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Composer Claude-Bénigne Balbastre came at the end of the French Baroque keyboard tradition that produced François Couperin and Jean-Philippe Rameau. Composed in 1759, these pieces look back toward the tradition of French harpsichord music, with its individual piece titles designating various members of the French nobility and their individual personalities. Thirty years after Couperin announced the reunification of French and Italian tastes, they show only light influence of Italian style; the clearly diatonic, periodic Allegro tune of "La Laporte," track 16, is the exception. Nor does Balbastre attempt to take after the intellectual density and harmonic complexity of Rameau's keyboard music. Instead his little musical portraits have a mostly pleasant, pastoral mien, with harmonic touches that are unusual and evocative rather than difficult. Sample the recurring, almost tickling emphasis on the flat fifth degree in "La Genty," track 13, or the large, static harmonic fields of "La Lamarck," track 9. This piece is marked "Ouverture," and part of what makes these works interesting is how they serve double duty as character pieces and as potential parts of an abstract structure. The playing of British harpsichordist Sophie Yates is nothing short of exemplary here. She doesn't try to make more of this light music than is actually in it, but she takes time where necessary to let the music breathe and to bring out small details, and there isn't a moment on the album that doesn't feel alive. She has the indefinable instinct for a command performance. Yates' own notes appear in English, German, and French.
© TiVo
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Pieces de clavecin, Book 1 (Claude Balbastre)
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
Presentación del Álbum
Composer Claude-Bénigne Balbastre came at the end of the French Baroque keyboard tradition that produced François Couperin and Jean-Philippe Rameau. Composed in 1759, these pieces look back toward the tradition of French harpsichord music, with its individual piece titles designating various members of the French nobility and their individual personalities. Thirty years after Couperin announced the reunification of French and Italian tastes, they show only light influence of Italian style; the clearly diatonic, periodic Allegro tune of "La Laporte," track 16, is the exception. Nor does Balbastre attempt to take after the intellectual density and harmonic complexity of Rameau's keyboard music. Instead his little musical portraits have a mostly pleasant, pastoral mien, with harmonic touches that are unusual and evocative rather than difficult. Sample the recurring, almost tickling emphasis on the flat fifth degree in "La Genty," track 13, or the large, static harmonic fields of "La Lamarck," track 9. This piece is marked "Ouverture," and part of what makes these works interesting is how they serve double duty as character pieces and as potential parts of an abstract structure. The playing of British harpsichordist Sophie Yates is nothing short of exemplary here. She doesn't try to make more of this light music than is actually in it, but she takes time where necessary to let the music breathe and to bring out small details, and there isn't a moment on the album that doesn't feel alive. She has the indefinable instinct for a command performance. Yates' own notes appear in English, German, and French.
© TiVo
Detalles de la grabación original : 76:29 - DDD - Enregistré les 29 et 30 novembre 2005 au St George’s, Brandon Hill, Bristol - Notes en français, anglais et allemand
Acerca del álbum
- 1 disco(s) - 17 pista(s)
- Duración total: 01:16:24
- 1 Libreto digital
- Artistas principales: Sophie Yates
- Compositor: Claude Balbastre
- Sello: Chandos
- Género Clásica
- Colección: Chaconne
2011 Chandos 2011 Chandos
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