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Miroirs d’Espagne | Solo Musica SM462

Miroirs d’Espagne

£12.83

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New Item

Label: Solo Musica

Cat No: SM462

Barcode: 4260123644628

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 13th September 2024

Contents

Works

Debussy, Claude

Estampes (3) (arr. for guitar and harp)

Falla, Manuel de

Homenaje 'Pour le tombeau de Claude Debussy' (arr. for guitar and harp)
Piezas espanolas (4) (arr. for guitar and harp)

Ravel, Maurice

Miroirs
» Alborada del gracioso (arr. for guitar and harp)
» La vallee des cloches (arr. for guitar and harp)
» Oiseaux tristes (arr. for guitar and harp)

Artists

Guitarp Duo

Works

Debussy, Claude

Estampes (3) (arr. for guitar and harp)

Falla, Manuel de

Homenaje 'Pour le tombeau de Claude Debussy' (arr. for guitar and harp)
Piezas espanolas (4) (arr. for guitar and harp)

Ravel, Maurice

Miroirs
» Alborada del gracioso (arr. for guitar and harp)
» La vallee des cloches (arr. for guitar and harp)
» Oiseaux tristes (arr. for guitar and harp)

Artists

Guitarp Duo

About

The biographies and the music of Debussy, Ravel, and de Falla contain multiple hidden reflections, many elements that mirror each other. These reflections are so clear-cut that it becomes difficult in many cases to make out the original image. Music inspired by Iberia and the piano as an instrument were certainly common ground, on which the three composers engaged in a lively artistic exchange. The Romantic piano repertoire has appropriated music of the most diverse origins. Considering the particular instrument that originally inspired it, we could almost call the result regeneration rather than mere transcription, as if the music were reborn in its pure form. The works included on this CD showcase guitar, harp and piano in just such a complementary relationship. Indeed, Maurice Ravel personally noted in his score of Miroirs for the pianist Vlado Perlemuter, that he should imitate the guitar or the harp in certain passages. In his article La guitara, Manuel de Falla in his turn writes of how marvellously Debussy depicts the artistic qualities of the instrument, without ever having used the guitar at all in his works. Having grown up with the Romantic tradition, many pianists of the time had difficulties doing justice to the new musical imagery of Symbolism. Chronicles from the time reveal a certain impatience in composers, who required from interpreters a new technique and a different use of the sustaining pedal. Unlike the piano, both guitar and harp emit softer, less defined contours, in keeping with the melancholic and equivocal timbres of Debussy and Ravel.

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