Four Hands Alexandre Tharaud

Alexandre Tharaud - Four Hands (2024)  Music

Posted by delpotro at May 2, 2024
Alexandre Tharaud - Four Hands (2024)

Alexandre Tharaud - Four Hands (2024)
MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 01:07:36 | 160 Mb
Classical | Label: Warner Classics

“This was something I’d had in mind for a long time…to put together an album for the sheer pleasure of it, in collaboration with dear friends and paying tribute to the wonders of the piano duet repertoire.” – Alexandre Tharaud

Alexandre Tharaud - Domenico Scarlatti: 18 Sonatas (2011)  Music

Posted by Designol at April 9, 2024
Alexandre Tharaud - Domenico Scarlatti: 18 Sonatas (2011)

Alexandre Tharaud plays Domenico Scarlatti: 18 Sonatas (2011)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 226 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 156 Mb | Scans ~ 33 Mb
Genre: Classical | Label: Virgin Classics | # 5099964201603 | Time: 01:08:05

The biggest surprise on this wonderfully exuberant and exhilarating disc comes with the very first notes: the piano tone is rich and full, worlds away from the slightly distant, musical-box tone that is often thought appropriate for recordings of Domenico Scarlatti's sonatas on a modern concert grand. But as the soundworld suggests, Tharaud is totally unapologetic about playing these pieces – all originally composed for harpsichord even though the earliest fortepianos were in circulation in Scarlatti's time – on a piano. In the sleevenotes, Tharaud says that of the four baroque keyboard composers that he has recorded so far – Bach, Couperin, Rameau and now Scarlatti – it's the last whose music is most suited to this treatment. His selection of sonatas is chosen for maximum variety, with a group in which the Spanish inflections of flamenco and folk music can be heard, others in which he gets a chance to show some dazzling technique, alongside those in which the playfulness is replaced by profound introspection.
Alexandre Tharaud - Four Hands (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

Alexandre Tharaud - Four Hands (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/96]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 01:07:27 minutes | 1,02 GB
Classical | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

The aptly named 4 Hands offers 18 tracks, each just a few minutes in length, each featuring Tharaud sharing a piano keyboard with a different partner. The repertoire ranges wide - from Bach to Glass by way of such composers as Schubert, Tchaikovsky, Grieg, Fauré, Satie, Debussy, Ravel, Rachmaninov, Ravel and Piazzolla.

Eric Le Sage - Gabriel Faure, Vol. 4 (2013)  Music

Posted by tirexiss at March 2, 2020
Eric Le Sage - Gabriel Faure, Vol. 4 (2013)

Eric Le Sage - Gabriel Faure, Vol. 4 (2013)
EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 01:10:18 | 274 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Alpha | Catalog: ALPHA 603

For the fourth and penultimate volume of his Fauré series, Eric Le Sage has been joined by Alexandre Tharaud, Emmanuel Pahud, and François Salque, long-standing accomplices, in order to record these pieces for four hands. Recipient of numerous prizes both in France and abroad, this complete Fauré series is already asserting itself as a reference for the interpretation of Gabriel Fauré’s chamber music with piano.

Camille Saint-Saëns Edition [34CDs] (2021)  Music

Posted by ArlegZ at April 21, 2024
Camille Saint-Saëns Edition [34CDs] (2021)

Camille Saint-Saëns Edition [34CDs] (2021)
XLD | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 9,16 Gb | Total time: 39:56:27 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Warner Classics | # 0190296746048 | Recorded: 1904-2020

Over a remarkably long and illustrious career, Camille Saint-Saëns thrilled audiences around the world as a pianist and organist, shaped the course of musical life in France, and enriched a multitude of genres with some 600 works, all bearing witness to the mastery of his craft. Setting his best-known compositions in their dazzlingly diverse context, this edition invites exploration and discovery. It spans more than a century of recording history, encompassing a host of great instrumentalists, singers, conductors and orchestras, many of them from France. Setting the pace, in performances from as early as 1904, is the composer himself.