Quattro Note Di Autunno

The English Concert, Trevor Pinnock - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni, Concertos RV 548 & 516 (2003)

The English Concert, Trevor Pinnock - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni, Concertos RV 548 & 516 (2003)
EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 56:36 | 294 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: DG Archiv | Catalog: 474616

In their original incarnation on LP, the sound of Trevor Pinnock and his English Consort's 1981 recording of Vivaldi's famous Four Seasons was clear and bright. In subsequent CD iterations, it was clearer and brighter. But in this 2008 Japanese original bit processing issue, it has passed clearest and brightest and gone all the way to transparent and translucent. One can hear each of the 13 string players bows strike their strings and every pluck of Nigel North's theobro or Pinnock's harpsichord. And soloist Simon Standage sounds so vibrant and present that he may as well be in the room standing between the speakers.
Amandine Beyer - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni (2024)

Amandine Beyer - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni (2024)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless / MP3 320 kbps | 70:57 | 393 / 162 Mb
Genre: Classical

Violinist Amandine Beyer has a variety of musical interests but is best known as a specialist in the Baroque violin, with a repertory stretching from the early Baroque to the Classical period. She has collaborated with numerous top historical performance groups, founded the chamber orchestra Gli Incogniti, and is a co-founder of the Kitgut Quartet. Beyer was born in 1974 in Aix-en-Provence, France. She began taking lessons at age four on both the violin and recorder. In 1990, she entered the Paris Conservatory as a violin student, studying with Sylvie Gazeau, graduating in 1994 with a first prize in violin.
Théotime Langlois de Swarte & Le Consort - Vivaldi: Le quattro stagioni (2025)

Théotime Langlois de Swarte & Le Consort - Vivaldi: Le quattro stagioni (2025)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 479 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 209 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:30:26
Classical | Label: harmonia mundi

Another recording of The Four Seasons? A year after ‘Concerti per una vita’, the orchestra of Le Consort, in the course of its exploration of Vivaldi, reveals the many facets of this inexhaustible cycle. To achieve this, Théotime Langlois de Swarte has held up a subtle mirror to other works by the ‘red-haired priest’. All of them perpetuate the seasons in their own way, through shared memories and impressions; in the background Lambranzi's Venetian dances complement this musical picture awash with colours!
Théotime Langlois de Swarte & Le Consort - Vivaldi: Le quattro stagioni (2025)

Théotime Langlois de Swarte & Le Consort - Vivaldi: Le quattro stagioni (2025)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 479 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 209 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:30:26
Classical | Label: harmonia mundi

Another recording of The Four Seasons? A year after ‘Concerti per una vita’, the orchestra of Le Consort, in the course of its exploration of Vivaldi, reveals the many facets of this inexhaustible cycle. To achieve this, Théotime Langlois de Swarte has held up a subtle mirror to other works by the ‘red-haired priest’. All of them perpetuate the seasons in their own way, through shared memories and impressions; in the background Lambranzi's Venetian dances complement this musical picture awash with colours!
George Philipp Telemann (1681 - 1767) - Venti Piccole Fughe (Dedicate a Benedetto Marcello). 1976

George Philipp Telemann (1681 - 1767) - Venti Piccole Fughe (Dedicate a Benedetto Marcello). 1976
Genre: Classical | 4100 kHz | 16 bits | FLAC (lossless) level 8 | 153 MB + covers | Vinyl ripped by Melcano (Rare disc)
Audio edition: Adobe Audition with Creative Audigy 4 and Technics SL 1300
Source: LP Stereo Erato STU 70877, Prodotto e distributto dalla RCA s.p.a. 1976
Orchestra Pro Arte di Monaco diretta da Kurt Redel

Studiando le 24 Piccole Fughe, publicate da Telemann nel 1731 é impossibile non pensare al Clavicembalo ben temperato di J.S. Bach, i cui due libri furono terminati rispettivamente in 1722 en el 1744: Da una parte 20 Fughe per organo o tastiera (eseguite nella presente registrazione da Kurt Redel, in una trascrizione per orchestra da camera) impiegano 12 distinte tonalitá, dall’altra parte 48 Preludi e Fughe in tutte le tonalitá maggiori e minori. Ma questi due compositori, Telemann e Bach, non furono certo gli unici in quell’ epoca a scrivere tal genere di musica. Il Clavicembalo ben temperato gode ai nostri giorni di una tale celebritá da far dimenticare a volte come esso rifletta problemi che non si riferivano soltanto a Bach, all’ inizio del XVIII secolo. D’altra parte nessun lavoro del Cantor ha beneficiato, mentre Bach era in vita di una simile circolazione nella societá del tempo, né goduto di altrettante copie neppure conosciuto pari gloria nella seconda metá del XVIII secolo. (…)

Forma Antiqva - My Choice (2021)  Music

Posted by delpotro at Aug. 13, 2021
Forma Antiqva - My Choice (2021)

Forma Antiqva - My Choice (2021)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 280 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 123 Mb | Digital booklet | 00:52:19
Classical | Label: Winter & Winter

Forma Antiqva, founded in 1998 by the brothers Aarón, Daniel and Pablo Zapico in Asturias, is considered to be the most courageous baroque ensemble in Spain. With variable formations - from the trio of the Zapico brothers (Concerto Zapico) to the baroque orchestra with outstanding performers of the young generation - the Zapicos deal with repertoire of the 17th / 18th centuries and the present in an original and bold way: from Spanish dance music to great works of the late baroque, including legacy revivals by authors such as Vicente Baset.

Vivaldi · Le Quattro Stagioni · Concertos · Accardo  Music

Posted by enjopin at Dec. 30, 2009
Vivaldi · Le Quattro Stagioni · Concertos · Accardo

Vivaldi · Le Quattro Stagioni · Concertos per 3 & 4 Violini · Accardo
Classical | EAC | APE, CUE, No LOG, 300 MB | MP3 HQ, Tracks 107 MB
1 CDs | Covers | rs.com | 1988
Viktoria Mullova, Claudio Abbado - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni (1987)

Viktoria Mullova, Claudio Abbado - Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni (1987)
EAC | APE (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 48:36 | 218 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Philips | Catalog: 420 216-2

Viktoria Mullova is one of the most versatile and charismatic violinists to have emerged in the late 20th century, demonstrating a high level of mastery in broad range of repertoires, from Baroque to Romantic and post-Romantic to jazz and crossover. She established her reputation early in the 1980s, winning both the Sibelius and Tchaikovsky competitions and going on to win the Grand Prix du Disc and a Diapason d'Or Award, as well as garnering numerous other honors. Her widely acclaimed 1987 Philips recording of Vivaldi's Four Seasons is ample proof of her sure grasp of the idiosyncrasies of the Italian Baroque, and the freshness and vitality of her playing has made her version a favorite with listeners and critics. Mullova performs with passionate musicality and technical finesse, and Claudio Abbado leads the Chamber Orchestra of Europe in a nuanced, idiomatic accompaniment.
Luigi Dallapiccola - Liriche Greche / Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi / Piccola Musica Notturna (1988)

Luigi Dallapiccola - Liriche Greche / Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi / Piccola Musica Notturna (1988)
Classical | EAC (APE & CUE) | 133 MB
Various mirrors: Rapidshare, Depositfiles, Megaupload & more!

The theme of human liberty and subjection is a recurrent theme of both Dallapiccola’s life and music. Dallapiccola’s early works show him grappling with a range of disparate influences ranging from Debussy to Schoenberg. By 1934, as an appointed professor of piano at the Florence Conservatory, his compositions further developed under the influences of Busoni, Schoenberg and, especially, Berg, as Dallapiccola studied the 12-note system and began to incorporate it into his own music. Meanwhile, the growing shadow of Fascism reawakened his concern with the plight of ordinary human beings living under despotism. In 1938, Mussolini’s adoption of Hitler’s racial policies (with the consequent threat to Dallapiccola’s own wife, who was Jewish) provided the impetus for the first of his tryptych of works concerned with imprisonment and freedom, the Canti di prigionia (“Songs of Imprisonment”)―as Dallapiccola noted in his diary: “In a totalitarian regime, the individual is powerless. Only by means of music would I be able to express my anger.” For all his personal difficulties, however, the years immediately before and during World War II were musically fecund ones, as Dallapiccola established the lyrical version of 12-note music―with a distinctly Italian turn of phrase―that was to serve him for the remainder of his career, and which he first expounded in the sequence of small-scale vocal works, most notably the Liriche greche, written during the 1940s.
Luigi Dallapiccola: Liriche Greche · Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi · Piccola Musica Notturna (1988)

Luigi Dallapiccola - Liriche Greche · Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi · Piccola Musica Notturna (1988)
Classical | EAC (APE & CUE) | 133 MB

The theme of human liberty and subjection is a recurrent theme of both Dallapiccola’s life and music. Dallapiccola’s early works show him grappling with a range of disparate influences ranging from Debussy to Schoenberg. By 1934, as an appointed professor of piano at the Florence Conservatory, his compositions further developed under the influences of Busoni, Schoenberg and, especially, Berg, as Dallapiccola studied the 12-note system and began to incorporate it into his own music. Meanwhile, the growing shadow of Fascism reawakened his concern with the plight of ordinary human beings living under despotism. In 1938, Mussolini’s adoption of Hitler’s racial policies (with the consequent threat to Dallapiccola’s own wife, who was Jewish) provided the impetus for the first of his tryptych of works concerned with imprisonment and freedom, the Canti di prigionia (“Songs of Imprisonment”)―as Dallapiccola noted in his diary: “In a totalitarian regime, the individual is powerless. Only by means of music would I be able to express my anger.” For all his personal difficulties, however, the years immediately before and during World War II were musically fecund ones, as Dallapiccola established the lyrical version of 12-note music―with a distinctly Italian turn of phrase―that was to serve him for the remainder of his career, and which he first expounded in the sequence of small-scale vocal works, most notably the Liriche greche, written during the 1940s.