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Format : 1 CD Durée totale : 01:12:49
Enregistrement : 2013 Pays : Royaume-Uni Prise de son : Stereo
Label : Nimbus Référence : NI5906 EAN : 0710357590627
Année d'édition : 2013 Date de sortie : 06/09/2013
Genre : Classique
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Padre Antonio Soler (1729-1781) Sonate en ré majeur, R 86 Sonate en ré minuer, R 24 Sonate en do dièse mineur, R 110 Sonate en la mineur, R 118 Sonate en do mineur, R 19 Sonate en do majeur, M 27 Sonate en fa majeur, R 56 Sonate en ré majeur, R 92d Sonate en ré mineur, R 39 Sonate en sol mineur, M 38 Sonate en ré majeur, R 74 Sonate en sol majeur, R 43Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805) Fandango
Richard Lester, clavecin David Ponsford, clavecin
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 The harpsichord music of Antonio Soler is to a great extent overshadowed by the keyboard works of his near contemporary Domenico Scarlatti, music master to Queen Maria Barbara of Spain. Soler though, rightly claims a prominent position amongst those few select composers who became beacons of the Classical Enlightenment and whose music possessed elements of genius. At the age of twenty-three Soler took Holy Orders, entering the Escorial as a Hieronymite monk in the Order of Saint Jerome where he remained in relative confinement for the rest of his life. His existence at the Escorial is well documented by a colleague who wrote an extremely detailed obituary notice, describing a man who loved his cell and was always there except for duty. Whilst at the Escorial, Soler studied with José de Nebra and Scarlatti. Soler’s output of around 200 harpsichord sonatas were written for the Infante don Gabriel, whom Soler taught from around 1765. The sonatas on this CD can be pigeonholed into three categories: the dance (sonatas R21, R118, R43 & R92d). Those which are slower and more vocal in nature (R4 & R110) with a hint of the melismatic expression found in cante hondo : a pur form of Andalucian folk music. And those which lean towards the new ‘galant’ style (R56 & M27). There are also frequent echoes of the guitar punteado and rasgueado styles, R86 & R43 which are also related to the dance. Luigi Boccherini was born in Lucca, Italy in 1743 and was renowned as a composer and ‘cellist. In 1761, Boccherini went to live in Madrid where he was appointed music master to the Infante Luis Antonio, and he would certainly have met Soler. This version of Boccherini’s fandango, from the last movement of Quintet No 4 in D major, is Richard Lester’s own arrangement for two harpsichords.

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