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Froberger : Suites & Toccatas

Alina Rotaru

Miscellaneous - Released May 1, 2012 | Carpe Diem Records Berlin

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Rita Strohl: Musique vocale

Elsa Dreisig

Mélodies - Released October 27, 2023 | La Boîte à Pépites

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The rediscovery of music by female composers came a bit later to France than it did to Britain or the U.S., but the new label La Boîte à Pépites is changing that with a series of generous releases illustrated by nifty drawings of the composers. The label does a real service here with this double-album revival of vocal music by Rita Strohl (songs, plus a fascinating set for narrator and piano), who lived from 1865 to 1941. It is hard to understand the neglect of her music, which was praised by Henri Duparc and programmed by Pablo Casals in its own time. In these songs, it is a bit hard to hear the "compositrice de la démesure" ("composer of excess") promised by the album's subtitle; perhaps that is still to come in the label's series, but Strohl did expand upon her models -- Franck, with some Wagner and Debussy -- in striking ways. Perhaps the best-known Strohl work so far is the uniquely dramatic and programmatic cello sonata called Titus et Bérenice, presumably still to come from La Boîte à Pépites. However, the songs here are hefty in their ambition and reach, sounding in no way derivative of anybody else. Strohl offers her own set of Pierre Louÿs' lesbian Songs of Bilitis that could easily be programmed with Debussy's set of three. The second disc in the set is devoted mostly to settings of Baudelaire and other poets; the two cycles, written in 1891 and 1894, would have been received as entirely contemporary in their time. Most interesting of all is the set of narrations, titled Quand la flûte de Pan; they have Symbolist texts by the little-known Marie de Courpon, who was also a composer, and the relationship between text and music is fluid. The performances are by major artists, including the soprano Elsa Dreisig and baritone Stéphane Degout, which bodes well for the future of a series that has started promisingly indeed.© James Manheim /TiVo
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Gloire Immortelle !

Hervé Niquet

Classical - Released November 17, 2023 | Château de Versailles Spectacles

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The Couperin Family

Benjamin Alard

Classical - Released January 13, 2023 | MarchVivo

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Bach: Toccatas

Claire Huangci

Classical - Released September 10, 2021 | Berlin Classics

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On her most recent album, the pianist Claire Huangci made her first discographic foray into the chamber-music world of Ernest Chausson and Maurice Ravel. Her latest album creates a musical link almost back to the beginning of her professional career, to her highly acclaimed Scarlatti album, and proves yet again that she has a very close relationship with Baroque repertoire: with Johann Sebastian Bach’s varied and sparklingly virtuoso Toccatas she has taken ownership of a rarely heard collection of works, in which she presents the entire emotional spectrum of the young adult Bach. The album begins with the most famous toccata in music history, though it is not the sort of work we are used to hearing played on a solo piano recording. Ferruccio Busoni’s transcription of the world famous Bach D minor Toccata, which takes the work normally heard on a mighty Baroque organ and has it played in romanticised manner on a piano keyboard, provides a captivating start, seeming to blow the cobwebs out of the keys, and whets our appetite for the original Bach and all of his seven Toccatas. All were written during Bach’s years in Weimar and bring him alive as a composer who is well versed in the serious art of Baroque counterpoint, yet contrasts this mastery with improvisational, virtuoso runs and dreamy slow passages. In this programme Claire Huangci's musical diversity comes perfectly into play, whether in the finely traced slow middle movement of the D major toccata, the dazzling brilliance of the beginning of the G minor toccata or the romanticised excesses of the Busoni transcription of BWV 565. © Berlin Classics

Si tu as peur, n'aie pas peur de l'amour

Daniel Auteuil

French Music - Released March 17, 2023 | Universal Music Division Label Panthéon

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Charpentier: Pastorale de Noël - Antiennes O de l’Avent

Sébastien Daucé

Sacred Vocal Music - Released October 21, 2016 | harmonia mundi

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Meditation

Philippe Pierlot

Classical - Released January 28, 2022 | Flora

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What a treat to have a first solo album from Philippe Pierlot, the Belgian viola da gamba player best known for being the director of the Ricercar Ensemble, and what a double treat for it then to sound so absolutely ravishing. In programming terms alone, “Meditation” is a joy for its combination of variety and musicological storytelling. A charting of the viola da gamba’s time in the sun via the music of its finest exponents, it opens with a selection of airs from Tobias Hume’s (1579-1645) The First Part of Ayres of 1605, which was the first complete collection of pieces for solo viola da gamba to be published on British shores. From there it’s a hop over the Channel to celebrate the instrument’s heyday in France. First for a handful of sarabandes and courantes, plus a chaconne, from Monsieur de Sainte Colombe (1640-1700). Then Les Voix humaines by Marin Marais (1656-1728), before returning to British shores for a few pieces by Carl Friedrich Abel (1723-1787), whose love for the fast-becoming-unfashionable viol saw him adapt his own pre-Classical style to something closer to that of his family friend and onetime teacher Johann Sebastian Bach. Pierlot then winds things up with his own transcriptions of two German works – the Prélude, Sarabande and Menuet from Bach’s Cello Suite No. 1 in G major, and a Meditation for harpsichord piece that Johann Jakob Froberger wrote on a trip to Paris in 1660. Recorded in Santa Maria di Micciano, the performances themselves have been captured with vibrant-toned intimacy, and a nice amount of church acoustic in the mix; and while there’s audible breathing, I’m inclined to think that it’s worth it for the pleasure of being really able to appreciate the timbres of hair catching – and of subtle mid-bow modulations in weight and attack – on gut string. Pierlot’s Thomas Allred 1635 viola da gamba meanwhile fully lives up to the viola da gamba’s ‘ambassador’ nickname with its mahogany’s sweetness, and Pierlot’s actual playing is as beguiling in the rhythmic rise and fall of an up-tempo Sarabande as in his programme’s many slower-spun lyrical moments. As for the album title, this refers to the programme’s first and last pieces, which serve as an ear-pricking way to finish by coming full circle, while having moved to an altogether different and more exotic place in stylistic and harmonic terms. Don’t leave too soon either, because as the Froberger’s final chord dies away there’s an inspired postscript in the form of far-off church bell chimes. © Charlotte Gardner/Qobuz
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Bach : Passio secundum Johannem (St. John Passion)

Philippe Pierlot

Sacred Vocal Music - Released March 31, 2011 | Mirare

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Bach, J.S.: Toccatas BWV 910-916

Trevor Pinnock

Classical - Released January 1, 2013 | Archiv Produktion

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Ravel: Complete Orchestral Works by Manuel Rosenthal

Manuel Rosenthal

Classical - Released December 31, 2021 | Alexandre Bak - Classical Music Reference Recording

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Navet Maria

LEs fatals picards

Rock - Released January 1, 2001 | Les Disques Caractère

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Couperin: Les piéces de clavessin, Vol. 1

Blandine Verlet

Classical - Released January 1, 1987 | naïve classique

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Sonates françaises pour violoncelle

Nicolas Altstaedt

Chamber Music - Released February 23, 2010 | Naxos

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Telemann: Polonoise

Holland Baroque

Classical - Released January 15, 2021 | PentaTone

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It is well-known that the baroque language is a kind of musical Esperanto whose codes spread throughout the European continent, each nation contributing to inspire, or possibly contaminate, its neighbours. Unlike the sedentary Johann Sebastian Bach who only travelled through his colleagues' scores, his prolific friend Georg Philipp Telemann travelled throughout Europe and retained in his works the style he had discovered in Poland. Like many of his contemporaries, Telemann seems to have been fascinated by Polish folk dances, which were very popular throughout Europe and known by various names: chorea polonica, baletto polacco, polnischer Tanz or saltus polonicus. But this music from Poland itself came from elsewhere before being transformed in turn. "After hearing the music of the taverns for just one week, one remains imbued with it for life", wrote Telemann.This enthusiasm is conveyed to us today by the violinist Aisslinn Nosky and her Holland Baroque ensemble, through a bouquet of works perfectly reflecting the musical whirlwind heard by Telemann in Krakow and the surrounding area. Polonié, Polonesie, Concertos-Polonois, Partie Polonois, Hanac come to recreate the joy of dance and the bitter perfumes of pipes, all drenched in an alcohol that should not be consumed in moderation. © François Hudry/Qobuz

Abba père

Collectif Cieux Ouverts

Miscellaneous - Released April 13, 2017 | Premiere Partie Music

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French Cello Sonatas, Lalo, Koechlin & Pierné, Vol. 1

Marina Tarasova

Classical - Released December 28, 2022 | Brilliant Classics

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Froberger: Suites for Harpsichord, Vol. 1

Gilbert Rowland

Classical - Released April 19, 2019 | Athene

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Johann Jacob Froberger

Jean-Marc Aymes

Classical - Released October 23, 2020 | Lanvellec Editions