Erlend Vetås Aagaard-Nilsen - Perpetuum Trompetuum (2015) [Hi-Res]

  • 29 Aug, 14:02
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Artist:
Title: Perpetuum Trompetuum
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Lawo Music
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 01:06:00
Total Size: 246 / 574 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Resisting Gravity
02. Perpetuum Trompetuum
03. Signals
04. Kvernhusfanfare
05. Elegy for Broken Hearts
06. Festoso
07. Orpheus Lament
08. Three Lamento Movements: 1/4-del = 54
09. Three Lamento Movements: 1/8-del = 60
10. Three Lamento Movements: 1/4-del = max. 40
11. MultiMORF IV

There is a particular quality to works which tell something in short formats; a form of concentration which separates them from the large-scale forms, in the same way that a short story is distinct from a novel. In this perspective it is important to keep the form alive by new composers continually exploiting it, as they do on this disc.
The trumpet player Erlend Aagaard-Nilsen has invited some Norwegian composers to compose works for solo trumpet and piano which has resulted in interesting additions to the repertoire at the same time reflecting the variety of expression to be found among today’s composers.
Erlend Aagaard-Nilsen’s contact with contemporary music began at an early age. He was introduced to working together with students of composition from the Grieg Academy in Bergen, and as a performer in brass bands, where new music is often part of the repertoire. All the composers represented on this recording, with the exception of Bolstad Skjelbred, live in or nearby Bergen. Together with the pianist Jarle Rotevatn, Erlend, in co-operation with Brass- Wind, has commissioned and premiered most of the works on this disc. All the pieces are written for him (except track 5).
Music can be described as a room for dialogue. And without trust in the person one is conversing with, the possibility for dialogue ends before it has begun. Erlend Aagaard-Nilsen invites you to a conversation with a choice of repertoire which demonstrates “the breadth of the narrow” in Norwegian art music, as the composer Åse Hedstrøm put it.




  • jascha
  •  14:19
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Thanks so much!