Enrico Pieranunzi - Enrico Pieranunzi Plays J. S. Bach G. F. Handel D. Scarlatti 1685 (2011)

  • 24 Nov, 15:07
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Artist:
Title: Enrico Pieranunzi Plays J. S. Bach G. F. Handel D. Scarlatti 1685
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: CAM Jazz
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:52:55
Total Size: 213 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. - Capriccio In F HWV 481/Improhandel 481 - (Georg Friedrich Händel, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [04:26]
02. - Prelude In G BWV 884 - (Johann Sebastian Bach) - [02:25]
03. - Sarabanda In E Minor HWV 438/Improhandel 438 - (Georg Friedrich Händel, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [05:10]
04. - Impro K 183/Sonata In F Minor K 183 - (DOMENICO SCARLATTI, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [05:31]
05. - Chorale BWV 402 "O Mensch, Bewein' Dein' Sunde Gross" - (Johann Sebastian Bach, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [04:39]
06. - Bourree I & Il BWV 807 - (Johann Sebastian Bach) - [03:51]
07. - Improbach 859/ Prelude In F# Minor BWV 859 - (Johann Sebastian Bach, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [02:54]
08. - Sonata In F# K 319 - (DOMENICO SCARLATTI) - [03:54]
09. - Improhandel 439/Courante In G Minor HWV 439 - (Georg Friedrich Händel, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [03:27]
10. - Impro K 448/ Sonata In F# Minor K 448 - (DOMENICO SCARLATTI, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [04:03]
11. - Chorale BWV 122/6 "Das Neugeborne Kindelein"/ Improbach 122 - (Johann Sebastian Bach, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [04:04]
12. - Suite In A Minor BWV 818a/ Improbach 818 - (Johann Sebastian Bach, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [03:41]
13. - Intro 797/ Sinfonia 11 In G Minor BWV 797/ Improbach 797 - (Johann Sebastian Bach, Enrico Pieranunzi) - [04:50]

"Maybe one day," says the pianist, "astrologers or numerologists, researchers of those symbols that seem to mysteriously connect the most distant events and deeds, will be able to explain this to us... we, on the other hand, can only marvel at the appearance one after another in the musical heavens in that fateful year 1685 (more precisely, February, March and October) or, if you like, three new stars: Handel, Bach and Scarlatti. Three stars whose orbits intersected from time to time, but for the most part followed independent trajectories, whose traces can still be observed sweeping across the universal firmament." Pieranunzi masterfully re-reads the pages of these three composers with the practicality and skill of a person who has mastered the language of classical music and knows how to combine it with improvisation.