {Steven Wilson Remix}
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz  | Time – 01:07:05 minutes | 1,35 GB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © Rhino/Warner
Recorded: August 1969, Columbia Recording Studios, New York and Columbia Studios, Hollywood

More than 40 years after its debut, Chicago II still sounds like nothing else. Released in 1970, Chicago’s second album brims with confidence and inspiration as it draws on everything from orchestral music to heavy rock. Although it never affected the record’s popularity – it peaked at #4 on the album chart and spawned a trio of Top Ten hits – many fans have longed for a more-nuanced mix. That wish is about to come true with a new stereo version created by British musician and producer Steven Wilson.
Chicago II has been remixed before, but never like this. For the first time, a stereo remix from the 16-track multi-track tapes made it possible for Steven Wilson to bring out elements that were muffled or submerged in the mix. The result is a new stereo version of Chicago II that boasts clearness, punch and definition that it didn’t have before.
Wilson explains: “Working with high-resolution 96K/24 bit digitally transferred files, I had every element from the recording sessions isolated, which meant I was able to rebuild the mix from the drums upwards, recreating as closely as I could the equalization, stereo placement, reverbs, other effects, and volume changes of each individual instrument or vocal – but at the same time looking to gain definition and clarity in the overall sound.
In 1969, Chicago recorded the band’s follow-up to their debut album, Chicago Transit Authority (voted 2014 into the Grammy Hall of Fame). When it arrived in January 1970, Chicago II became an instant sensation. Principal composers, James Pankow and Robert Lamm, emerged further as the band’s source of Top Ten hits for the group, including “Make Me Smile” and “Colour My World,” as well as “25 or 6 to 4,” which peaked at #4 and has become one of the band’s signature songs. Terry Kath, Robert Lamm, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Walter Parazaider, also Danny Seraphine and Peter Cetera … somehow found time (while touring the world behind the success of “CTA”) to prepare another double LP album.
“So rich was their creative seam at the time that, like their debut, and the album that followed this one, it was a two record set,” says Wilson. “In fact, with unprecedented boldness the run of double albums was only broken by their fourth which was a quadruple (live) set! I consider all of these albums to be classics, but perhaps Chicago II is the pre-eminent masterpiece. It’s got everything: moments of tender beauty to power riffs and scorched-earth jazz-rock, catchy melodies and gorgeous vocal harmonies. When I first heard it as a teenager I was captivated by the mixture of jazz, blues, pop, classical, progressive and heavy rock styles, including both improvisational elements and intricate arrangements, and by songs written and sung by several different members, all with their own unique personality. How could that possibly hang together?! But it does, and brilliantly so.”
The album, which was certified platinum by the RIAA, soon after its release, also highlighted some of the band’s most ambitious work, such as the 13-minute song cycle “Ballet For A Girl In Buchannon,” composed by James Pankow, as well as “Memories Of Love,” a Terry Kath song, arranged for orchestra by Peter Matz. Chicago’s lasting musical impact was recognized in April of 2016, with their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The Chicago Transit Authority recorded this double-barreled follow-up to their eponymously titled 1969 debut effort. The contents of Chicago II (1970) underscore the solid foundation of complex jazz changes with heavy electric rock & roll that the band so brazenly forged on the first set. The septet also continued its ability to blend the seemingly divergent musical styles into some of the best and most effective pop music of the era. One thing that had changed was the band’s name, which was shortened to simply Chicago to avoid any potential litigious situations from the city of Chicago’s transportation department — which claimed the name as proprietary property. Musically, James Pankow (trombone) was about to further cross-pollinate the band’s sound with the multifaceted six-song “Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon.” The classically inspired suite also garnered the band two of its most beloved hits — the upbeat pop opener “Make Me Smile” as well as the achingly poignant “Color My World” — both of which remained at the center of the group’s live sets. Chicago had certainly not abandoned its active pursuit of blending high-octane electric rockers such as “25 or 6 to 4” to the progressive jazz inflections heard in the breezy syncopation of “The Road.” Adding further depth of field is the darker “Poem for the People” as well as the politically charged five-song set titled “It Better End Soon.” These selections feature the band driving home its formidable musicality and uncanny ability to coalesce styles telepathically and at a moment’s notice. The contributions of Terry Kath (guitar/vocals) stand out as he unleashes some of his most pungent and sinuous leads, which contrast with the tight brass and woodwind trio of Lee Loughnane (trumpet/vocals), Walter Parazaider (woodwinds/vocals), and the aforementioned Pankow. Peter Cetera (bass/vocals) also marks his songwriting debut — on the final cut of both the suite and the album — with “Where Do We Go from Here.” It bookends both with at the very least the anticipation and projection of a positive and optimistic future. –AllMusic Review by Lindsay Planer

Tracklist:
1 Movin’ In 4:06
2 The Road 3:10
3 Poem For The People 5:36
4 In The Country 6:35
5 Wake Up Sunshine 2:33
Ballet For A Girl In Buchannon
6 Make Me Smile 3:16
7 So Much To Say, So Much To Give 1:12
8 Anxiety’s Moment 1:01
9 West Virgina Fantasies 1:34
10 Colour My World 3:01
11 To Be Free 1:15
12 Now More Than Ever 1:26
13 Fancy Colours 5:10
14 25 Or 6 To 4 4:58
Memories Of Love
15 Prelude 1:10
16 A.M. Mourning 2:05
17 P.M. Mourning 1:58
18 Memories Of Love 3:59
It Better End Soon
19 1st Movement 2:33
20 2nd Movement 3:41
21 3rd Movement 3:19
22 4th Movement 0:55
23 Where Do We Go From Here 2:54

Personnel:
Peter Cetera – bass, lead & backing vocals
Terry Kath – electric & acoustic guitars, lead & backing vocals
Robert Lamm – piano, Hammond organ, Hohner Pianet, lead & backing vocals
Lee Loughnane – trumpet, flugelhorn, background vocals
James Pankow – trombone, brass arrangements
Walter Parazaider – saxophones, flute, clarinet, background vocals
Danny Seraphine – drums, percussion
Additional:
Peter Matz – orchestrations and co-arrangements on “Memories of Love” (“Prelude”, “A.M. Mourning”, “P.M. Mourning”)

Download:

mqs.link_ChicagChicagIIStevenWilsnRemix19702017Qbuz2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_ChicagChicagIIStevenWilsnRemix19702017Qbuz2496.part2.rar

Maurizio Pollini – Chopin: Late Works, Opp. 59-64 (2017) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Frederic Chopin – Late Works, Opp. 59-64 – Maurizio Pollini (2017) 
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 54:34 minutes | 905 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Qobuz | Booklet, Front Cover | © Deutsche Grammophon
Recorded: Munich, Herkulessaal, 5 & 9/2015; 5/2016

After winning the International Chopin Competition over half a century ago, Maurizio Pollini adds an important new chapter to his ongoing interpretation with some of the composer’s most famous late works. On this album, the “grand master” (BBC music magazine) interprets some of Chopin’s largescale masterpieces, including six Mazurkas and three Waltzes that he has never recorded before. “I’m in love with Chopin – his music never ceases to amaze me.” – Maurizio Pollini

‘I’m in love with Chopin – his music never ceases to amaze me’, Pollini is quoted as saying on the jewel case of his latest CD. If only it sounded like it. The first thing that alienates me is the sound: the bass slightly too immediate, the treble slightly muffled, the mid-register slightly woolly, the general over-pedalling. It’s almost as though we’re sitting in the page-turner’s position rather than in the audience. Then, as the Barcarolle unfolds, it’s the boxed-in rhythms that are puzzling, along with the restricted colours, and the lack of sufficient dynamic range to articulate properly either the short-term gestures or the long-term structure. All of which proves characteristic of the recital as a whole.
The best construction I can put on this is that Pollini is attempting to show that late Chopin should be stripped of the usual attributes of pianistic flair and allowed to speak unencumbered by personal intervention, trusting that it will weave its own spell without all that baggage. Certainly the nocturnes, mazurkas and waltzes here sound as severe and uningratiating as the larger-scale Barcarolle and Polonaise-fantaisie. No lilt, no magic, no sense of wonder, only a few flickerings of poetry, and beyond the obvious technical fluency and control no virtues that might compensate for the losses. I confess I struggled to concentrate all the way to the end. What on earth happened to the Pollini who was something close to a god for me in my far-off student days? –David Fanning, Gramophone

Tracklist:
Frédéric Chopin (1810 – 1849)
Late Works, Opp. 59-64
1 Barcarolle In F Sharp Major, Op. 60 00:07:55
3 Mazurkas, Op. 59
2 No. 1 In A Minor. Moderato 00:03:34
3 No. 2 In A Flat Major. Allegretto 00:02:22
4 No. 3 In F Sharp Minor. Vivace 00:02:58
5 Polonaise-Fantaisie In A Flat Major, Op. 61 00:11:31
2 Nocturnes, Op. 62
6 No. 1 In B Major. Andante 00:05:45
7 No. 2 In E Major. Lento 00:05:01
3 Mazurkas, Op. 63
8 No. 1 In B Major. Vivace 00:01:55
9 No. 2 In F Minor. Lento 00:01:50
10 No. 3 In C Sharp Minor. Allegretto 00:02:00
3 Valses, Op. 64
11 No. 1 In D Flat Major. Molto vivace 00:01:43
12 No. 2 In C Sharp Minor. Tempo giusto 00:03:20
13 No. 3 In A Flat Major. Moderato 00:02:40
Mazurka In F Minor, Op. Posth. 68
14 No. 4 Andantino 00:02:00

Personnel:
Maurizio Pollini, piano

Download:

mqs.link_ChpinLateWrkspp.5964MauriziPllini2017Qbuz2496.rar

Pavel Kolesnikov – Chopin: Mazurkas (2016) [Hyperion FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Frederic Chopin – Mazurkas – Pavel Kolesnikov (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:09:07 minutes | 1,07 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: hyperion-records.co.uk | Booklet, Front Cover | © Hyperion Records
Recorded: August 2015, Concert Hall, Wyastone Estate, Monmouth, United Kingdom

There are in all fifty-eight mazurkas by Chopin. Pavel Kolesnikov, making a welcome second recording for Hyperion, here performs a selection of twenty-four, from the earliest examples dating from his teenage years, through to the rich maturity of Op 59 No 2 from 1845.

Four years on since he won Canada’s Honens International Piano Competition, the world’s biggest piano prize, Pavel Kolesnikov continues to show the quiet intensity that distinguishes his playing from that of many competition contestants. Now onto his second recording for Hyperion—his first, featuring Tchaikovsky’s The Seasons flowed with similar naturalness—he displays complete poetic freedom of a sort ideal for approaching Chopin’s mazurkas. By opening this recital with Op 50 No 5, in A flat, he makes a perhaps deliberately unobtrusive statement, entering into the music’s spirit with crisp rhythms that are never overly emphatic. It’s tempting to say that he plays this quintessential Polish music with a flexibility rare among Russians but then Kolesnikov is the antithesis of the Russian bear school of pianism.
He has his own thoughts about their order, too, eschewing opus-number groupings in favour of a selection (almost half the published mazurkas) that makes its own satisfying tonal sense. The wonderful Op 17, 24 and 50 sets are heard complete, if scattered around, and even out of chronological order the place of these pieces within Chopin’s output is immediately evident. Kolesnikov can be shy or fiery in tracing the folk-dance roots of this music; more unusually, he also finds its sophistication. A refreshing way of letting us hear these well-known miniature masterpieces, this is a notable addition to the huge Chopin discography. –John Allison, BBC Music Magazine

Tracklist:
Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)
1 Mazurka in A flat major Op 50 No 2[3’07]
2 Mazurka in C major Op 56 No 2[1’33]
3 Mazurka in E minor Op 17 No 2[2’03]
4 Mazurka in A flat major Op 17 No 3[3’26]
5 Mazurka in F sharp minor Op 59 No 3[3’17]
6 Mazurka in G sharp minor Op 33 No 1[1’51]
7 Mazurka in A minor Op 68 No 2[3’04]
8 Mazurka in G minor Op 24 No 1[2’54]
9 Mazurka in A minor Op 17 No 4[4’50]
10 Mazurka in B flat minor Op 24 No 4[4’12]
11 Mazurka in B flat major KKIIa/3[1’29]
12 Mazurka in B flat major Op 17 No 1[2’04]
13 Mazurka in C major Op 33 No 3[1’14]
14 Mazurka in A flat major Op 24 No 3[2’49]
15 Mazurka in E minor Op 41 No 1[2’05]
16 Mazurka in B minor Op 30 No 2[1’19]
17 Mazurka in C sharp minor Op 50 No 3[5’21]
18 Mazurka in C major Op 24 No 2[2’01]
19 Mazurka in A minor KKIIb/5[3’27]
20 Mazurka in F sharp minor Op 6 No 1[2’29]
21 Mazurka in A minor KKIIb/4[3’09]
22 Mazurka in G major Op 50 No 1[2’04]
23 Mazurka in C minor Op 56 No 3[7’03]
24 Mazurka in A flat major Op 59 No 2[2’16]

Personnel:
Pavel Kolesnikov, piano

Download:

mqs.link_ChpinMazurkasPavelKlesnikv2016Hyperin2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_ChpinMazurkasPavelKlesnikv2016Hyperin2496.part2.rar

Ikuyo Nakamichi (仲道郁代) – Chopin: Waltzes (2016) [DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz]

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Frederic Chopin – Waltzes – Ikuyo Nakamichi (2016)
DSF Stereo DSD64/2.82MHz  | Time – 01:45:57 minutes | 4,18 GB | Genre: Classical
Source: ISO SACD | © RCA Red Seal
Recorded: 2015年5月26日~29日、サントミューゼ 上田市交流文化芸術センター小ホール

◎長年のショパンへの取り組みが結実した新録音
現代日本を代表する人気ピアニスト、仲道郁代による2年ぶりの新譜は、ショパンのワルツ集です。ショパンは、仲道にとって、モーツァルト、ベートーヴェン、シューマンと並ぶ自らのレパートリーの中心的作曲家であり、演奏会でその多くを演奏するかたわら、これまでにも2曲の協奏曲(1990年と2010年の2種類 )をはじめ、即興曲4曲(1989年 )、バラード4曲(1990年 )、前奏曲(1991年録音 )、夜想曲全集(1989~92年 )、ピアノ・ソナタ第3番(1993年 )、スケルツォ4曲(1993年 )と、ピアニストとしてのキャリアの初期10年のうちに主要曲を集中的に録音しています。最近では、ショパンの生涯と音楽を、演奏、映像とエピソードを交えながら立体的なコンテクストの中で紹介するシリーズ『ショパン鍵盤のミステリー』を企画し、各地で公演し好評を博しています(2016年7月からは、東京Hakujuホールで開催予定 )。また2007年にはワルシャワ~パリ~ノアンなど、ショパンが残した足跡を辿るNHK制作のドキュメンタリー『ピアノの詩人 ショパンのミステリー』にも出演し、さらに同番組は2010年のショパン・アニヴァーサリーに際して、『仲道郁代 ショパンのミステリー 特別編』として追加制作・再放映されています。また同じ2010年には、『NHK趣味工房シリーズ〔あなたもアーティスト〕 仲道郁代のピアノ初心者にも弾けるショパン』に講師として出演、さらにCD付きのMOOK『CDでわかる ショパン鍵盤のミステリー』(ナツメ社 )も上梓するなど、ショパンの音楽への探求には大きな情熱を持って取り組んできています。

◎生前に出版された8曲を中心とする17曲のワルツ
ショパンのワルツは、ショパンのピアノ作品の中でも最も人気の高い作品。一部の最有名曲を除き、仲道はこれまで積極的には取り組んできませんでした。しかしここ数年ショパンについての研究を深めていく中で、ショパンのワルツの本質は、「華麗な円舞曲」などの題名の陰に隠された、「作曲者自らの魂の告白」であることに思い至り、華やかさよりも陰影の深さに寄り添った解釈で、これまでとは一味違うショパンのワルツ像を描き上げています。当アルバムは、最新の成果を反映させたナショナル・エディションに準拠し、ショパンの生前に作品番号を付されて出版された8曲を中心とする、最も有名な17曲を収録しています。
◎2013年製スタインウェイと1842年製プレイエルを聴き比べる究極の醍醐味
しかも今回のアルバムはショパンのワルツ集なのに2枚組!それは、1842年製プレイエル、2013年製スタインウェイという2つの楽器で弾いた、17曲のワルツの演奏を2種類収録しているからです。作曲家が想定した楽器で、作品を弾くことによって、現代の楽器では失われてしまったり、これまでは気付かなかった微妙なニュアンスの移り変わりを感じ取り、作曲者が一つ一つの音符に込めた思いをより明確な形でくみ取ることができる、というピリオド楽器を使った演奏への興味は20世紀半ばから本格化しました。仲道は2007年にヨーロッパ各地のショパンの足跡を訪れた際に1848年製のプレイエルに触れて以来、時代による鍵盤楽器や演奏様式の変遷に大きな興味を抱き、自らもピリオド楽器数種を身近に置いて、作曲者が耳にしていた楽器の響きや感触に直接接することで、個々の作品への理解をこれまでとは異なった角度で深めてきています。モダン・ピアノとピリオド楽器を一つの演奏会で弾き比べるという演奏会も行なっており、当アルバムはそうした仲道の取り組みの一端を形にしたものともいえるでしょう。1842年というショパンが生きた時代の空気の中で製作されたプレイエルの肌理細やかで親密なソノリティ、アコースティック鍵盤楽器の進化の頂点である2013年製スタインウェイ・コンサードグランドの多彩なニュアンスと、仲道はそれぞれの楽器の特性を最大限に生かして絶妙に弾き分けています。
◎新ホール・サントミューゼでの初録音
録音は、2014年にオープンしたばかりで、オープン前から仲道がレジデント・アーティスト的な役割を担ってきた長野県上田市のサントミューゼ(上田市交流文化芸術センター )の小ホールにおける4日間のセッションで行なわれました。今回が同ホールでのCD初録音となります。プロデュースは、1998年の「ロマンティック・メロディ」以来、仲道の録音を手掛けてきたフィリップ・トラウゴットで、DSDレコーディングによるSA-CDハイブリッドとして発売いたします。

Tracklist:
Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)
17 Waltzes
Disc#1
1. Waltz in F Major WN18, KK IVa-12 2’20
2. Waltz in B Minor WN19, Op. 69, No. 2 2’26
3. Waltz in B-flat Major WN20, Op. 70, No. 3 2’23
4. Waltz in A-flat Major WN28, KK IVa-13 1’16
5. Waltz in E Minor WN29, KK IVa-15 3’02
6. Waltz in E-flat Major Op. 18 ‘Grande valse brillante’ 5’52
7. Waltz in G-flat Major, WN42, Op. 70, No. 1 2’03
8. Waltz in A-flat Major WN47, Op. 69, No. 1 ‘L’adieu’ 3’04
9. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 34, No. 1 ‘Valse brillante’ 5’28
10. Waltz in A Minor Op. 34. No. 2 ‘Valse brillante’ 5’05
11. Waltz in F Major Op. 34, No. 3 ‘Valse brillante’ 2’31
12. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 42 4’11
13. Waltz in F Minor WN55, Op. 70, No. 2 1’42
14. Waltz in D-flat Major Op. 64, No. 1 ‘Minute’ 1’53
15. Waltz in C-sharp Minor Op. 64, No. 2 3’47
16. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 64, No. 3 3’11
17. Waltz in A Minor WN63, KK IVb-11 2’09

Disc#2
1. Waltz in F Major WN18, KK IVa-12 2’21
2. Waltz in B Minor WN19, Op. 69, No. 2 2’27
3. Waltz in B-flat Major WN20, Op. 70, No. 3 2’31
4. Waltz in A-flat Major WN28, KK IVa-13 1’16
5. Waltz in E Minor WN29, KK IVa-15 3’01
6. Waltz in E-flat Major Op. 18 ‘Grande valse brillante’ 5’50
7. Waltz in G-flat Major, WN42, Op. 70, No. 1 1’55
8. Waltz in A-flat Major WN47, Op. 69, No. 1 ‘L’adieu’ 3’11
9. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 34, No. 1 ‘Valse brillante’ 5’30
10. Waltz in A Minor Op. 34. No. 2 ‘Valse brillante’ 5’25
11. Waltz in F Major Op. 34, No. 3 ‘Valse brillante’ 2’31
12. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 42 4’16
13. Waltz in F Minor WN55, Op. 70, No. 2 1’48
14. Waltz in D-flat Major Op. 64, No. 1 ‘Minute’ 1’58
15. Waltz in C-sharp Minor Op. 64, No. 2 3’54
16. Waltz in A-flat Major Op. 64, No. 3 3’25
17. Waltz in A Minor WN63, KK IVb-11 2’14

Personnel:
Ikuyo Nakamichi, piano
Disc#1: Pleyel, 1842, 80 keys, serial number 9387
Disc#2: Steinway D-274, 2013, serial number 595450

Download:

mqs.link_ChpinWaltzesIkuyNakamichi2016DSD64.part1.rar
mqs.link_ChpinWaltzesIkuyNakamichi2016DSD64.part2.rar
mqs.link_ChpinWaltzesIkuyNakamichi2016DSD64.part3.rar
mqs.link_ChpinWaltzesIkuyNakamichi2016DSD64.part4.rar
mqs.link_ChpinWaltzesIkuyNakamichi2016DSD64.part5.rar

Claus Ogerman and His Orchestra – A Salute to Sam Cooke (1966/2016) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Claus Ogerman and His Orchestra – A Salute to Sam Cooke (1966/2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 29:44 minutes | 1,1 GB | Genre: Jazz, Easy Listening
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © RCA Records

This prolific arranger and orchestrator moved from Europe to the United States in 1959 and began an association with the Verve label, where his arrangements were featured on albums by Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim (1967’s Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim — the first of two collaborative albums by the pair), Astrud Gilberto, Bill Evans, Wes Montgomery, Stan Getz, Cal Tjader, and other leading artists. Having worked with producer Creed Taylor on numerous Verve albums during the ’60s, Ogerman continued his partnership with Taylor following the establishment of the A&M-affiliated CTI label, arranging albums including Jobim’s classic Wave, released in 1967 as only the second album under the CTI imprint.
Over the following decades and into the 21st century, Ogerman has served as arranger, orchestrator, and/or conductor on albums by the likes of George Benson, Michael Brecker, Danilo Perez, and Diana Krall, winning a Grammy for arranging the title track of Krall’s 2009 bossa-themed Quiet Nights. (A repeated Grammy nominee, Ogerman had previous won the award for arranging guitarist Benson’s “Soulful Strut” from 1979’s Livin’ Inside Your Love.) Ogerman is also noted for his arrangements backing pop artists, his original scores for primarily German films of the ’50s and ’60s, and his work as a classical composer — or, in the case of 1982’s Cityscape co-billed to saxophonist Brecker, as composer, arranger, and conductor of a successful classical-jazz hybrid concerto. –Artist Biography by Dave Lynch

Tracklist:
1 Shake 02:20
2 Little Red Rooster 02:53
3 Good Times 02:16
4 Send Me Some Lovin’ 02:26
5 Twistin’ the Night Away 02:17
6 Cupid 02:33
7 Somebody Have Mercy 02:27
8 Chain Gang 02:54
9 Another Saturday Night 02:19
10 Frankie and Johnny 02:33
11 Having a Party 02:27
12 He’s a Cousin of Mine 02:19

Personnel:
Claus Ogerman (arranger, conductor) and His Orchestra

Download:

mqs.link_ClausgermanandHisrchestraASalutetSamCke19662016HDTracks24192.part1.rar
mqs.link_ClausgermanandHisrchestraASalutetSamCke19662016HDTracks24192.part2.rar


Colin Vallon Trio – Danse (2017) [Qobuz FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Colin Vallon Trio – Danse (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 46:00 minutes | 845 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Qobuz | Booklet, Front Cover | © ECM Records GmbH
Recorded: February 2016, Auditorio Stelio Molo RSI, Lugano

The Colin Vallon Trio has found its own space in the crowded world of the piano trio by quietly challenging its conventions. On its third ECM album Vallon again leads the group not with virtuosic solo display but by patient outlining of melody and establishing of frameworks in which layered group improvising can take place. With this group, gentle but insistent rhythms can trigger seismic musical events. Although Vallon (recently nominated for the Swiss Music Prize) is the author of nine of the pieces here, the band members share equal responsibilities for the music’s unfolding. The gravitational pull of Patrice Moret’s bass and the intense detail supplied by Julian Sartorius’s drums and cymbals are crucial to the success of Vallon’s artistic concept and the range of emotions the music can convey. Danse is issued in both CD and LP editions.

It’s simple: any music fan seeking something quite “different” from contemporary instrumental music — and specifically from conventional notions of the “jazz piano trio” — should investigate Switzerland’s Colin Vallon Trio. Danse, Vallon’s third date for ECM, might be the recording that establishes the band’s (and his) reputation outside Europe and hopefully with an audience outside the confines of jazz. Danse hasn’t much to do with pop, but Vallon, who wrote nine of these 11 tunes, obviously admires its more adventurous expressions. Those familiar with the trio’s two previous albums know this music is as expansive as it is articulate and focused. The improvisation is plentiful, and based on the trio’s interaction in (mostly) songlike pieces that are usually inseparably dependent on circular rhythm. Vallon, double bassist Patrice Moret, and drummer Julian Sartorius do solo, but almost always within structural harmonic themes and defined rhythmic pulses. They communicate a piece’s inner dynamic that is welcoming, even when dissonant, to listeners.
In opener “Sisyphe,” Sartorius sets a 4/4 rhythm with his brushes. When Vallon enters, he establishes a hymn-like melody, almost a processional. Moret initially reflects only the changes, but within a couple of choruses he delivers an elegant solo that illuminates both harmony and time signature. In “Tsunami,” Vallon introduces a mysterious, classically tinged waltz. In his own solo he uncovers layer after layer of hidden melody. Sartorius uses his bass drum to keep time, all the while gently accenting and altering the actual motif with his snare and cymbals, until the tune reflects an unveiled muscularity and has been transformed into a rather dramatic exercise in tension and release. In the group improvisation “Oort,” he sets a seemingly fixed rhythm as Vallon explores Moret’s haunting but effusive arco patterns. Its angular timbres and tonalities are tempered by the reflection of the time signature. “Kid,” the set’s longest cut, uses a tender, almost spiritual piano motif that weds songlike lyricism to modern classical harmony. This is buoyed by Moret’s deep woody tone and economical use of notes. Sartorius “dances” on his own beat and the melody, adding a fluid, jazzman’s musicality as the pianist’s fills and chord voices lift it off the ground. Vallon’s piano chops shine on “Tinguely.” Rolling and muted snares, toms, and percussion set a quick pace for his fleet prepared piano solo that extends all over the keyboard. Moret and Sartorius keep increasing the tempo so that when the trio does comes back together, it’s in a sprint of whirling color and timbre. Danse goes a full step further than 2014’s Vent. Almost certainly most jazz fans will enjoy it for its fine display of dynamic, rhythmic, and improvisational group interplay. That said, other open-minded music listeners — especially those who enjoy Jóhann Jóhannsson, Max Richter, Björk, Ólafur Arnalds, and Nils Frahm — should find it appealing as well. This trio’s music is as attractive and engaging as it is idiosyncratic and inventive. –AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek

Tracklist:
1 Sisyphe 4:26
2 Tsunami 7:00
3 Smile 5:20
4 Danse 2:07
5 L’Onde 5:41
6 Oort 2:13
7 Kid 6:13
8 Reste 1:36
9 Tinguely 4:42
10 Morn 4:14
11 Reste (Var.) 2:23

Personnel:
Colin Vallon, piano
Patrice Moret, double bass
Julian Sartorius, drums

Download:

mqs.link_ClinVallnTriDanse2017Qbuz2496.rar

Curtis Stigers – One More For The Road (2017) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/48kHz]

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Curtis Stigers – One More For The Road (2017) 
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 33:31 minutes | 428 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Booklet, Front Cover | © Concord Music
Recorded live in Copenhagen at The DR Koncerthuset, January 2014

Just in case the title One More for the Road didn’t suggest Sinatra, Curtis Stigers underscores his debt to the Chairman of the Board by patterning the artwork for this 2017 collaboration with the Danish Radio Big Band after 1966’s Sinatra at The Sands. In fact, One More for the Road is something of a salute to that 1966 record, containing eight songs from that double album and adhering to the snazzy swing of late-period Frank. Stigers even channels that sensibility into “Summer Wind,” a gentle breeze of a single, and that’s one of the distinguishing factors of One More for the Road. Another distinguishing factor is the cheerful blare of the Dutch Radio Big Band, who are big and brassy without overwhelming the singer. For his part, Stigers doesn’t mimic Sinatra, appropriating just a bit of swagger — and, sometimes, the arrangements — but plays with his phrasing and alternates between crisp enunciation and elongated notes. This is enough to make One More for the Road something a bit different than a straight-up tribute to Ol’ Blue Eyes because it shows how Stigers can hold his presence on-stage while sharing the spotlight with his idol.

Tracklist:
1 Come Fly With Me 03:20
2 I’ve Got You Under My Skin 03:51
3 Don’t Worry ‘Bout Me 03:38
4 You Make Me Feel So Young 03:03
5 My Kind Of Town 02:45
6 Fly Me To The Moon 02:57
7 Summer Wind 03:19
8 They Can’t Take That Away From Me 03:13
9 The Lady Is A Tramp 03:16
10 One For My Baby (And One More For The Road) 04:12

Personnel:
Curtis Stigers, vocals
The Danish Radio Big Band

Download:

mqs.link_CurtisStigersneMreFrTheRad2017HDTracks2448.rar

D.I.V.A – D.I.V.A (2017) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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D.I.V.A – D.I.V.A (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:14:03 minutes | 1,38 GB | Genre: Classical, Opera
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Booklet, Front Cover | © Decca
Recorded: la Maison de l’ONDIF, Alfortville, France

All wonderful dreams begin in the real world: all fairy tales are based on fact. So this is the tale of two brilliant singers, strong personalities, and they were performing on various stages in France and elsewhere. They had excellent training — alumni of the Maîtrise de Radio-France — and could sight read any score, even upside down with their eyes closed, they were wary of discovering the real world, where merciless competition makes human feelings seem optional.
In England, Flore Philis had found good productions to appear in, but the rewards were slim when there was an exorbitant rent to consider. Marie Menand was living in the land of Molière and getting by somehow; and she was wondering what she’d let herself in for.
Dreaming of great prime donne’s arias, the two first met in a production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Like a pair on a slimming course with their eyes on the desert trolley, they used their imagination and came up with an original project: part opera, part mash-up. The aim was to get everyday listeners to discover opera and fall in love with it, and at the same time, to give themselves the chance to tackle roles they had only dreamed of: Carmen, Violetta or Flora Tosca. And why not Leporello, or Scarpia, too! A project for women thought up by crazies, something more Pedro Almodovar than Ingmar Bergman.
They talked to stage-director Manon Savary about it, and she translated their chimera into something quite visual: ve dolls leaving a box wearing crazy wigs, and make-up straight out of the Carnival in Venice. Manon even rummaged through the trunks belonging to her father, the famous French director Jérome Savary, and brought out ve of the most extravagant costumes ever worn by the renowned Grand Magic Circus.
The five dolls would be (allegedly) typecast as Timorous, Snooty, Quirky, Furious and the Ultimate Diva, and appear in an action-packed true story. Each character would sing bits of arias and duets taken from the great repertoire (from The Magic Flute to Tosca), all cleverly cut to shape, scored and orchestrated. In ten minutes! The result would be a brilliant example of direction packed with rhythm, videos and special effects, with no expense(s) spared in production.
One rule only: «Have fun, but don’t betray the music.» So the girls recruited a «magician» to arrange, transpose and shorten the repertoire without alterations: composer Olivier Rabet, who painstakingly concocted admirable scores and even pulled off the miracle of threading a symphony orchestra through the eye of a needle to obtain a string quartet. Four élite musicians, four delicious characters, and a result that some might think a crime, but then again, as the French song has it: La victime est si belle et le crime est si beau.

Tracklist:
Giuseppe Verdi (1813 – 1901)
La Traviata Act 1-3
1. Libiamo, libiamo (Brindisi) / Un dì, felice, eterea / Follie… Sempre libera 04:16
2. È grave il sacrifizio / Dite alla giovine / Piangi, piangi 03:21
3. Noi siamo zingarelle / Piangi piangi / Scena della lettera / Amami, Alfredo 03:49
4. Addio del passato / Largo al quadrupede / Finale 03:35
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 – 1791)
Don Giovanni, K.527
5. Ouverture / Deh vieni alla finestra / Madamina, il catalogo è questo / Fin ch’han dal vino 04:09
6. Là ci darem la mano / Ah, fuggi il traditor / Protegga il giusto cielo… Traditore 04:11
7. Mi tradì quell’alma ingrata / Don Giovanni, a cenar teco m’invitasti / Finale 03:06
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Die Zauberflöte, K.620
8. Ouverture / Zu Hilfe! Zu Hilfe! / Der Vogelfänger bin ich ja 03:21
9. O Isis und Osiris / Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen / Ach, ich fühl’s 04:36
10. Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen / Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Papagena! / Es siegte die Stärke 03:19
Georges Bizet (1838 – 1875)
Carmen, WD 31 / Act 1 – 3
11. Ouverture / La cloche a sonné / Dans l’air, nous suivons des yeux / Mais nous ne voyons pas la Carmencita? 02:31
12. L’amour est un oiseau rebelle (Habanera) / Holà, éloignez-moi toutes ces femmes-là / Près des remparts de Séville (Séguédille) 03:33
13. Les bohémiens à tour de bras (Air des Tringles) / Toréador, en garde / La-la-la-la 02:18
14. Mêlons! Coupons! (Trio des cartes) / Suis-nous à travers la campagne 02:12
Giacomo Puccini (1858 – 1924)
Tosca / Act 1 – 2
15. Ouverture / E lucevan le stelle / Mario, Mario… Son qui! 03:50
16. Tradirmi egli non può! / Va’, Tosca 03:37
17. Vissi d’arte, vissi d’amore 03:26
18. Tosca, finalmente mia! / E lucevan le stelle / Finale 02:35
Jacques Offenbach (1819 – 1880)
Les Contes d’Hoffmann / Act 2
19. Belle nuit, ô nuit d’amour / Dans les rôles d’amoureux langoureux 03:43
Les Contes d’Hoffmann / Act 1
20. Il était une fois à la cour d’Eisenach / Les oiseaux dans la charmille 03:15
Les Contes d’Hoffmann / Act 4
21. Elle a fui, la tourterelle 01:50
Les Contes d’Hoffmann / Act 2
22. C’est une chanson d’amour / Des cendres de ton cœur / Septuor 03:29

Personnel:
Flore Philis, soprano
Grace Carter, soprano
Jazmin Grollemund-Black, soprano
Marie Menand, mezzo-soprano
Audrey Kessedjian, mezzo-soprano
String Quartet:
Maéva Laignelot, violin 1
Célia Bobichon, violin 2
Alice Bourlier, viola
Barbara Le Liepvre, cello

Download:

mqs.link_D.I.V.AD.I.V.A2017HDTracks2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_D.I.V.AD.I.V.A2017HDTracks2496.part2.rar

Dave Liebman, Enrico Intra – Liebman meets Intra, Live (2008) [e-Onkyo FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

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Dave Liebman, Enrico Intra – Liebman meets Intra, Live (2008)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:07:41 minutes | 1,35 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Alfa Music
Recorded: #1-10 May 4, 2008, Teatro Villoresi, Monza, Italy; #11 May 3, 2008, La Casa del Jazz, Rome, Italy; Mastering: Alfamusic Studio, Roma, Italy by Alessandro Guardi

Ogni nuovo progetto e registrazione di Enrico Intra ha sempre una sua propria e autonoma peculiarità artistica; Liebman meets Intra Live non fa certo eccezione. Eppure, già dopo il primo ascolto – ed è risaputo come i lavori di Intra per essere apprezzati in pieno richiedano diversi ascolti – sembra che quest’ultimo lavoro si ritagli un posto di rilievo all’interno della pur vasta e varia produzione del pianista e compositore milanese. Certo, per chi ha familiarità con i dischi di Intra, questa con Dave Liebman riporta subito alla memoria un’altra celebre registrazione con un celebre sassofonista americano, Gerry Mulligan, di cui ricalca anche il titolo, Gerry Mulligan meets Enrico Intra – correva l’anno 1976. La riproposizione del titolo vuole suggerire una continuità e costruire un ponte lungo oltre trent’anni, non c’è dubbio. E tuttavia, pur trattandosi di uno scontro tra titani, Liebman non è Mulligan e, forse, il sassofonista di Brooklyn, anch’egli raffinato e colto compositore, nonché uno dei più europei tra i jazzisti americani, ha una sensibilità artistica più adatta a “leggere” il complesso e stratificato mondo musicale di Intra e a districarsi nella sua articolata rete di rimandi e sonorità non soltanto jazzistiche. Quanto Liebman vi si trovi del tutto a suo agio è immediatamente percepibile.
Nel live al Teatro Villoresi di Monza (l’ultimo brano è stato invece registrato alla Casa del Jazz di Roma), Liebman non si limita affatto a svolgere diligentemente, come spesso accade, il ruolo dell’ospite d’eccezione; il suo contributo è tutt’altro che accessorio e dimostra invece un’affinità e una partecipazione profonda con l’estetica musicale di Intra. E non poteva essere altrimenti, dal momento che le composizioni di Intra richiedono non soltanto una grande cultura musicale e una tecnica fuori dall’ordinario, ma anche la disponibilità a mettersi in gioco in un’improvvisazione totale – e Liebman non si è di certo risparmiato, anzi ha suonato ai suoi massimi livelli, offrendo assoli di valore assoluto.
Dicevamo che i lavori di Intra esigono ascolti diversi e attenti – Liebman meets Intra non solo non fa eccezione, ma richiede uno sforzo ancora ulteriore. Ma ne vale la pena. Il brano di apertura, Mazurca, è un piano solo di Intra ispirato a Chopin, che ne rievoca le atmosfere “notturne”, ma non bisogna lasciarsi ingannare: già con l’introduzione di solo sax di Liebman a Bluestop l’atmosfera si fa infuocata e, con l’eccezione della ballad Il Mi di Corso Venezia, il ritmo è sostenuto per tutto il cd – l’apporto della sezione ritmica di Marco Vaggi e Tony Arco risulta infatti fondamentale. La scaletta presenta composizioni di Intra che abbracciano circa venticinque anni della sua produzione e si richiamano esplicitamente a stili e generi musicali diversi: Bluestop, Per Donatoni (dedicata al compositore colto Franco Donatoni), Per una Serenata, Ragtime, Rock; eppure, di tali generi, resta quasi esclusivamente la struttura base, mentre comune è piuttosto il lavoro ironico di decostruzione a cui sono sottoposti per lasciar spazio all’improvvisazione più libera. Ciò non toglie tuttavia che il terreno comune sia quello del jazz e del jazz americano in particolare: basti ascoltare www.liebman.it e il pianismo intriso di swing di Intramood. Non mancano, inoltre, tracce delle sperimentazioni più recenti di Intra, come in Punto Due – Intraludes, in cui Alessandro Melchiorre tesse un tappeto elettronico, mai invadente, su cui lo stesso Liebman improvvisa in modo molto suggestivo.
Insomma, Liebman meets Intra è, brano dopo brano e nota dopo nota, un’esplorazione mai scontata della tradizione del jazz e delle sue prospettive più attuali; lascia senza fiato fino all’ultima nota, anzi fino all’ultimo applauso del pubblico che la suggella. –Dario Gentili, Jazzitalia

Tracklist:
1 Mazurca 3:49
2 Bluestop 6:21
3 Zawinul 8:17
4 Il Mi di Corso Venezia 5:03
5 Intramood 4:33
6 Punto Due, Intraludes 4:44
7 Per Donatoni 13:09
8 Per una Serenata 4:55
9 www.liebman.it 4:18
10 Ragtime 6:07
11 Rock 6:17

Personnel:
Enrico Intra, piano
Dave Liebman, soprano-, tenor sax, flugelhorn
Marco Vaggi, double bass
Tony Arco, drums

Download:

mqs.link_DaveLiebmanEnricIntraLiebmanmeetsIntraLive2008enky2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_DaveLiebmanEnricIntraLiebmanmeetsIntraLive2008enky2496.part2.rar

Dave Parker – Flamenco (1966/2016) [HDTracks FLAC 24bit/192kHz]

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Dave Parker – Flamenco (1966/2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 28:27 minutes | 1,02 GB | Genre: Flamenco, Latin
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Front Cover | © Monument Records

Tracklist:
1 April In Portugal 02:43
2 Carnaval 02:05
3 Malaguena 03:14
4 Cavaquinho 01:37
5 Third Man Theme 02:26
6 La Comparsa 02:48
7 Bells Of Sao Paulo 01:58
8 Bay Of Monterey 02:04
9 Poinciana (Song Of The Tree) 02:43
10 Mirage 02:17
11 Southern Star (Estrellita Del Sur) 02:07
12 Romanza 02:25

Personnel:
Dave Parker – guitar

Download:

mqs.link_DaveParkerFlamenc19662016HDTracks24192.part1.rar
mqs.link_DaveParkerFlamenc19662016HDTracks24192.part2.rar

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