Vers le romantisme: Concertos pour flûte Soyoung Lee

Cover Vers le romantisme: Concertos pour flûte

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
09.11.2015

Label: Skarbo

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Soyoung Lee, Ensemble of Tokyo & Chang-Kook Kim

Composer: Bernhard Romberg, Saverio Mercadante, François Devienne

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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FLAC 88.2 $ 13.50
  • Bernhard Romberg (1767 - 1841):
  • 1 I. Allegro maestoso 13:02
  • 2 II. Andante grazioso 06:04
  • 3 III. Rondo 08:39
  • Saverio Mercadante (1795 - 1870):
  • 4 I. Allegro maestoso 09:36
  • 5 II. Adagio 04:21
  • 6 III. Rondo russo: Allegro giusto 06:42
  • François Devienne (1759 - 1803):
  • 7 I. Allegro 08:57
  • 8 II. Adagio 04:30
  • 9 III. Rondo, allegretto poco moderato 05:39
  • Total Runtime 01:07:30

Info for Vers le romantisme: Concertos pour flûte

How could one resist the pleasure of listening to and discovering or rediscovering three of the most famous ute concertos from the late 18th and early 19th centuries, brought together by the same soloist? Some of the most-played concertos from that era, already dear to their authors at the moment of their rst performance, they represent both incontestable successes even though they were not the only compositions for the instrument at the time, and an exemplary illustration of three powerful identities – French, Prussian and Neapolitan – whose style and taste contain as many differences as they do riches.

Whereas François Devienne was a autist like – to a lesser degree of virtuosity – Saverio Mercadante, the former still playing the ute with one key unlike his students whose instruments already had several keys, and the latter, using transitional utes before the invention of the Böhm system still in use today, Bernhard Romberg was a cellist, his fame and playing giving him the status of father of the German cello school. The ute did not occupy the same place in the compositions of the three composers. With Devienne, it represents both something obvious and an historical continuity; with Mercadante, it has a place of honour but represents a break by attributing a de nite importance to instrumental music in a universe dominated by opera, a genre in which the composer excelled abundantly; with Romberg, it constitutes an exception, this concerto being his only one for ute alongside ten for cello. These speci cities by themselves engender a character unique to each work, whilst each composer raised ute writing to the highest level.

Recording has allowed and still allows for unprecedented dissemination of these concertos, with soloists such as Jean-Pierre Rampal or James Galway in the latter half of the 20th century making known to music lovers the world over the names of Devienne or Mercadante, previously ignored by the old 78s, thanks to their versions of reference. It was inevitable that, with these three new titles representative of their era, Soyoung Lee would pursue her discographic exploration of the ute repertoire after having recorded, in keeping with the same logic, three major concertos of the 20th century (Nielsen, Jolivet, Ibert – Skarbo DSK 3101).

Soyoung Lee, flute
Ensemble of Tokyo
Chang-Kook Kim, conductor

No biography found.

Booklet for Vers le romantisme: Concertos pour flûte

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