Mittwoch, 30. August 2023

P 135 (Eiji Hashimoto/Yevgeny Sudbin)

30 08 2023


P 135 (K 99) in c-Moll am Cembalo gespielt von Eiji Hashimoto

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lkk_s0psKo


am Klavier gespielt von Yevgeny Sudbin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQLL8Oru4Ss


Eiji Hashimoto Biografie

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiji_Hashimoto

https://janellesnotes.wordpress.com/2021/01/20/eiji-hashimoto-was-a-virtuoso-and-scholar-of-the-harpsichord/


Eiji Hashimoto gab in der bei der Schott Music Group erschienen Reihe „zen-on piano library“ die Werke Domenico Scarlattis in 3 Bänden (japanisch/englisch) heraus.


Yevgeny Sudbin Interviews

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ArJUw0b-9z8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-X-t8pDVSY


Yevgeny Sudbin Biografie

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewgeni_Olegowitsch_Sudbin


Yevgeny Sudbin Website

https://www.yevgenysudbin.com


 

Dienstag, 29. August 2023

Sonntag, 27. August 2023

P 132 (Luca Guglielmi/Enrico Maria Polimanti)

27 08 2023


P 132 (K 198) in e-Moll am Cembalo gespielt von Luca Guglielmi

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9q5zhrzJqgY


am Klavier gespielt von Enrico Maria Polimanti

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Hi9iN3eB_4


Luca Guglielmi Interview

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-smfxVqTME


Luca Guglielmi Biografie

https://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Guglielmi-Luca.htm


Luca Guglielmi Website

https://lucaguglielmi.com


Enrico Maria Polimanti on Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/enrico.polimanti/


Enrico Maria Polimanti Website

https://www.enricomariapolimanti.com/en/


 

Mittwoch, 9. August 2023

P 114 (Fernando Valenti/Harout Senekeremian)

09 08 2023


P 114 (K 152) in G-Dur am Cembalo gespielt von Fernando Valenti

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PfqGGC6dK5w


am Klavier gespielt von Harout Senekeremian

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUbcHH9UfOE


Fernando Valenti Biografie

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fernando_Valenti

https://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Valenti-Fernando.htm


Fernando Valenti – The Scarlatti Project


In 1951, a young harpsichordist named Fernando Valenti went into the recording studios of Westminster Records to produce a long-playing phonograph record devoted entirely to keyboard music of a relatively obscure Italian-Iberian baroque composer named Domenico Scarlatti. At that time, harpsichordists were still a fairly rare breed, and although Wanda Landowska had courageously recorded several dozen Scarlatti sonatas in the 1930s, his music was still known principally to non-specialists by only a few miniatures played in arrangements as encores at piano recitals.


Valenti's Scarlatti recording was an instant success. More Scarlatti was demanded, and thus began the first major attempt to record the gargantuan cycle of some 550 keyboard sonatas in modern times. (On a few sonatas, he is joined by violinist Julian Olevsky.)


For the next decade, volumes of Scarlatti sonatas played by Valenti continued to be cranked out, 12 sonatas to the LP. Collectors eagerly awaited volumes 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 15, 20… Unfortunately, just as stereo recording was beginning to revolutionize the recording industry, trouble was brewing. The Valenti/Scarlatti Project would not be finished. To this day musicians wonder if Valenti actually managed to record all of the 545 sonatas in the Longo Edition (plus the Menuet in F)—he did not. A finite number of sonatas was released on LP. And, after years of collecting, scrounging, horse trading, and begging, I believe I have assembled all of the music of Domenico Scarlatti that was ever commercially released by Westminster Records (and its heirs Music Guild and MCA), as played by Fernando Valenti: 359 sonatas in all. This series of videos will eventually include all of these recordings


A NOTE ABOUT THE RECORDINGS: These recordings were made over 60 years ago. They have been unavailable commercially for many decades. I have been collecting these now rare recordings for over 30 years by searching used record stores, browsing the Internet, and trading copies with other collectors. I have had to use a variety of sources, including original LPs, open reel tapes, and cassette tapes. In many cases, I had to use second- and third-generation copies of the original LP sources. For these reasons, while the original mono sound of the Westminster LPs was quite good for the 1950s, the sound quality of these recordings varies somewhat from track to track. Many are quite good; some unfortunately are not. I must apologize for some quiet background hum in some sonatas which can be heard between tracks. It is felt that the historical significance of these remarkable performances by Fernando Valenti, the first artist to record nearly all of Scarlatti’s voluminous oeuvre for keyboard, far outweighs the shortcomings of sound quality found in some of the sonatas.


The sonatas have been arranged according to the Longo edition (Ricordi). Valenti’s recording project pre-dates the publication of Ralph Kirkpatrick’s seminal research on Domenico Scarlatti, and his chronological arrangement of the sonatas (including pairing) was essentially unknown at the time. Valenti recorded the sonatas in a more-or-less random order. Still, some ordering system is necessary given the scope of the project, and it seemed appropriate to use the ordering system known to Valenti (and used as identification on the LPs themselves), that of the original Longo edition. Those familiar with Kirkpatrick's numbering system can easily cross-check the numbers with charts readily available in his book and on the internet.


Vol.1 Longo 1 – 28

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHWAe6Emn9Y


Vol.2 Longo 33 – 75

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4AJMC284aY&t=39s


Vol.3 Longo 78 – 140

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8DE3VEL77A&t=31s


Vol.4 Longo 151 – 199

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqHv4V1q5AM&t=44s


Vol.5 Longo 200 – 257

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzqvfUKs1ow&t=21s


Vol.6 Longo 261 – 319

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bS9NJH8Bao8&t=30s


Vol.7 Longo 320 – 379

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skS0hUxBI5c&t=4722s


Vol.8 Longo 380 – 444

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjMWOpbhcEA&t=171s


Vol.9 Longo 445 – 488

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXumryw-YXA&t=37s


Vol.10 Longo 492 – 500, Longo Supplemento 2 - 41

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ol87lGJ6iqM&t=93s


Harout Senekeremian Biografie

https://www.88keysmusicacademy.com/harout-senekeremian-piano/

https://www.pianoaccompanists.com/profile-harout-senekeremian


Harout Senekeremian on Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/ALKANIAN/