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Format : 1 CD Digipack Durée totale : 01:07:28
Enregistrement : 29/06-01/07/2018 Lieu : Milan Pays : Italie Prise de son : Eglise / Stereo
Label : Stradivarius Référence : STR37140 EAN : 8011570371409 Code Prix : DM021A
Année d'édition : 2019 Date de sortie : 01/07/2019
Genre : Classique
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Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757) Andante de la sonate en ré mineur, K 213 Allegro de la sonate en ré mineur, K 1 Vivo de la sonate en sol majeur, K 201 Allegrissimo de la sonate en mi mineur, K 98 Adagio e cantabile de la sonate en la majeur, K 208 Allegro de la sonate en fa mineur, K 184 Allegro de la sonate en do mineur, K 115Padre Antonio Soler (1729-1781) Allegro de la sonate en ré majeur, R 413Mateo Pérez de Albéniz (?1755-1831) Presto e gaio de la sonate en ré majeurSebastian de Albero (1722-1756) Allegro de la sonate n° 12 en ré majeurFélix Máximo López (1742-1821) Variations sur le menuet Afandangado en ré mineur
Amaya Fernandez Pozuelo, clavecin
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 In front of a score, the performer - as in a play of shadows - is always and unfailingly faced with difficult interpretative choices between appearance, reality and imagination. Domenico Scarlatti’s language in its simplicity and immediacy goes beyond the direct meaning of notation. What should be read according to convention for other authors, in Scarlatti’s pieces a potential changeable meaning is to be sought, never exactly the same. Everything becomes more understandable if one thinks of Scarlatti as a composer who performed his sonata before noting it on paper. The development and the definitive draft have always perfectly blended the alea of improvised execution and formal completeness. The limits of notation, almost perfect for those times, lie in the performer’s profound understanding of the author style and of the relationship intertwining structural rigour, stylistic-formal perfection, and free inventiveness. For this to occur, the musician-performer’s intuition is to transcend and make the written signs meaningful and make them his or her own. Only in this way can the non-writable, the unsaid but thought of, the changeable meaning, emerge as well as the allusion to and participation in the vast panorama of human emotions. In my interpretation of Scarlatti sonatas and of his imitators and epigones on the CD, I intended to make these hidden elements audible, palpable: its effects and affects, which are rich, varied and manifold.

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