Peter Schaar

Brigitte Poulin - György Kurtág- Játékok (2025) [Official Digital Download 24/192]

Brigitte Poulin - György Kurtág- Játékok (2025) [Official Digital Download 24/192]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 01:10:05 minutes | 2.44 GB
Classical | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

“I’m looking for a note and, maybe, I’ll find it eventually. I may fail. Perhaps the piece is nothing more than an attempt to find it.”

Brigitte Poulin - Gyorgy Kurtag: Jatekok (2025)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at Oct. 23, 2025
Brigitte Poulin - Gyorgy Kurtag: Jatekok (2025)

Brigitte Poulin - Gyorgy Kurtag: Jatekok (2025)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless | 1:10:03 | 206 Mb
Genre: Classical

The Játékok are an autobiographical journey, a laboratory of miniatures that György Kurtág (1926*) composed throughout his career of more than 50 years. Brigitte Poulin has carefully chosen a route which, animated by nostalgia and in dialogue with the past, “plays” with tradition. There we find tributes to different masters and friends of the past, folklore, Gregorian chant, declamation, and improvised gestures
Michael Schneider, Camerata Köln, La Stagione Frankfurt - Telemann: Wind Concertos Vol.2 (2008)

Michael Schneider, Camerata Köln, La Stagione Frankfurt - Telemann: Wind Concertos Vol.2 (2008)
Classical | Eac. Flac, Image+.Cue, Log | Covers | 264.89 MB
Label: CPO | TT: 54:38

The varied forces of Georg Philipp Telemann's instrumental music require a flexible ensemble to give a sense of the music's range. In this case, two German historical-instrument ensembles, La Stagione Frankfurt and the veteran Camerata Köln, join forces for a set of concertos with a delightfully varied set of soloists. This music has the odd combination of lightness and unorthodoxy that tends to either attract or repel those who listen to Telemann. The concertos, in three or four Italianate movements, are among his most progressive works, none more so than the Concerto in D major for two horns, strings, and continuo, TWV 52:D1, where the continuity of Baroque texture breaks up entirely: at one point the horns seem to inhabit their own stately sphere as the strings pause to let them pass. But each of the concertos has moments as unusual, if not quite as dramatic. (James Manheim)