GIACOMETTI, PAOLO - piano - 10697 Schubert, Paolo Giacometti

Schubert, Paolo Giacometti

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Schubert, Paolo Giacometti - 10697

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Franz Schubert (Vienna, 1797-1828) was the son of a schoolteacher who was also an amateur cellist. He received musical instruction starting an early age from the local parish organist, who recognized and encouraged his unusual musical talent; this did not please Schubert's father, who would have preferred his son to follow in his own footsteps as a teacher. Ultimately, Schubert chose to be a composer. His contemporaries did not take him seriously, and he was only able to survive thanks to the support of a small group of friends and admirers. Both the Sonata in a minor op. 42 and the four Impromptus op. 142 were written towards the end of Schubert's life, in 1825 and 1826 respectively. Unlike many of his compositions which are now famous, the Sonata was actually published during Schubert's lifetime, in 1826. The Impromptus, however, were declared "too difficult" by his publisher; they were not to be published until 1829, ten years after his death, by Diabelli. From that moment on, the Impromptus attained their stature as important compositions.....

Additional Information

Artist

Paolo Giacometti, fortepiano

Inlay

F. Schubert Sonata in A minor,
op.42-D 845;
4 Impromptus, op.142

Biography

Paolo Giacometti was born in Milan in 1970 and came with his parents to the Netherlands the next year. When he was nine years old he started piano lessons at the Music School in Hilversum with Joke Dekker-Vroons. He continued his studies with Jan Wijn at the Amsterdam Sweelinck Conservatory, where he was admitted directly to the ‘Performance Musician Program’. He graduated with honors in 1995. Paolo Giacometti has followed a number of Masterclasses with such eminent pianists and teachers as György Sebök, Karl-Heinz Kämmerling, Marie Françoise Bucquet, Lazar Berman, John Perry and Detlef Kraus. He has successfully participated in various National and International Piano Competitions.
In 1987 he was awarded First Prize at the Steinway Competition in The Netherlands qualifying thereby to take part in the international Steinway Festival the following year as the representative of the Netherlands. This in turn lead to an invitation to participate in the German Parke-Davis Förderpreis in Germany in 1990, which he won. In 1992 he participated in the prestigious International Brahms Competition in Hamburg where he was awarded the Second Prize. In 1995 Paolo Giacometti was again awarded First Prize at the Postbank Sweelinck Competition and was invited to perform Brahms’ 2nd piano concerto together with the Amsterdam Conservatory Orchestra conducted by Kenneth Montgomery at various famous Dutch concert halls, including the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. In recent years he has performed several times in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam as part of the Holland Music Sessions and in the series ‘Young Dutch Musicians’. This last performance was greeted with great enthusiasm both by the public and the reviewers. The Telegraaf, a leading Dutch daily wrote: ‘Giacometti, talent and musician!....a name to remember’. Apart from many concerts in The Netherlands, Paolo Giacometti has given recitals in Italy, Germany and France. The last years he has also performed abroad together with the dutch cellist Pieter Wispelwey.

Awards

 

Quotes

(...) Een interessante cd die het gangbare Schubert-ideaal op prikkelende wijze bijstelt. (...) (...) Giacometti geeft blijk van een scherp inzicht in de muzikale structuur. (...) Volkskrant, June 1997
(...) alsof je een stem uit een andere wereld hoort (...) (...) Wie nog steeds denkt dat een fortepiano een soort spijkerbak met een fletse klank is, moet deze cd absoluut beluisteren, dan is dat vooroordeel meteen uit de wereld. Leeuwarder Courant, August 1997
(...) Hij speelt met een prettig soort nuchterheid. (...) (...) Door het sobere geluid van de fortepiano komen de versieringsgeluiden goed tot hun recht. Giacometti is een naam om te onthouden. HP/De Tijd, september 1997
(...) Natuurlijke bekoorlijkheid van zijn pianospel (....) (...) Giacometti speelt zeer overtuigend, zonder onprettige gevoeligheden, rijk aan charme en articulatie, scherp van ritmiek. Hij is een begaafd pianist. Ik hoop nog veel van hem te horen. Muziek Journaal, September 1997
(...) er is een cd ontstaan, die een geïnspireerde musicus laat horen met geprononceerde ideeën en muzikale fantasie (...) (...) De fortepiano, een authentieke Lagrassa, klinkt prachtig onder zijn handen. (...) Luister, September 1997
(...) Giacometti heeft zich sterk met de muzikale elementen vereenzelvigd. Het resultaat is een prachtige cd die zich ver verheft boven de kleinmoedige discussie welk instrument in Schubert nu het beste is. Pianowereld, September 1997
(...) the quality of the interpretation is arresting.(...) (...) the fortepianop has an gorgeous sound across its whole range and has been excellently recorded. Early Music Review, September 1997
(...) Paolo Giacometti laat de luisteraars genieten van zijn aanzienlijke talenten. (...) Gelderlander, August 1997 (...) De eerste die doorbreekt op een fortepiano, een zeer gedurfde keuze (...) (...) de aandacht wordt getrokken voor de pianistische kwaliteiten. (...) (...) zeer doordachte opbouw van Giacometti (...) (...) Sterkste punt van deze opname is de dynamische schakering die hij in zijn spel legt, waardoor alles aan spanning wint. Klassiek, July 1997
(...) een sprankelijke cd van een begaafde interpreet (...) (...) zelfs het tikken van de hamerkopjes is te horen op deze glasheldere opname (...) (...) vederlicht touché (...) Piano, January 1998
(...) Une lecture fraîche et légère, très delicate, et imaginative (...) Répertoire, Novembre 1997 Diapason, July 1998 (…) Giacometti is a dedicated Schubertian and a sensitive musician (…) Fanfare

Composer SCHUBERT, Franz
Type Solo
Total Length 75:11:00
Year of release 1997
Artist GIACOMETTI, PAOLO - piano
 

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2010-06-18:  Alfredo Marcucci, Bandoneón - dies age 81

MASTER OF THE TANGO

Bandoneón player Alfredo Marcucci has died June 12, 2010 in Landen, Belgium at age 81.

Alfredo Marcucci was taught the profession by his uncle, the great Bandoneón player Carlos Marcucci. Since 1947 Alfredo played in the big orchestras of the time: Raúl Kaplún, Carlos di Sarli, Julio de Caro. At the end of the 1950's, when the Tango got less popular he toured the world with the folklore group Los Paraguayos for 15 years. After meeting his Dutch wife he chose to stop playing professionally and starts working in a factory to be able to support his family. In 1986 he was able to retire and starts Orquesta Típica. He taught Leo Vervelde and Carel Kraayenhof, Sexteto Canyengue the art of the Bandoneón. A "second youth" starts and with Channel Classics he played in 6 projects like: ‘Timeless Tango’, ‘Touched by Tango’ and in 2004 - in honor of his 75th birthday, - ‘a life of Tango’.

It was a wonderful experience to work with Alfredo these last 13 years.  Put his bandoneon in his hands was like seeing a small boy with his favorite toy.  His music and musical timing was extraordinary.  For all the musicians that have worked with him, I can speak for them that Alfredo will be sorely missed.
Jared Sacks

 

DUTCH:

Grootmeester van de Tango

Bandoneón speler Alfredo Marcucci is op 12 juni 2010 in zijn woonplaats Landen in België op 81-jarige leeftijd overleden. 

Alfredo Mrcucci leerde het vak op 7-jarige leeftijd van zijn oom, de grote Argentijnse bandoneónist Carlos Marcucci. Vanaf 1947 speelde hij in de grote orkesten van die jaren: Raúl Kaplún, Carlos di Sarli, Julio de Caro. Het was de tijd van de dansfeesten, tango-salons, radio-optredens en 78-toerenplaten. Als eind jaren vijftig de tango in het slop raakt en Marcucci de op dat moment wereldberoemde folkloregroep Los Paraguayos ontmoet reist hij met hen vijftien jaar lang de wereld over.  Nadat hij zijn Nederlandse vrouw ontmoette besloot hij een punt te zetten achter het artiesten bestaan  en ging in een fabriek werken om zijn gezin te kunnen onderhouden. In '86 mocht Marcucci met vervroegd pensioen en richtte Orquesta Típica op. Onder meer Leo Vervelde en Carel Kraayenhof van Sexteto Canyengue gingen bij hem in de leer. Een ‘tweede jeugd’ brak aan en bij Channel Classics verschenen ‘Timeless Tango’, ‘Touched by Tango’ en in 2004 - ter ere van zijn 75ste verjaardag- ‘a life of Tango’. 

 
2010-06-09:  New Videos on Dejan - Brahms

Dejan was on "Vrije Geluiden", a Dutch TV program last sunday June 6th.

We added two video's of the broadcast to the release page

2010-06-08:  New Audio Sample Player

We have installed a new Audio player on the product pages that should improve stabilty and site speed.

If you experience problems please feel free to contact us to let us know.

Our e-mail address is: info@channel.nl.

 

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Reviews

2010-07-09:  29410 Absolute Sound

 

 
 

 

THE ABSOLUTE SOUND

 


August 2010
Brahms Piano Concerto no. 3
Dejan Lazic; Atlanta Symphony
Robert Spano. Channel Classics

Brahms was famously casual about performance instructions for his own compositions. And, following Bach and Beethoven before him, both of whom recast their violin concertos using keyboard protagonists - he wasn't at all averse to arrangements of his music in other - than- original instrumentations, and indeed reworked his late clarinet sonatas for repertoire - starved violists.
If the notion of replacing the violin with the piano in his magisterial Opus 77 concerto probably wouldn't have bothered old Johannes, it's still likely to startle today's concert audiences. Fortunately Dejan Lazic's 2008 rendering of the work as a piano concerto (here in its first recording) is amazingly effective. It leaves the orchestration untouched and transforms the solo violin part into idiomatic Brahmsian piano figurations with appropriately rich chordal sonorities, sparkling arpeggios, and a fully elaborated first-movement cadenza. Lazic plays with flair, eloquence, and, in the lovely central adagio songful poetry.
Recorded 'live in concert' the hybrid SACD conveys full throated weight and a judicious balance between soloist and orchestra, with the multichannel encoding offering extra ambience and presence.
Mark Lehman
 

2010-06-24:  29410 brahms Stereoplay (german

Brahms / Lazic, Klavierkonzert Nr. 3
Lazic, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Spano (2009)
 
Ein neues Klavierkonzert von Brahms?
 
Kann man (und darf man) ein solch populäres Meisterwerk wie Brahms’ Violinkonzert 130 Jahre nach seiner Niederschrift einfach in ein Klavierkonzert verwandeln? Oder haben nicht auch musikalische Werke eine unantastbare Identität? Das waren meine ersten Gedanken, als ich Dejan Lazics neue SACD mit der Aufschrift „Piano Concerto No.3“ in der Hand hielt. Schon nach dem ersten Satz waren meine Zweifel schnell verflogen, denn hier hat sich ein junger, hochbegabter Pianist mit ernsthaften kompositorischen Ambitionen und großem Geschick der schier unlösbaren Herausforderung gestellt und in einem fünf Jahre (!) währenden Arbeitsprozess das unbequeme Violinmonstrum in ein ähnlich symphonisch geprägtes Klavierkonzert umgeschrieben. Als „Inspirationsquellen“ nennt Lazic Beethoven und Bach, die hätten ja Ähnliches mit ihren Violinkonzerten angestellt. Wer beispielsweise die Klavierversion von Beethovens Violinkonzert kennt, wird überrascht sein, wie einfühlsam, stilsicher, pianistisch phantasievoll und dabei hochgradig skrupulös der 32-jährige Kroate den zumeist einstimmig-melodiösen Violinpart für die Hände des Pianisten erweitert hat – nämlich so behutsam, dass man nur an wenigen Stellen über die schwächere Ausdruckskraft des Klaviers irritiert ist. Doch der Grundcharakter des Werks bleibt gewahrt, so sehr gewahrt, als sei es eine Eigenbearbeitung von Brahms.
Natürlich versucht Lazic auch als Interpret, durch expressive Agogik und abgetöntes Spiel zu kompensieren, dass die Kantabilität des Violinklangs für einen Pianisten unerreichbar ist; und es gelingt ihm, mit seiner wunderbaren eigenen Kadenz den großen lyrischen Bogen zu spannen. Das Atlanta Symphony Orchestra unter Robert Spano steuert den originalen Orchesterpart zu diesem gelungenen Experiment mit eher amerikanisch anmutender Klangsinnlichkeit bei und gibt sich dabei so abgeklärt und professionell, dass man den Livemitschnitt für ein Studioprodukt halten könnte.
Auf alle Fälle hat Lazics „drittes“ Brahms-Konzert ein Weiterleben in europäischen Konzertsälen verdient, und es könnte auch für andere Pianisten interessant sein. Brahms hätte es bestimmt gefallen.
Attila Csampai   19.05.10 08:07
 

2010-06-22:  28809 Katona Twins/De Falla


Manuel de FALLA (1876–1946)
Spanish Dance (from La vida breve) (1905) [3:23]
El amor brujo (1916 version) [23:04]
Excerpts from El sombrero de tres picos (1919): Danza del molinero; Danza de los vecinos; Danza de la molinera [9:35]
Siete canciones populares españolas (1914): El paño moruno; Seguidilla murciana; Asturiana; Jota; Nana; Canción; Polo [12:16]
Homenaje (from Le tombeau de Claude Debussy, 1920) [3:07]
Tus ojillos negros (1903) [3:50]
Peter and Zoltán Katona (guitars); Juanita Lascarro (soprano); David Garcia Mir (percussion)
rec. Doopsgezinde Kerk, The Netherlands 2008
CHANNEL CLASSICS CCS SA 28809 [57:00]

Imagine well-dressed gentlemen and old ladies in furs and jewels, coming to listen in concert to some respectable Mass – Cherubini’s, for example. Suddenly they hear about a change in the program, and are presented with the Misa flamenca! A similar shock is in store for you on this disc.

Dedicated to the music of Manuel de Falla, this disc contains the entire El amor brujo (in its later, more “civilized” ballet form), the irresistible Seven Popular Spanish Songs, and a few other pieces, including three dances from The Three-Cornered Hat and the ubiquitous Spanish Dance from La vida breve. In brief, the most Spanish of all the Spanish music. So, the program is quite standard – but the arrangements aren’t! In addition to the two guitars played by Peter and Zoltán Katona, and the mezzo-soprano (in the songs and the vocal numbers of El amor brujo), there is a lot of diverse percussion. Moreover, in several parts of El amor brujo we hear electric guitars! Did I like it? Yes and no. I loved the added percussion – very colorful and inventive. But the electric guitars seem a bit out of place sometimes – and I do not feel musical unity in the cycle, since the electric guitars grab the stage in some numbers and disappear in others. The style jumps hither and yon and back again.

Manuel de Falla’s music appears born to be played on guitar. The short and frequent notes, the clear articulation, the stomping chords, the tremolos – it is hard to believe that it was not initially written for the instrument. This is especially noticeable in the Seven Songs, where the original piano arrangement imitates the guitar. These arrangements liberate the hidden spirit of the music.

The introduction to El amor brujo immediately shows the two strong points of this disc: the sonorous, strong guitar sound (the tadimm-tudamm tadimm-tudamm motif has orchestral power), and the constant presence of the percussion. The following Night in the Cave introduces the electric guitars and is all recyclable plastic, after which we go to flamenco singing in Cancion del amor dolido. All this creates a feeling of a big mix, which continues throughout the entire cycle. It’s a bit uncomfortable. I liked the arrangement solutions in the classical-guitar parts: very rhythmic, propelled by the percussion. In the vocal numbers, Juanita Lascarro does a very good job. She does not descend to the depths of the throat like an authentic flamenco cantaora, but also does not have the superficial opulence of some opera-house singers. Her voice has a natural beauty and roundness. She is recorded a bit remotely, which creates a feeling of stage action. Escena (track 10) is another dubious electric experiment, but the surrounding Danza ritual del fuego and Pantomima are well done, the former with good contrast, the latter sensitive and letting the music breathe.

Out of El Sombrero de tres picos we have three dances. The Miller’s Dance has a virile, rather arrogant, character. Some percussion effects give it a more sinister hue than usual. The Dance of the Neighbors is sunny and good-humored, relaxed, very well arranged and played. The Dance of the Miller’s Wife is, regrettably, too hard-driven and loses its voluptuous, Carmen-like appeal. The percussion try to substitute depth with quantity but lack subtlety. Instead of a dance, the Miller’s Wife seems to be enjoying an exciting horse ride. The same can be said of the opening track of the disc, the Spanish Dance from La vida breve. The guitars and percussion do not always blend well. However, the percussion effects definitely make the music more interesting, although probably less emotional.

But I can say without reservation that in the Seven Popular Songs the arrangers’ approach bears wonderful unique fruit. In the main this is due to the beautiful singing of Juanita Lascarro, her voice strong and velvety, like a clarinet. The accompaniment is well-planned and well-measured. The percussion never dominate, yet they add illuminating detail. The entire construction is open and colorful: an Eiffel Tower of music!

The two last pieces on the disc dispense with the percussion. First comes the purely instrumental Homenaje – the only piece de Falla actually wrote for guitar! It is soft and delicate, like the music of Debussy to whose memory it was dedicated. Last, Juanita Lascarro grants us a radiant performance of the beautiful song Tus ojillos negros. It has one of de Falla’s unforgettable tunes. The two guitars are like two additional singers - a perfect close for the album.

The sound of the guitars is orotund and resonant, well articulated yet not dry, without any extraneous noises, powerful when required and delicate when needed. The recording is clear, though I would prefer the percussion to have been a little more recessed: at some moments it eclipses the guitars. The insert notes speak sufficiently about the performers, but not enough about the works. And no texts of the songs, either.

The bottom line: I would not recommend this disc as the only recording of El amor brujo, but it offers a very interesting and indeed unique alternative view. The songs are first class, with some great singing and sensitive playing. I am very happy that discs like this continue to appear – giving new perspectives on ‘old’ music. This cannot be called a crossover: it’s just a fresh approach. With efforts like this, classical music will never fossilize.

Oleg Ledeniov

Read more: http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2010/June10/falla_ccs_sa_28809.htm#ixzz0rZIY9KcM

 

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