MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Scarlatti: Alexandre Tharaud plays Scarlatti

MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Scarlatti: Alexandre Tharaud plays Scarlatti cover $20.00 Low Stock add to cart

ALEXANDER SCARLATTI
MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Scarlatti: Alexandre Tharaud plays Scarlatti
Alexandre Tharaud (piano)

[ Erato / Warner Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Sunday 20 March 2011

This item is only available to us via Special Import.

"Tharaud brings all of the resources of the modern grand piano to Scarlatti's music and is unapologetically pianistic in his approach." (Recording of the Month MusicWeb March 2011)

"Tharaud's attention to musical detail is, as ever, combined with total spontaneity. The recorded sound adds warmth and this is a wonderfully original reimagining of repertory and instrument."
(Observer)

"Tharaud brings all of the resources of the modern grand piano to Scarlatti's music and is unapologetically pianistic in his approach. He deploys a ravishing range of tone colour to the works, exquisitely executed ornamentation and a virtuoso technique."
(Recording of the Month MusicWeb March 2011)

"The biggest surprise on this wonderfully exuberant and exhilarating disc comes with the very first notes: the piano tone is rich and full...There's never a dull moment, and Tharaud's range of touch and colour, and his sheer enthusiasm, shine through every jewel-like piece." The Guardian, 3rd February 2011 *****

"I love the extravagance, the sunny glow, the light touch of Scarlatti," says French pianist Alexandre Tharaud, whose second Virgin Classics release is a collection of the composer's captivating and adventurous keyboard sonatas. His first release, the Chopin recital Journal intime was described by The Guardian as "altogether breathtakingly beautiful".

"Listening to Mr. Tharaud's crisply articulated and vividly etched playing, a listener might guess that he is a Baroque specialist who, for some reason, prefers the modern piano to the harpsichord. But … Baroque music is only one of his interests," wrote the New York Times in 2005.

In typically imaginative fashion, Tharaud combined early Romanticism with the Baroque over the 2009-10 season when he toured a recital programme of works by Chopin - the subject of Virgin Classics release, Journal intime - and selections from Domenico Scarlatti's canon of 555 keyboard sonatas.

"I love the extravagance, the sunny glow, the light touch of Scarlatti, who shares with Chopin a precise sense for ornamentation, a culture of beauty in sound and an intimate rapport with the audience," he says.

Tharaud's previous exploration of the Baroque repertoire has focused on composers such as Couperin and Rameau, whose music is rarely heard on the modern piano. The tradition of Scarlatti on the piano is much more firmly established - Vladimir Horowitz, for instance, would often include his music in recitals - but Tharaud draws inspiration from developments in historically informed performance over the past 30 years. As he told the French magazine Télérama: "I am not sure that authenticity is conferred by a specific instrument, but rather in the way new life is imbued into this music … Baroque musicians have taught us to approach tempi and ornamentation with a sense of freedom, even audacity."

Scarlatti, born in Naples, spent more than 30 years of his life serving the royal families of Portugal and Spain and died in Madrid. His sonatas are concise, captivating one-movement works in binary form, often adventurous in their use of harmony and modulation, and frequently inhabited by the exotic spirit of Iberian folk music.

"Whether on a broad canvas or on a miniature one, Tharaud's feel for tonal colouring and his eloquence of expression are a perfect match for this inspiring, kaleidoscopic music." That praise from the Daily Telegraph could almost apply to works by Scarlatti, but in fact came from a review of Tharaud's Chopin album, Journal intime. More specific in its frame of reference was The Guardian's comment on the Chopin disc: "Alexandre Tharaud explores a huge emotional range in his Journal intime, including the most thrilling and propulsive first ballade since Michelangeli's version, with a deeply intense C sharp minor nocturne at the heart. Tharaud lifts the music across the bar-lines with deft rubato, his sound clear, shining and sensuous; altogether breathtakingly beautiful."

Tracks:

Keyboard Sonata K239 in F minor
Keyboard Sonata K208 in A major
Keyboard Sonata K72 in C major
Keyboard Sonata K8 in G minor
Keyboard Sonata K29 in D major
Keyboard Sonata K132 in C major
Keyboard Sonata K430 in D major
Keyboard Sonata K20 in E major
Keyboard Sonata K481 in F minor
Keyboard Sonata K514 in C major
Keyboard Sonata K64 in D minor
Keyboard Sonata K32 in D minor
Keyboard Sonata K141 in D minor
Keyboard Sonata K472 in B flat major
Keyboard Sonata K3 in A minor
Keyboard Sonata K380 in E major
Keyboard Sonata K431 in G major
Keyboard Sonata K9 in D minor