Skip to product information
1 of 1
Customer 1
Customer 2
Customer 3
Larry , Jon and 10,000+ others love our products!

Antonioni / Ashkenazy / Saggini - Music For Viola & Strings - Music CD

Antonioni / Ashkenazy / Saggini - Music For Viola & Strings - Music CD

Regular price $18.18 USD
Regular price Sale price $18.18 USD
Sale Sold out
🔥 Trending Now: 1784 views in the past 24 hours
Amazon
American Express
Apple Pay
Diners Club
Discover
Google Pay
Mastercard
PayPal
Shop Pay
Visa

...

Fast shipping. Estimated delivery times may vary slightly during high demand.

Mix & Match & Save Sitewide!
2 Items = 5% Off, 3 or More = 10% Off

Discount applied automatically at checkout
Any new album by Vladimir Ashkenazy is cause for celebration and attracts worldwide attention. First as a pianist and latterly as a conductor in a performing career of over six decades, Ashkenazy was recognized early on as having all the virtues of a great performer: musicianship, intellectual perception, technical perfection and musical instincts that never failed to make his fingers say something. He has an individual but expressive conducting technique, but he made the transition to the podium with complete success during the late 70s and early 80s, and his orchestral recordings are now as numerous as his piano albums, and the best of them as masterly. Although the repertoire for which he is best known focuses on Beethoven and the Romantic era, Ashkenazy has often performed music of our own time, especially by young composers. This project brings together Mauro Cardi (b.1955), Francesco Antonioni (b.1971) and Cristiano Serino (b.1971) with concertante works for viola and ensemble, which explore between them the centrality of the viola within a string section, and within the pitch range of an orchestra, and how the viola can both journey from that centre and rediscover it's natural home there. Serini's Per Tutta la Durata di un Arco is based on the duration and extension of a bow-stroke; in Northern Lights, after the Thaw, Antonioni paints a soundscape of light and ice and flowing water in which a clarinet duets with the viola; it is the viola's antique cousin, the viola d'amore, that takes the starring role in Cardi's La Follia, based on the chord progression which inspired countless 17th- and 18th-century composers such as Corelli, Tartini and Vivaldi.
View full details