Artist:
Daniele Lazzari
Title:
Virtuoso Guitar Music of Spain and Latin America
Year Of Release:
2018
Label:
Da Vinci Classics
Genre:
Classical
Quality:
FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:19:26
Total Size: 295 MB
WebSite:
Album Preview
Tracklist:1. Préludes, W419: No. 1 in E Minor, Andantino expressivo (04:34)
2. Préludes, W419: No. 2 in E Major, Andantino (03:02)
3. Préludes, W419: No. 3 in A Minor, Andante (06:01)
4. Préludes, W419: No. 4 in E Minor, Lento (03:55)
5. Préludes, W419: No. 5 in D Major, Poco animato (04:09)
6. Sonatina: I. Allegretto (04:28)
7. Sonatina: II. Andante (04:49)
8. Sonatina: III. Allegro (04:29)
9. La Catedral: I. Preludio saudade (02:31)
10. La Catedral: II. Andante religioso (02:00)
11. La Catedral: III. Allegro solemne (03:53)
12. Vals en Sol (04:22)
13. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 1, Theme. Lento (01:03)
14. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 2, Var. I. Poco vivo (00:56)
15. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 3, Var. II. Allegretto mosso (01:02)
16. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 4, Var. III. Lento (02:25)
17. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 5, Var. IV. Un po' agitato (00:54)
18. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 6, Var. V. Andantino (01:07)
19. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 7, Var. VI. Allegretto expressivo (00:53)
20. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 8, Var. VII. Andante (01:46)
21. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 9, Var. VIII. Moderato (01:19)
22. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 10, Var. IX. Andantino affettuoso (01:20)
23. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 11, Var. X. Prestissimo (00:44)
24. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 12, Var. XI. Andantino (01:53)
25. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 13, Var. XII. Animato (01:07)
26. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 14, Var. XIII. Sostenuto (01:29)
27. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 15, Var. XIV. Allegro non troppo (00:38)
28. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 16, Var. XV. Moderato energico (01:16)
29. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 17, Var. XVI. Moderato (01:50)
30. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 18, Var. XVII. Allegro ma non troppo (01:01)
31. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 19, Var. XVIII. Allegro scherzando (01:02)
32. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 20, Var. XIX. Vivo e marcato (00:54)
33. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 21, Var. XX. Andante (01:54)
34. Variations sur Folia de España: No. 22, Fugue. Moderato (04:21)
Agustin Barrios: (b San Juan Bautista de las Misiones, 5 May 1885; d San Salvador, 7 Aug 1944). Paraguayan guitarist and composer. In his youth in Asunción he studied the guitar with Gustavo Sosa Escalada and composition with Nicolo Pellegrini, and practised his compositional skills by transcribing works by Bach, Beethoven and Chopin. In 1910 he left Paraguay intending to give a week of concerts in Argentina, but such was his success that he was away for 14 years, playing in Brazil, Chile and Uruguay (where he studied with Antonio Giménez Manjón). He found a patron in the diplomat Tomás Salomini, who arranged recitals for him in Mexico and Cuba. His first real successes date from about 1919, when he played for the President of Brazil. In 1930 he adopted the pseudonym Mangoré (after a legendary Guaraní chieftain), and in 1934 he went to Europe with Salomini, living in Berlin and visiting Belgium and Spain. In 1936 he returned to Latin America, and taught at the conservatory in San Salvador from 1939 to 1944. Critics compared Barrios Mangoré with Segovia as an interpreter and with Paganini as a virtuoso. He was the first Latin-American guitarist of stature to be heard in Europe, and made numerous recordings between 1913 and 1929.
Although he lacked a formal musical education, Barrios Mangoré wrote guitar music of high quality that combined many of the characteristics of his predecessors, Sor and Tárrega. He reputedly composed about 300 works for solo guitar, of which over a third have been located either in manuscripts or from his recordings. These include La catedral, Danza paraguaya, Un sueño en la floresta, Preludio, op.5 no.1, Julia Florida, Una limosna por el amor de dios, Mazurka apasionata, Vals, op.8 nos.3 and 4, and Variations on a Theme of Tárrega, all of which have become part of the repertory.
Federico Moreno Torroba (b Madrid, 3 March 1891; d Madrid, 12 Sept 1982). Spanish composer, conductor and critic. He first studied music with his father, José Moreno Ballesteros, an organist and teacher at the Madrid Conservatory, and with whom he collaborated on his first zarzuela, Las decididas (1912). He later studied composition with Conrado del Campo at the Royal Conservatory, where his tone poem La ajorca de oro was first performed in 1918. In 1924 he married Pilar Larregla, the daughter of a Navarrese composer; the folk music of Navarra along with that of Castile was to serve as a major source of inspiration in his music. Although not a guitarist himself, in the 1920s his growing friendship with Segovia inspired him to begin writing for the guitar, and the resulting compositions such as Sonatina (1924) and Piezas características (1931) are among his finest works. He also established himself as a composer for the stage, and his zarzuela La mesonera de Tordesillas was first performed to critical acclaim in 1925, while his most famous zarzuela, Luisa Fernanda (1932), is a representative of the last flowering of the zarzuela grande. Between 1925 and 1935 he was active as a music critic for Madrid periodicals, especially Informaciones, and used this position and his brief term in the Second Republic's five-member Junta Nacional de Música to promote greater government support for music.
With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1936, Moreno Torroba retreated to Navarra with his family, avoiding involvement in the conflict. With the ascendancy of Franco he became one of the dominant figures in Spanish music, along with Turina and Rodrigo. Rejecting the European avant garde, they embraced a conservative nationalist aesthetic that was accepted in the new political environment. In 1946 he formed a zarzuela company that toured the Americas for two seasons (he had directed productions of his zarzuelas in Buenos Aires annually since 1934). In the 1950s Moreno Torroba's satirical zarzuela Bienvenido, Mister Dolar (1954) reflected the growing political and military cooperation between the USA and Spain along with the influx of American capital and culture, while María Manuela (1957) became his most popular zarzuela of the decade.
His output diminished as the public appeal of the zarzuela waned in the 1960s and his own work became increasingly seen as dated. Consequently, he devoted more time to conducting and recording, returning several times to Latin America to conduct performances of his own works. He continued to compose for the guitar, however, writing the Concierto de Castilla (1960) for Segovia, Homenaje a la seguidilla (1962) and Diálogos entre guitarra y orquesta (1977), among the best of his concertos. The two books of Castillos de España (1970 and 1978) for solo guitar are among his most notable successes in that genre. Among his last works is his second opera El poeta, first performed in 1980 with Plácido Domingo.
Moreno Torroba was a major figure in Spanish music of the 20th century who flourished despite the political and social upheavals that surrounded him. His music has often been described as ‘castizo’, employing elements of folk and art music which are of distinctly Spanish ‘pure cast’. A nationalist, he believed that fidelity to Spain's heritage, rather than imitation of foreign models, would lead to the universality of Spanish music. His musical palette was not limited to strict folklorism, and he acknowledged a wider musical influence through the works of Debussy, Ravel, Franck, Wagner and, in later years, Bartók. His accessible, lyrical style maintains a strong sense of tonality through the use of conventional forms while judiciously employing extended triadic harmonies, modality, remote modulations and colourful orchestration. His zarzuelas also draw upon expressly regional motifs and references to traditional and contemporary urban culture.
Moreno Torroba held many prominent positions including Comisario del Teatro Zarzuela, director of the Compañía Lírica and, from 1974, president of the Sociedad General de Autores de España, through which he served as a cultural diplomat. He was elected as the director of the Academia de Bellas Artes de S Fernando in 1978, and died four years later at the age of 91.
Heitor Villa-Lobos (b Rio de Janeiro, 5 March 1887; d Rio de Janeiro, 17 Nov 1959). Brazilian composer. Heitor Villa-Lobos stands as the single most significant creative figure in 20th-century Brazilian art music. This significance stems not only from his international recognition, but from his achievement in creating unique compositional styles in which contemporary European techniques and reinterpreted elements of national music are combined. His highly successful career stood as a model for subsequent generations of Brazilian composers.
Manuel Maria Ponce: (b Fresnillo, Zacatecas, 8 Dec 1882; d Mexico City, 24 April 1948). Mexican pianist and composer. He was the leading Mexican musician of his time, and made a primary contribution to the development of a Mexican national style – a style that could embrace, in succession, impressionist and neo-classical influences.