Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085534715
Catalog number: AVI 8553471
Releasedate: 14-06-19
- The core of this record are the two Bach Piano Concertos
- Bach’s works are best to be coupled with, Martin Klett and his group Cuarteto SolTango plus friends are combining with the Tango subject – the combination is a very personal connection by the artists
- The players include Martin Klett (piano), Jonian Ilias Kadesha (Violine), Thomas Reif (Violine – Concert Master of Bayerischer Rundfunk Symphonic Orchestra), Karel Bredenhorst (Dutch Cellist) and also three Bandoneon Players – all coming from different countries.
LAMENTO – a personal affair
You have referred to “Lamento” on the one hand as an “insane project”, on the other as a “matter of the heart”. How do insanity and the heart go together?
Insanity and the heart fortunately go very well together. The project of doing Bach concertos with a chamber ensemble of solo strings had been going around in my head for almost a decade. And Bach, in a way, is the core of the programme on this CD. His music often tends to be combined with other works: with new music, or with Romantic music. Piazzolla’s Four Seasons are often coupled with those of Vivaldi. Thus the idea of combining Baroque music with tango isn’t new. But this specific repertoire is something quite different.
Then we have my personal journey with tango: my ensemble Cuarteto SolTango and my passion for dance. What grew out of all this? A rather large-scale project (for chamber music), with musicians from many different countries – and an intense week I will probably never forget.
Bach and tango: why, for your ears, do they fit so well together?
First and foremost, they obviously each stand for themselves. We play tango as tango, and Bach as Bach. The combination emerged from my personal connection with each of them. What is more, the Lamento runs like a red thread through the entire programme. I hear lamentation in each of these styles. The title Lamento is inspired by the tango song Mi lamento, and lamentation naturally plays an outstanding role in Bach’s music: not always, but quite often. (Excerpt from the booklet)
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1Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in D Minor BWV 1052I. Allegro07:14
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2Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in D Minor BWV 1052II. Adagio05:56
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3Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in D Minor BWV 1052III. Allegro07:15
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4Five Tangos in the style of Horacio Salgán (1916-2016)Recuerdo (Music: Osvaldo Pugliese)03:44
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5Five Tangos in the style of Horacio Salgán (1916-2016)Tierra Querida (Music: Juli de Caro)03:47
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6Five Tangos in the style of Horacio Salgán (1916-2016)Boedo (Music: Julio Caro)03:23
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7Five Tangos in the style of Horacio Salgán (1916-2016)A Fuego Lento03:29
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8Five Tangos in the style of Horacio Salgán (1916-2016)El Marne (Music: Eduardo Arolas)02:42
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9Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in F Minor BWV 1056I. (no title)03:12
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10Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in F Minor BWV 1056II. Largo02:44
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11Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in F Minor BWV 1056III. Presto03:15
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12Five Tangos in the style of Osvaldo Pugliese (1905-1995)Mi Lamento (Music: Julio Carrasco)03:16
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13Five Tangos in the style of Osvaldo Pugliese (1905-1995)De Floreo (Music. Julio Carrasco02:56
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14Five Tangos in the style of Osvaldo Pugliese (1905-1995)Patético (Music: Jorge Caldara)02:46
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15Five Tangos in the style of Osvaldo Pugliese (1905-1995)A Roberto Peppe (Music: Esteban Gilardi)03:18
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16Five Tangos in the style of Osvaldo Pugliese (1905-1995)La Rayuela (Music: Julio de Caro)03:22