Baroque Guitar
Facts
| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | June 21, 1991 |
| UPC Code | 090266049424 |
| Buy this item | $6.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 30 11:36 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Passacaille
- Prelude
- Allemande
- Courante
- Sarabande
- Gavotte
- Menuet 1 and 2
- Bourrée
- Gigue
- Passagio... Presto
- Allemande
- Courante
- Sarabande
- Bourree
- Gigue
Similar CDs
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Beautiful |
| Superb baroque music festival for the guitar |
| Bream does a superlative job |
| Awesome |
| One of the greatest masterpieces of guitar recordings of all time |
This album demonstrates the high standard of truth of his statement.
Originally released in 1965 by RCA, this recording is one of the finest ever made. Bream was at one of the several heights of his musical mastery.
Of the opening tracks by Gaspar Sanz, both the stately Pavanas and the famous Canarios are models of exquisite phrasing, dynamic rhythmic energy and dramatic character.
J.S. Bach's Prelude in D minor is much superior to Andres Segovia's earlier recording. It is a bit slower in tempo, yet has a fabulous pulse that underlies the arpeggio figurations. The following fugue in A minor is a still miraculous model of contrapuntal clarity, drama, rhythmic drive and sheer exuberance. All the many guitarists of my generation measured their own efforts in relation to this rendition.
Fernando Sor's Fantasie and Minuet are completely captivating in the 19th century style. Bream had an affinity for Sor's music and also the taste to record only the small handful of Sor's opus which stood above the mundane.
Bream's recordings of the lutenist S. L. Weiss works take us back to the baroque. Weiss was a friend of Bach and the Passacaille, Fantasie and Tombeau chosen here remain among the greatest recordings ever made. The transcription is especially tricky since the baroque lute used a very different tuning and had 13 courses. Bream was the first to really make a definitive case for playing Weiss on the guitar, and these renditions demonstrate why.
The Suite in D minor of Robert de Visee is by far the best for the transcription he used. Later Bream revisited the original sources and made better editions for his recordings. (See his re-recording of Sanz's Canarios in his album Guitarra)
Finally, the recording of the Lute Suite in E minor of J.S. Bach was a landmark in 1965. Today there are many recordings to choose from, but for my taste, nothing surpasses the total beauty, passion and realization of this recording.
I thank Mr. Bream everyday for this recording.
Buy this recording ASAP. Many of Breams great recordings are no longer available, so get it while you can.
May 24, 2007
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