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BACH, Angela Hewitt, Australian Chamber Orchestra, Richard Tognetti

The Keyboard Concertos, Vol. 1

Keyboard Concerto No 1 in D minor BWV1052[22'44] 1 Allegro[7'37] 2 Adagio[7'17] 3 Allegro[7'50] Keyboard Concerto No 7 in G minor BWV1058[14'05] 4 [untitled][3'41] 5 Andante[6'34] 6 Allegro assai[3'50] Brandenburg Concerto No 5 in D major BWV1050[19'57] with Richard Tognetti (violin), Alison Mitchell (flute) 7 Allegro[9'41] 8 Affettuoso[5'02] 9 Allegro[5'14] Triple Concerto in A minor BWV1044[20'07] with Richard Tognetti (violin), Alison Mitchell (flute) 10 Allegro[8'35] 11 Adagio ma non tanto e dolce[4'36] 12 Tempo di alla breve[6'56]
  • Angela Hewitt - piano
  • Australian Chamber Orchestra - orchestra
  • Richard Tognetti - conductor
  • BACH
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59.00 PLN

CD:

Nr kat.: CDA67307
Label  : Hyperion

Together with its companion Volume 2, these CDs contain all Bach’s extant concertos that feature a solo keyboard. Most were written in the 1730s and are thought to be arrangements of earlier concertos, many of which are now lost (though two will be recognized as Bach’s E major and A minor violin concertos and the sixth is an arrangement of the fourth Brandenburg). The fifth Brandenburg Concerto, with harpsichord, flute and violin soloists, dates from 1721 and is generally regarded as the first concerto for a solo keyboard instrument ever written. Bach made the keyboard part particularly brilliant and included a huge cadenza; he certainly knew how to establish a genre with a bang! Hewitt’s Bach is by now self-recommending but only after playing Bach across the world with numerous ensembles did Angela decide that the Australian Chamber Orchestra were the perfect collaborators. After a month of concerts across Australia these recordings were set down in Sydney in February of this year and the frisson of artists operating at the peak of their form is clear for all to hear. One is immediately struck by the quality of chamber-music playing as phrases are passed from soloist to orchestra and, in the case of Brandenburg Concerto No 5 and the Triple Concerto, between all three soloists. Rhythms are buoyant, tempos lively, the spirit of dance is never far away in the fast movements and a perfectly vocal quality pervades the sung lines of the slow movements. These CDs will surely be the jewels in the crown of Angela Hewitt’s magnificent Bach series.