Label: Challenge Classics
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917269024
Catalog number: CC 72690
Releasedate: 29-01-16
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917269024
Catalog number: CC 72690
Releasedate: 29-01-16
- Second release of versatile cellist Mayke Rademakers on Challenge Classics
- A well-thought-out selection of Spanish and Latin American works based on folk music: flamenco and tango
- All works – although ‘classical’ – convey the energy and passion of popular music based on instincts
- A well-thought-out selection of Spanish and Latin American works based on folk music: flamenco and tango
- All works – although ‘classical’ – convey the energy and passion of popular music based on instincts
Mayke Rademakers: All my life, I’ve played a lot of Spanish music, and so has my partner and duo-pianist Matthijs Verschoor. Both of us have worked and studied in Spain. And I spent some time immersing myself in Buenos Aires, because I wanted to see the tango with my own eyes: how people perceived it, how they danced it in the streets and on public squares. At a certain point we got this sense of wanting to do something with it. We had a number of works on our repertoire and so we investigated how we could combine them with new pieces, music we still needed to discover, to produce a great CD. We found the music we were looking for. We put together an exciting combination of Spanish and South American music. In a nutshell: flamenco and tango.
Spanish music takes folk music as its starting point. La Furia is based on that idea. This music is about the heat, the poverty, about lifestyle and passion. La furia literally means anger or aggression. But in Latin, the word has very positive connotations. It means doing what your instincts tell you, acting with passion, giving it your all. The tango flamenco spread from Spain to South America. The tango is truly South American. Although it does show some flamenco influences, the tango definitely found its own form. Perhaps the biggest difference is that the tango is ‘urban’, because it arose in Buenos Aires. The flamenco is ‘rustic’, because it arose in the countryside.
Spanish music takes folk music as its starting point. La Furia is based on that idea. This music is about the heat, the poverty, about lifestyle and passion. La furia literally means anger or aggression. But in Latin, the word has very positive connotations. It means doing what your instincts tell you, acting with passion, giving it your all. The tango flamenco spread from Spain to South America. The tango is truly South American. Although it does show some flamenco influences, the tango definitely found its own form. Perhaps the biggest difference is that the tango is ‘urban’, because it arose in Buenos Aires. The flamenco is ‘rustic’, because it arose in the countryside.
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1Danza Española no. 5 – Andaluza03:53
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2Suite Popular EspañolaEl paño moruno02:08
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3Suite Popular EspañolaAsturiana02:27
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4Suite Popular EspañolaJota03:02
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5Suite Popular EspañolaNana02:38
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6Suite Popular EspañolaCanción01:27
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7Suite Popular EspañolaPolo01:33
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8No por amor, no por tristeza03:26
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9Suite for Cello SoloPreludio-Fantasia06:15
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10Suite for Cello SoloSardana (Danza)03:27
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11Suite for Cello SoloIntermezzo e Danza Finale06:20
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12La Rosa y el Sauce02:46
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13Seguida EspañolaVieja Castilla01:58
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14Seguida EspañolaMurciana01:35
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15Seguida EspañolaAsturiana03:13
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16Seguida EspañolaAndaluza01:56
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17Le Grand Tango12:05
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18Triste03:51