730099599429

Adagio 1

Varous

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Format: CD

Cat No: 8550994

Release Date:  12 January 1999

Label:  Naxos - Nxc / Naxos Classics

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  730099599429

Genres:  Classical  

Composer/Series:  ADAGIO 1

  • Description

    Famous Adagios The Italian word Adagio had become by the time of Mozart a generic term for the central slow movement of an orchestral composition. A direction originally suggesting that the music should be played in a leisurely way or even according to the player's wishes, by the eighteenth century the word had come to mean 'slow', although there was argument as to whether adagio was in fact slower than largo or lento, or even grave, the traditional Baroque Adagio provided scope for improvised ornamentation, a practice that was occasionally exaggerated by instrumental soloists or singers. The Venetian composer Tomaso Albinoni was born in Venice in 1671. The son of a well-to-do merchant, he devoted himself to music rather than to business. His most popular composition today is an Adagio that is not in fact his at all. The piece, an effective enough composition, is by the twentieth century musicologist Giazotto, an expert on the work of Albinoni, who allegedly based the Adagio on material by the composer to whom it has been popularly attributed. Among Albinoni's genuine compositions are two sets of oboe concertos. The second of these, issued as Opus 9, was published in 1722. The slow movement of the Concerto in D minor, Opus 9, No.2 is characteristic of the composer's vocal style of instrumental writing. Alessandro Marcello was a near contemporary of Albinoni, born in Venice in 1684, the son of a senator in Venice and therefore a member of a social class that allowed a purely dilettante interest in music and the arts. His best known composition, the Oboe Concerto in D minor, was published in a collection of concertos in 1717 or 1718 and was transcribed by Bach for harpsichord solo. Johann Sebastian Bach was born at Eisenach in 1685 and after serving at the courts of Weimar and Cöthen spent the last 27 years of his life as Thomaskantor in Leipzig. He absorbed Italian influence in his study of music by Corelli and by Vivaldi, while his interest in Marcello is evident in his transcription of the latter's Oboe Concerto. His violin concertos were written during the period from 1717 to 1723 at the court of Prince Leopold of Anhalt- Cöthen and were later transcribed as concertos for one or more harpsichords with string orchestra. Three violin concertos survive in their original form, two of them for one solo violin. The Concerto in E major, like its companion in A minor, has a slow movement in which an elaborated melody, like an aria, unwinds over a repeated bass pattern. The son of a composer and violinist, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg in 1756. He travelled widely as a child on extended concert tours but later found the restrictions of service of the Archbishop of Salzburg, his father's and then his own employer, irksome. From 1781 until his death in 1791 he lived in Vienna in precarious independence, his initial success followed by periods of difficulty. His violin concertos were largely written for his own use as concert-maste

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Adagio In G minor - Capella Istropolitana
      • 2. Adagio - Takako Nishizaki
      • 3. Adagio - Anthony Camden
      • 4. Adagio - Takako Nishizaki
      • 5. Adagio - Jozsef Kiss
      • 6. Adagio - Jeno Jando
      • 7. Adagio - Takako Nishizaki
      • 8. Adagio - Ernst Ottensamer
      • 9. Adagio - Norbert Kraft
      • 10. Adagio For Strings - Capella Istropolitana

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