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L'Orgue Soliste: Music for Organ & Orchestra
 
12,00 €
 
Formát:
CD
 
 
Dostupnosť:
dodacia doba 7-28 dní
 
 
Katalógové číslo:
96955
 
 
EAN kód:
5028421969558
 
 
Autori:
Joseph Jongen, Marco Enrico BOSSI, POULENC Francis
 
 
Interpreti:
Eugène Carmona, Tommaso Mazzoletti
 
 
Vydavateľ:
BRILLIANT CLASSICS
 
 
Zoznam skladieb
Dátum vydania: 7. 7. 2023

Marco Enrico Bossi: Concerto for Organ, Strings, 4 Horns and Timpani in A Minor, Op. 100
1 I. Allegro moderato
2 II. Adagio, ma non troppo
3 III. Allegro

4 Joseph Jongen: Hymne, for Organ and Orchestra, Op. 78

Francis Poulenc: Organ Concerto in G Minor, FP 93
5 I. Andante
6 II. Allegro giocoso
7 III. Subito andante moderato
8 IV. Tempo allegro. Molto agitato
9 V. Très calme. Lent
10 VI. Tempo de l’allegro initial
11 VII. Tempo d’introduction. Largo
Popis
When we think of a concerto for solo instrument and orchestra, the organ is certainly not the first instrument that comes to mind. And yet, the symphonic organ is perfectly adapted to the role of soloist, being capable of duelling as well as duetting with the orchestra. The Concerto for organ, strings, horns and timpani Op.100 by Marco Enrico Bossi, for example, is one of the most important and successful pieces in the entire repertoire, and yet it does not enjoy the recognition it deserves among the wider public. Structured in three movements of genuine expressive power, this is music that is both majestic and intimate, able to touch the hearts of listeners and performers alike – a work on which this great composer really lavished his extraordinary creativity. After reading through the score, Giuseppe Verdi was effusive in his praise for the Concerto Op.100, acknowledging the music’s ‘extremely bold and powerful effects’. His visionary genius is clearly displayed in the Concerto Op.100, whose solo part calls for a dynamic and symphonic organ that didn’t yet exist in Italy at the time when he was a student but which he was probably already dreaming up. Hymne by Joseph Jongen is a real rarity. The organ has less of a ‘solo’ role than in the Bossi and Poulenc works; rather, it blends into the warm textures of the orchestra as an integral part of the sonic conversational flow so typical of Jongen’s impressionist idiom. Here too, the composition of the Gland organ and its eminently full, warm and poetic sound are an ideal showcase for the mysterious atmosphere of this work. Unlike the Bossi and Jongen works, the Concerto for organ, strings and timpani by Francis Poulenc is very well known indeed. Uncharacteristically written in a single movement divided into seven sections, this concerto is surely one of the best-known organ works of the 20th century. In certain sections the sonorous, weighty and deliberately strident organ writing is juxtaposed alongside orchestral textures that are extremely graceful and poetic, almost like a rough country giant trying to attract the attentions of a refined princess. At other moments, the organ imposes itself upon the orchestra, only to come together with it at other times, before proceeding to turn everything upside down once again.
 
 
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