David Strbac - DEVENIR (2026) (2026) Hi-Res

Artist: David Strbac
Title: DEVENIR
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Contrastes Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC 24 Bit (44,1 KHz / tracks)
Total Time: 51:23 min
Total Size: 204 / 462 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: DEVENIR
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Contrastes Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC 24 Bit (44,1 KHz / tracks)
Total Time: 51:23 min
Total Size: 204 / 462 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Eduardo Sainz de la Maza, Platero,
02. Manuel de Falla, Cancion del Fuego Fatuo,
03. Manuel de Falla, Homenaje a Claude Debussy,
04. Manuel de Falla, Danza del Molinero,
05. Joaquin Rodrigo, Invocacion y Danza,
06. Isaac Albeniz, Mallorca,
07. Isaac Albeniz, Zortzico,
08. Isaac Albeniz, Capricho Catalan,
09. Isaac Albeniz, Torre Bermeja,
10. Joaquin Turina, Sonata Op. 61, 1. Mov,
11. Joaquin Turina, Sonata Op. 61, 2. Mov,
12. Joaquin Turina, Sonata Op. 61, 3. Mov,
Devenir takes its name from a Spanish verb meaning “becoming,” but also suggesting a natural, unforced transformation. In this spirit, David Strbac presents a program shaped by the quiet evolution of his early adult years and by a lifelong pull toward the music of Spain.
His connection to this music began in his teens, long before he understood its roots. He listened to Spanish guitar obsessively, and by the time he moved from Belgrade to Vienna, this fascination had become so defining that his university professor jokingly called him “Mr. Spain.” Only later did he discover the deeper reason behind this attraction: his ancestors on his mother’s side were Spanish, a heritage that had been distant during his upbringing in Serbia. The music became a way of reaching toward something that had always been part of him, even if he did not yet know why.
Born in Belgrade and now based in Vienna, he left his hometown nearly a decade ago to begin a new life abroad. The years that followed were marked by study, travel, concerts, the formation of chamber projects, and the gradual shaping of the repertoire presented here. Beyond music, he navigated relationships through both joy and sorrow, forged enduring friendships, and embraced experiences he never anticipated. Each of these moments subtly reshaped his perspective.
This repertoire grew organically out of these experiences. Recorded intermittently throughout the past decade, each piece was captured whenever life allowed - often just after events that would later reveal themselves as pivotal.
Devenir reflects this period without dramatizing it; instead, it offers a clear and honest look at the process of growing into oneself. Featuring the fire and edge of flamenco-inspired works by Falla, Turina, and Rodrigo, alongside the lyrical gentleness of composers such as Eduardo de la Maza, these pieces serve as musical traces of the places, people, and turning points that shaped him.
His connection to this music began in his teens, long before he understood its roots. He listened to Spanish guitar obsessively, and by the time he moved from Belgrade to Vienna, this fascination had become so defining that his university professor jokingly called him “Mr. Spain.” Only later did he discover the deeper reason behind this attraction: his ancestors on his mother’s side were Spanish, a heritage that had been distant during his upbringing in Serbia. The music became a way of reaching toward something that had always been part of him, even if he did not yet know why.
Born in Belgrade and now based in Vienna, he left his hometown nearly a decade ago to begin a new life abroad. The years that followed were marked by study, travel, concerts, the formation of chamber projects, and the gradual shaping of the repertoire presented here. Beyond music, he navigated relationships through both joy and sorrow, forged enduring friendships, and embraced experiences he never anticipated. Each of these moments subtly reshaped his perspective.
This repertoire grew organically out of these experiences. Recorded intermittently throughout the past decade, each piece was captured whenever life allowed - often just after events that would later reveal themselves as pivotal.
Devenir reflects this period without dramatizing it; instead, it offers a clear and honest look at the process of growing into oneself. Featuring the fire and edge of flamenco-inspired works by Falla, Turina, and Rodrigo, alongside the lyrical gentleness of composers such as Eduardo de la Maza, these pieces serve as musical traces of the places, people, and turning points that shaped him.