Baroque Organ Concertos Kei Koito

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
19.05.2016

Label: deutsche harmonia mundi

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Kei Koito

Composer: Georg Friedrich Händel (1685-1759), Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741), Johann Gottfried Walther (1684-1748), Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767), Giuseppe Torelli (1658-1709), Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • Georg Friedrich Händel (1685 - 1759): Suite/Concerto in G Minor:
  • 1I. Ouverture, HWV 453, No. 103:40
  • 2II. Entrée, HWV 453, No. 201:31
  • 3III. Air, HWV 46602:11
  • 4IV. Sarabande, HWV 440, No. 302:50
  • 5V. Larghetto, HWV 58001:39
  • 6VI. Allegro, HWV 48701:38
  • Antonio Vivaldi (1678 - 1741):
  • 7Grave in B Minor, RV 206, No. 203:08
  • Concerto in B Minor, LV 133, after RV 275:
  • 8I. Allegro03:08
  • 9II. Adagio02:52
  • 10III. Allegro03:11
  • Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767): Concerto in G Minor, BWV 985, after TWV 51:
  • 11I. Allegro02:47
  • 12II. Adagio01:49
  • 13III. Allegro02:48
  • Antonio Vivaldi:
  • 14Largehtto in D Major, BWV 972, No. 2, after RV 23003:44
  • Tomaso Albinoni (1671 - 1751): Concerto in F Major, LV 126:
  • 15I. Allegro02:32
  • 16II. Adagio01:04
  • 17III. Allegro02:47
  • Georg Friedrich Händel: Suite No. 2 in F Major, HWV 427:
  • 18I. Adagio02:30
  • Giuseppe Torelli (1658 - 1709): Concerto in A Minor, LV 140:
  • 19I. Allegro02:30
  • 20II. Adagio02:11
  • 21III. Allegro03:18
  • Antonio Vivaldi:
  • 22Largo in D Minor, after RV 356, No. 202:06
  • Georg Friedrich Händel: Organ Concerto in F Major, after HWV 293:
  • 23I. Larghetto02:04
  • 24II. Allegro02:06
  • 25III. Alla Siciliana01:37
  • 26IV. Presto01:52
  • Georg Philipp Telemann: Concerto in C Minor, LV 136, after TWV 52:
  • 27I. Adagio02:30
  • 28II. Allegro02:25
  • 29III. Adagio01:58
  • 30IV. Allegro02:14
  • Total Runtime01:12:40

Info for Baroque Organ Concertos

The great Johann Sebastian Bach was the first who arranged famous baroque organ concertos (for example by Vivaldi) for solo organ. Kei Koito's album 'Baroque Organ Concertos' presents a selection of famous baroque organ concertos in transcriptions for organ alone.

Features famous and well known baroque music by composers such as Albinoni, Händel, Vivaldi and Telemann.

The album also features a new suite Kei Koito herself has arranged using some of Händel's best loved works, 'Suite in G'.

Kei Koito, original from Japan, has a career as an esteemed concert organist. She has performed throughout Europe, Russia, Japan, and the Americas. She is acclaimed for her expertise on Baroque and Renaissance music, especially that of J.S. Bach. Musicians from Japan have gained a reputation in the interpretation of Baroque music, especially for music by J. S. Bach. Think for example of the highly praised albums of Masaaki Suzuki.

The program of this album has been recorded in the 'Der Aa-kerk' in Groningen, Netherlands. The second Schnitger organ was built in 1702, originally for the Broerkerk in Groningen. In 1815, the organ was transferred to the Aa-kerk. The instrument is famous among organ player all over the world.

Kei Koito, Arp Schnitger-Orgel Aa-Kerk Groningen


Kei Koito
has risen to the highest ranks of the world’s concert organists and is widely acclaimed as one of the most exciting performers on the Baroque organ music today.

Born into a family of artists, Kei Koito studied music from the age of six, taking lessons on the piano, cello, harpsichord and in singing. At the age of sixteen she decided to study the organ with Mitchio Akimoto in Tokyo, and subsequently continued her studies with Pierre Segond in Geneva and Xavier Darasse in Toulouse. Following this, she studied Early music in Fribourg with the organist, harpsichordist and musicologist Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini, and Baroque music with the Baroque violinist and conductor Reinhard Goebel in Cologne. She concurrently studied philosophy and music aesthetics at the University of Fine Arts & Music in Tokyo, and studied with the composer Éric Gaudibert in Geneva composition, orchestration and music analysis from the 16th century to the present day.

After having performed organ music of every repertoire (including many world premieres), since 1985 Kei Koito has focused on baroque music, primarily on the music of J. S. Bach and his important predecessors. Her interpretative approach is both the result of her indefatigable research into historical performance practice, and based on her personal intuition and inspiration.

Kei Koito’s career as a solo concert organist has taken her across all of Europe, the USA, and to Russia and Japan. She has also collaborated with the Baroque orchestra Musica Antiqua Köln (dir. Reinhard Goebel) in Bach’s organ sinfonias (cantatas) or Handel’s organ concertos, and with the Ensemble Gilles Binchois (dir. Dominique Vellard) in music of the Italian Renaissance and Baroque or the French pre-Classical and Classical repertoire. She has performed also the organ concerto of Haydn with the Lausanne Chamber Orchestra and Poulenc’s Organ Concerto with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande.

As a recording artist, Kei Koito has made several CDs for the Early organ repertoire, playing on extraordinary historic organs. She has won numerous prestigious prizes and awards, among others : the Diapason d’Or, Choc du Monde de la Musique/Classica, “Exceptional Event” of Télérama, “10/10” from Répertoire, “5 stars” from Le Temps and “Editor’s Choice” (Gramophone, Early Music, Musik & Theater, Toccata-Alte Musik Aktuell, Record Geijutsu, Res Musica, Choir & Organ, Orgues Nouvelles). Her recordings have also received a warm and enthusiastic welcome from the general public.

A highly sought-after pedagogue, she has been Professor of Organ at the Lausanne University of Music since 1992. From the very start, her classes included students from all over the world. Since 2012 she has been doing comparative research on the repertoire of Bach, his predecessors, precursors and contemporaries. She has received invitations to give lectures and masterclasses as a visiting professor (at the Royal Academy of Music in London, Austrian Baroque Academy in Gmunden/Salzburg, Conservatories of Rouen, Québec and Buenos Aires, University of Belgrade and some American universities) and she has also frequently served on the juries of international organ competitions (in Maastricht, Aachen, Liège, Wasquehal, St-Omer, Genève, Alkmaar, for the Grand Prix Bach de Lausanne, and at the 50th St Albans Organ Competition).

Since the Lausanne Bach Festival was founded in 1997, Kei Koito has served as its Artistic Director, and she has also been involved with the “Grand Prix Bach de Lausanne” international organ competition from the very beginning. Since 2012 she has participated in productions of Baroque operas by Monteverdi, Lully, Purcell, as well as of secular cantatas by J. S. Bach, oratorios by Handel and others at the Lausanne City Opera.

In autumn 2014, her recording “Organ Music before Bach: works by Pachelbel, Froberger, Muffat, Kerll and Fischer”, released on the Deutsche Harmonia Mundi/Sony Music label, was awarded the Diapason d’Or and received a wonderful echo from many other reviews.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO