Andreas Staier Mozart Last Concertos

Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Sonatas (2012)  Music

Posted by tirexiss at Sept. 9, 2022
Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Sonatas (2012)

Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Sonatas (2012)
EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 02:12:23 | 423 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | Catalog: HMG508388/89

Behind every Mozart solo piano composition is the human voice, and many interpreters understandably build their interpretations from the melody line down. By contrast, fortepianist Andreas Staier generates rhythmic and dramatic momentum by letting his left hand lead, so to speak. His firm, sharply delineated bass lines in the C minor sonata's outer movements and the E-flat sonata's Allegro finale evoke a symphonic rather than operatic aura that proves far more stimulating than Paul Badura-Skoda's equally rigorous yet less vibrant fortepiano traversals.
Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23, Symphony No. 40 & Don Giovanni Overture (2022)

Andreas Staier, Le Concert de la Loge & Julien Chauvin - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23, Symphony No. 40 & Don Giovanni Overture (2022)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 242 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 132 Mb | Digital booklet | 00:56:57
Classical | Label: Alpha Classics, Outhere Music

Julien Chauvin meets up with one of the great harpsichordists and fortepianists of our time, Andreas Staier, who is a leading interpreter of the Mozart concertos. He presents us with his vision of the Piano Concerto no.23 and its famous Adagio, ‘one of the most heart-rending slow movements ever written by Mozart… Performers often tend to take it too slowly, certainly thinking that this will accentuate the tragic side, but Julien Chauvin and I spontaneously agreed on a slightly faster tempo, which respects the basic pulse of this movement in siciliana rhythm. When you start with the right tempo, it’s amazing how the whole discourse comes together perfectly, in a very logical and simple manner’, says Staier, who plays a magnificent instrument by Christoph Kern after a 1790 fortepiano by Anton Walter, the great maker of Mozart’s time. Also on the programme is the Symphony no.40, in which, says Julien Chauvin, ‘Mozart explores types of writing that he pushes to their most extreme limits. This is the case in the finale, where we find a succession of dissonant disjunct intervals at the opening of the development which, on closer inspection, present us with the full chromatic scale (except for G natural, the symphony’s tonic). And so the twelve-note series was born!’
Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23, Symphony No. 40 & Don Giovanni Overture (2022) [Digital Download 24/96]

Andreas Staier, Le Concert de la Loge & Julien Chauvin - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23, Symphony No. 40 & Don Giovanni Overture (2022)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover & Digital Booklet | Time - 56:57 minutes | 1,02 GB
Classical | Label: Alpha Classics, Official Digital Download

Julien Chauvin meets up with one of the great harpsichordists and fortepianists of our time, Andreas Staier, who is a leading interpreter of the Mozart concertos. He presents us with his vision of the Piano Concerto no.23 and its famous Adagio, ‘one of the most heart-rending slow movements ever written by Mozart… Performers often tend to take it too slowly, certainly thinking that this will accentuate the tragic side, but Julien Chauvin and I spontaneously agreed on a slightly faster tempo, which respects the basic pulse of this movement in siciliana rhythm.
Andreas Staier, Freiburger Barockorchester, Gottfried von der Goltz - Joseph Haydn: Keyboard concertos (2008)

Andreas Staier, Freiburger Barockorchester, Gottfried von der Goltz - Joseph Haydn: Keyboard concertos (2008)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 278 Mb | Total time: 64:20 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | # HMX 2961854 | Recorded: 2004

Haydn's importance in the development of both the symphony and the string quartet is well known and his works in those genres have become staples of the repertoire. However, the great composer's piano concerti are not performed nearly as often as those of Mozart or Beethoven. After listening to these glorious performances by fortepianist Andreas Staier, originally released in 2005, you will wonder why.
Andreas Staier - W.A. Mozart: Piano Sonatas K330/331/332 (2005) [Official Digital Download]

Andreas Staier - Mozart: Piano Sonatas K330/331/332 (2005)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time - 61:28 minutes | 506 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital booklet

We all know that Mozart had an impish sense of humour. Now we know it is shared by the gifted German pianist Andreas Staier, who permits himself authentically Amadean fun with his decorative conceits in these three inter-linked sonatas, especially in the celebrated 'Ronda alla Turca' from the most distinctive, K.331. But he also accords the composer due respect, bringing as much grace and poise to the contemplative slow movements as sprightly mischief to the pyrotechnical passages. In few hands can the fortepiano sound so expressive; at times, it is tempting to wonder if this is much how Mozart played his own works.
Orquestra barroca Casa da Música & Andreas Staier - À Portuguesa: Iberian Concertos & Sonatas (2018)

Orquestra barroca Casa da Música & Andreas Staier - À Portuguesa: Iberian Concertos & Sonatas (2018)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 345 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 154 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:04:53
Classical | Label: harmonia mundi

This musical journey takes its title from one of William Corbett's Bizzarie universali, a set of concertos which, in truth, owe much more to the Italian tradition than to the Iberian peninsula.
Andreas Staier, Roel Dieltiens - Ludwig van Beethoven: Cello Sonatas & Bagatelles (2022)

Andreas Staier, Roel Dieltiens - Ludwig van Beethoven: Cello Sonatas & Bagatelles (2022)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 212 Mb | Total time: 63:28 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | # HMM 902429 | Recorded: 2019

From the mid-1810s until the end of his life, Beethoven constantly tested to the limit the forms he had inherited from Haydn and Mozart. His last two cello sonatas bear witness to this structural preoccupation, which was to open up so many new spaces . . . as do the final sets of Bagatelles, as disconcerting as they are innovative! Two genres shrewdly linked by Andreas Staier and Roel Dieltiens in these interpretations, in which eloquence merges with historically informed performance practice.
Andreas Staier & Roel Dieltiens - Beethoven: Cello Sonatas, Op. 102, Bagatelles, Opp. 119 & 126 (2022)

Andreas Staier & Roel Dieltiens - Beethoven: Cello Sonatas, Op. 102, Bagatelles, Opp. 119 & 126 (2022)
WEB FLAC (Tracks +booklet)) | 01:03:26 | 214 MB
Classical | Label: harmonia mundi

From the mid-1810s until the end of his life, Beethoven constantly tested to the limit the forms he had inherited from Haydn and Mozart. His last two cello sonatas bear witness to this structural preoccupation, which was to open up so many new spaces . . .
Andreas Staier - Méditation: Bach, Couperin, Fischer, Froberger, Fux, Staier (2023)

Andreas Staier - Méditation: Bach, Couperin, Fischer, Froberger, Fux, Staier (2023)
XLD | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 370 Mb | Total time: 66:57 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Alpha Classics | # ALPHA 1012 | Recorded: 2022

Andreas Staier’s informed and inspired interpretations have left their mark on the discography of both the harpsichord and the fortepiano and have enabled us to see Bach, Mozart and Schubert in a completely new light. This is Staier’s first solo album of a projected series for Alpha Classics, in which he also presents his own compositions for the first time.

Andreas Staier - Schumann: Variationen & Fantasiestücke (2014)  Music

Posted by tirexiss at Feb. 29, 2020
Andreas Staier - Schumann: Variationen & Fantasiestücke (2014)

Andreas Staier - Schumann: Variationen & Fantasiestücke (2014)
EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 59:36 | 264 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | Catalog: HMC 902171

Counting the album of violin sonatas he made with violinist Daniel Sepec, this is the third Schumann release from historical-instrument specialist Andreas Staier. Staier's recordings of earlier keyboard music had some really surprising sounds, but with Schumann, playing an 1837 Erard, it's a realm not too far removed from the modern piano: better able to capture the intimate shadings of the Fantasiestücke, Op. 12, perhaps. But, even more so than in previous releases, Staier has come up with a really arresting program this time, and done it full justice.