Julian Bream: The Ultimate Guitar Collection-Volume 2
Facts
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Julian Bream: The Ultimate Guitar Collection-Volume 2
Music Price: $10.98 As of Dec 5 2:03 EST (details)
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| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | August 8, 2000 |
| UPC Code | 090266371327 |
| Buy this item | $10.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 2:03 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- 1. Allegretto
- 1. Allegretto
- Concerto in B flat for lutes, strings & recorders 1. Allegro
- 2. Andante
- Preludio
- 2. Andantino grazioso
- Bourée
- Gigue
- Polonaise
- Canario
Similar CDs
| Juliian Bream Ultimate Guitar Collection | Baroque Guitar | Together/Julian Bream & John Williams | Together Again/ Julian Bream & John Williams | Essential Guitar: 33 Guitar Masterpieces |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Not ultimate- but wonderful, none-the-less |
Without spending space here reiterating the specific pieces, their titles and lengths, I will simply list the composers whose works Bream presents so nicely in this collection. They span a range of about five centuries beginning in the time of England's Elizabeth I and spanning the years through to the 20th Century's premier Spanish and Brazilian classical guitar composers. The list reads like a `Whose Who" of classical plucked-string instrument music and of composers whose keyboard compositions work particularly well on the strings of a lute or guitar, and includes;
- John Dowland
- Francis Cutting
- Antonio Vivaldi
- Gaspar Sanz (*)
- Mateo Albeniz (*)
- Manuel de Falla
- Enrique Granados (*)
- Hector Villa-Lobos, and
- Joaquin Rodrigo
(*) = Pieces originally written for keyboard play.
Every classical guitarist has his own recognizable style and approach to the instrument and the material. An experience listener would not confuse Bream's work with that of Andres Segovia, for example: but it is not that one is better than the other. Each, in his own distinctive way, is simply superb. Though the Spanish influence is clearly audible with both musicians, Bream's stylings have a more contemporary lilt and inflection than do those of Segovia; he makes each piece his own. One suspects that each time he plays a piece it comes out differently according to the moment, his mood, the instrument and God knows what else. Segovia, on the other hand, was well known for his constancy once he had found a version of each piece that fully suited his own ear and temperament.
While I am admittedly a Segovia fan, I find Bream's renditions to be noticeably fresher and each infused with an aura of presence in the here-and-now which I find especially enjoyable.
The collection is neither complete not `ultimate', but it is VERY good and well worth having in any collection of classical guitar music. In fact, for audiophiles not familiar with this genre, it is a fair place to begin to develop an ear for and a listener's knowledge of and experience with the classical guitar.
April 14, 2007
| Very Nice Bream Collection |
Overall, this CD consists of a good variety of masterfully played music. I only wish most of Bream's recordings were recorded using later technology, which would make his playing shine even more. March 3, 2005
| Not what I thought! |
| Ultimately Satisfying |
| Spectacular |
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