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Home Classical Compilation Virtuoso Harp Music (Zabaleta) [2000]

Virtuoso Harp Music (Zabaleta) [2000]

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Virtuoso Harp Music (Zabaleta) [2000]

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G.F. Handel / Harfenkonzert B-Dur Op.4 Nr. 6
1. 1. Andante Allegro	
2. 2. Larghetto 		
3. 3. Allegro Moderato

J.S. Bach / Suite E-Dur BWV 1006a	
4. Prélude 	
5. 1. Allegro	
6. 2. Largo 		
7. 3. Allegro 

C.P.E. Bach / Sonate Für Harfe G-Dur Wq 139
8. 1. Allegro 		
9. 2. Adagio Un Poco	
10. 3. Allegro 	

G.C. Wagenseil / Harfenkonzert G-Dur	
11. 1. Allegro 		
12. 2. Andante 		
13. 3. Vivace

G.F. Handel / Harfenkonzert B-Dur Op.4 Nr. 5	
14. 1. Larghetto 	
15. 2. Allegro 	
16. 3. Alla Sicilana 		
17. 4. Presto 		

J.S. Bach / Suite H-Moll BWV 814
18. 1. Allemande 		
19. 2. Courante 		
20. 3. Sarabande 		
21. 4. Anglaise 		
22. 5. Menuet 		
23. 6. Gigue 	

Nicanor Zabaleta (harp)
Orchestre de Chambre Paul Kuentz
Kuentz, Paul (conductor)
English Chamber Orchestra
Navarro, Garcia (conductor)

 

This unusual disc offers a high degree of listening satisfaction. That much given, this isn’t a recording for the Baroque purist–only one of the six concertos for harp and strings collected on this album was actually written with the harp in mind. The remaining five are transcriptions made by Spanish virtuoso harpist Nicanor Zabaleta, who performs them all with seemingly effortless technique and infectious charisma. For most of the selections he’s accompanied by the English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Garcia Navarro; in the case of Handel’s harp concerto in B-flat major Op. 4 No. 6 (the only true harp concerto in this collection) he’s partnered by Paul Kuentz and his chamber orchestra.

Bach frequently adapted the music of others to suit his own requirements and indeed, the Handel works recorded here also sometimes reveal the hand of their arranger–for example, the Organ Concerto in F (Op. 4 No. 5), which itself is a remodelling of Handel’s earlier Sonata in F for recorder (Op. 1 No. 11). So in transcribing two of Handel’s organ concertos plus several concertos that Bach already had borrowed from Vivaldi, Zabaleta intelligently and resourcefully expands the concerto repertoire for his own instrument. Zabaleta’s fastidious style and un-mannered musicality ensures that these readings are constantly engaging. The recordings, which mostly date from 1978 (the last work here was taped in 1966), sound a little top-heavy and some shrillness persists in these new digital transfers; but with Zabaleta’s exuberant and skillful playing so vividly conveyed, it’s easy to just focus on the music, and enjoy. ---classicstoday.com

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Last Updated (Friday, 18 October 2013 13:01)

 

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