Mostrando postagens com marcador Douglas Riva. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Douglas Riva. Mostrar todas as postagens

13.4.22

GRANADOS : Danzas españolas (Douglas Riva) (2010) FLAC (tracks), lossless

Enrique Granados performed extensively in Spain, France and the United States, collaborating with many of the leading artists of his day. His first masterpiece was the collection of 12 Danzas españolas, refined and expressive evocations of the richness of Spain’s regions and dances, which gained high praise by composers as diverse as Massenet, Saint-Saëns, Grieg and Cui. By turns vivacious, melancholy and hypnotic, they are as fresh as his poetic Improvisation on the Valencian Jota, heard here in a transcription from a piano roll recording made by Granados himself. naxos
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1-12    12 Danzas españolas, Op.37
13    Improvisacion sobre la Jota valenciana
(transcribed by A.M. Martinez)

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Goyescas (Suite for Piano) (Douglas Riva) (1999) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Any new release of Goyescas faces unavoidable comparison to Alicia de Larrocha’s standard-setting interpretation (her 1976 Decca version is the finest of her four recordings). Happily, Douglas Riva’s persuasive playing stands up well to such formidable competition. Having prepared a critical edition of Granados’ piano works, Riva knows this music cold, and dispatches its colorful, multi-leveled textures and idiosyncratic figurations with fluent elegance. True, he doesn’t command De Larrocha’s wide vocabulary of articulations, nor her fearless dynamism. Yet his stylish, clear-cut playing benefits from engineering that’s superior to Decca’s tubby sonics. As a bonus, Riva includes the previously unrecorded “Serenata goyesca”, a slight, rather inconclusive piece that may have formed part of Goyescas’ first draft. Riva provides his own excellent, informative annotations. A highly recommended release. by Jed Distler 

Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1-4    Goyescas, Book 1
5-6    Goyescas, Book 2
7    El pelele ( The Straw Man)
8    Serenata goyesca (Serende in the Style of Goya)

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Escenas románticas • Allegro de concierto • Capricho español (Douglas Riva) (2001) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

"Riva is an American pianist who well understands the Granados style. ...he is a competent pianist who has the notes nicely in his fingers. That is a compliment, because Granados's writing for the piano can be very difficult. So this beautiful music is ain good...hands here."  by Harold Schonberg
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1    Preludio en re mayor
2    Danza lenta
3-9    Escenas romanticas
10    Barcarola
11    Capricho español
12-14    Libro de horas
15    Paisaje
16    Allegro appassionato
17     Allegro de concierto

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Romantic Waltzes • Poetic Waltzes • Aragonese Rhapsody (Douglas Riva) (2001) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

"Volume 4 of the continuing Naxos survey of the piano music of Enrique Granados includes three world premiere recordings. The performer is the American pianist Douglas Riva, who now enjoys a considerable reputation for his interpretations of Spanish music and has a particularly strong affinity with the works of Granados. ...you'll be treated to pleasing performances of Apparitions (Romantic Waltzes), and there's rich humour in Riva's accounts of the ten Stories of Youth. The Apparitions find their way onto disc for the first time here, as do the five Scenes from Childhood. The other premiere recording is Honey from Alcarria: Jota." by Michael Jameson
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1-11    Apparitions: Romantic Waltzes
12    In the Cuban Style
13-22    Cuentos de la juventud
23    Honey from Alcarria: Jota
24-32    Poetic Waltzes
33    Aragonese Rhapsody
34-38    Escenas infantiles
39    Apparition

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Azulejos • Oriental • Valse de concert (Douglas Riva) (2001) FLAC (tracks), lossless

 "Like its immediate predecessor, Volume 6 in Douglas Riva's complete Granados piano music survey for Naxos explores rarely-heard repertoire (in three cases, world-premiere recordings). Among the seven pieces based on Spanish Folk Songs that open the disc, the rhythmically vivacious sixth (Zambra) and seventh (Zapateado) seem the most substantial from a melodic and harmonic angle, and they give strong hints of the more complex and personal style that would manifest itself throughout Goyescas. El jardi d'Elisenda features lovely high-register writing that plays right into Riva's musical sensitivity.

There are times, though, when the music's sultry subtext requires more impulsive characterization, rhythmic snap, and darkness on the surface than Riva is willing to concede, such as in the Danza caracteristica, Sardana, and Jacara. On the other hand, Riva navigates the Three Impromptus' madcap stylistic shifts with elegant understatement. The engineering is fine...As always, Riva's scholarly booklet notes inform and delight." by Jed Distler

Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1    Albeniz/Granados: Azulejos (Mosaic Tiles)
2    Valse de Concert
3    A la pradera
4-10    Escenas poeticas (Poetic Scenes)
11    Fantasia - Cheherezada
12    Arabesca
13    Cancion arabe
14    Moresque
15    Cancion morisca
16    Oriental - Theme with Variations, Intermezzo, Finale

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : The Enchanted Palace in the Sea • Eisenda's Garden • Three Impromptus (Douglas Riva) (2001) FLAC (tracks), lossless

 Enrique Granados was born on 27th July 1867 in Lérida, near Barcelona. Son of an army captain, he began his study of the piano in 1879 and the following year he continued with Joan Baptista Pujol (1835-1898) at the Academia Pujol. Three years later he performed Schumann’s Sonata, Op. 22, in an academy-sponsored competition, for which one of the jury members was the noted composer Felipe Pedrell (1841-1922). The sixteen-year-old Granados won the competition and obviously impressed Pedrell, who began giving him instruction in harmony and composition in 1884.

In 1887 Granados went to Paris, where he studied the piano with Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot (1833-1914). Granados was highly influenced by the latter’s insistence on tone-production and pedal technique. In addition, Bériot emphasized improvisation in his teaching, reinforcing Granados’ natural ability in the skill. After returning to Barcelona in 1889, Granados published his Danzas españolas, which brought him international recognition.

In his lifetime Granados appeared in concerts in Spain, France and the United States, collaborating with conductors such as Isaac Albéniz and Pablo Casals, the violinists Eugène Ysaÿe and Jacques Thibaud, pianists Mieczyslaw Horszowski and Camille Saint-Saëns. In addition to his numerous piano works he composed chamber music, vocal music, operas, and symphonic poems. Granados was also a fine teacher and in 1901 he founded the Academia Granados, which produced such noted musicians as Paquita Madriguera, Conchita Badia and Frank Marshall.

In 1912 Granados met the American pianist Ernest Schelling, who was the first pianist to perform the music of Granados outside Spain. Schelling arranged for Granados’ works to be published in New York and encouraged Granados in his plans to convert the piano suite Goyescas into an opera, later arranging for its première at the Metropolitan Opera in New York.

Terrified of the ocean, Granados nevertheless sailed to New York for the première of the opera on 28th January 1916. While in the United States he performed numerous concerts, made piano-roll recordings, and also performed at the White House in Washington. With his wife he set sail for Europe via England, but while crossing the English Channel on the British ship Sussex, their boat was torpedoed by a German submarine and they both perished.

In about 1912 Granados wrote: "My motto has always been to renounce an easy success in order to achieve one that is true and lasting." Today he is universally recognised as one of Spain’s most important composers. His music is multi-faceted, although it is essentially romantic with some nationalist characteristics. He has been variously described as "the Spanish Chopin", "the last Romantic", and by his compatriots as "our Schubert". No single characterisation adequately describes his personality. Granados had a distinctive voice that is instantly recognisable and entirely his own.

Granados was primarily influenced by mid-nineteenth century European Romanticism, especially the music of Schumann and Chopin. The introverted luxuriance of his luminous harmonies, his rich palette of pianistic colour, loose formal structures and his vivid imagination, always tinged with nostalgia, place him firmly within the Romantic School. It has frequently been remarked that larger forms, such as those of sonatas and concertos, did not attract him. His artistic personality was better suited to shorter, rhapsodic forms, especially those based on variations.

Piezas sobre cantos populares españolas were composed about 1895 and dedicated to Cecilia Gómez de Conde, daughter-in-law of Granados’ patron, Eduardo Conde. The collection is clearly nationalistic in inspiration, written with a breadth of conception, romantic brilliance, and technical complexity which make it comparable to his Quinteto, Op. 49 and Trio, Op. 50, first performed the same year. No manuscript of the set is known to exist, but Granados made a piano-roll recording of Preludio for the Duo-Art Reproducing Piano in New York in 1916, which was issued under the title Prelude, María del Carmen.

The original version of the suite Elisenda, first performed on 7th July, 1912, included four movements scored for chamber orchestra, piano, harp and soprano. Later Granados made an arrangement for piano of the first movement of the suite, El jardí d’Elisenda. The work was dedicated to Pablo and Guillermina Casals, the cellist and his sister. The author of the text used in the fourth movement of the suite was the Catalan poet Apeles Mestres, one of the leading representatives of the cultural movement Modernismo, parallel to Art Nouveau. Apeles Mestres was also the librettist for four of Granados’ operas as well as the symphonic poem Liliana. The first edition of the piano version of El jardí d’Elisenda included a section of the Apeles Mestres poem of the same title:

The rising sun wakes Elisenda’s garden

which dreams as it rests in the shade of the palace;

rosebushes flower, drops of water sing as they leap

out of the fountain.

To calm her sorrows and soften her longing

Elisenda has come down to the silent garden;

her heart far, far away, on the battlefields where

they are fighting and dying. . .

The flowers perfume her as they open their petals;

the fountain adds sweet music;

and the day is beginning. . .and Elisenda’s world

is turning into perfume, harmony and light. . .

And behold, as if by magic, hope rises up

in her heart.

The manuscript of Parranda-Murcia is undated. Granados and his librettist José Feliu y Codina spent several weeks, however, about 1895-1896 in the province of Murcia gathering material for their opera María del Carmen. Parranda-Murcia may have been written at that time. This is the first recording of Parranda-Murcia and Pastoral, an atmospheric work first published in the Spanish magazine Mundial Musical around 1910.

There are two known manuscripts of Danza característica which are both undated and untitled. The first edition of Danza característica, published in 1973, gave the piece the present title. Granados may have originally conceived of Danza característica as one of the Danzas españolas, although it was not included in the final version of that collection.

Sardana, published in 1914, is Granados’ only piano work directly inspired by popular Catalan culture. It is dedicated to the American pianist, conductor and composer, Ernest Schelling. The sardana is a two-part group dance, typical of Granados’ native Catalonia, in which the dancers form rings. The steps, curts (shorts) and llarchs (longs), shape the music. Granados’ Sardana belongs to the genre of concert sardanas, not intended for dancing.

Granados composed Serenata as a gift to his wife. The manuscript is written on a parchment dated 20th May, 1893, and was inscribed by the composer: ‘For the Album of my life-companion, Amparo, so beloved and good - Your husband’. It is unlikely that Granados intended Serenata for publication or performance outside the family home.

Jácara, subtitled Danza para cantar y bailar, may have been written as a study for the suite Goyescas (Naxos 8.554403), since some of the melodic material was later used in the sixth piece of the suite, Epílogo: Serenata del espectro.

Países soñados appears to have been originally conceived as a collection of pieces. Granados, however, composed only El palacio encantado en el mar around 1912-1913. The work is subtitled Leyenda (Legend).

Impromptu No. 1 and Impromptu de la codorniz, No. 2, were published in 1912, but their date of composition is uncertain, as is that of Impromptu No. 3, published in 1914 as Op. 39. Curiously, Capricho español, (Naxos 8.554628) was also published as Op. 39 around 1890. The three Impromptus could not be more varied as a group. Impromptu No. 1 is probably similar to one of Granados’ highly praised improvisations, Impromptu de la codorniz, No. 2, is a bucolic pastoral, and Impromptu No. 3 radiates Romantic fervour.

Douglas Riva

This performance follows the critical edition of the Complete Works for Piano of Enrique Granados, published by Editorial Boileau, S.A., Barcelona, Spain, Alicia de Larrocha, Director and Douglas Riva, Assistant Director. 

 Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1-7    6 Piezas sobre cantos populares espanoles
8    El jardi d'Elisenda
9    Parranda-Murcia
10    6 estudios expresívos en forma de piezas faciles: Pastoral
11    Danza característica
12    Sardana
13    Serenata
14    Paises soñados, Palacio encantado en el mar (Dream Lands, The Enchanted Palace in the Sea
15-18    3 Impromptus, Op. 39

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Sentimental Waltzes • Love Letters • The Gondola • 6 Expressive Studies (Douglas Riva) (2004) FLAC (tracks), lossless

The sound of this CD is excellent and matches the superb playing by Riva. Not every piece on this CD is an undiscovered masterpiece. However, virtually all of this music is attractive and interesting; some of it is truly beautiful. None of it deserves the neglect that has been its lot for the last century or so. What Douglas Riva has done for us is to give us the opportunity to judge a vast part of the Granados oeuvre for ourselves. We can decide what is timeless and what is ephemeral. I do not suppose that recital promoters will programme many of these newly rediscovered works. I expect that the same Spanish Dances and extracts from the Goyescas will continue to reign supreme. But now there is no excuse. We have our musical lives enriched by this in depth exploration of one of the greatest of composers for the piano of the early twentieth century. by John France

Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1-10    Valses sentimentales
11-17    7 Estudios
18-23    6 Estudios expresivios en froma de piezas faciles
24-27    Bocetos: Coleccion de Obras faciles
28    Exquise...! Vals tzigane
19    L'himne dels morts
30-33    Cartas de amor: Valses intimos
34    A la Antigua: Bourre
35    Minuetto
36    La Gondola

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Album of Melodies • Carboard Soldiers • The Mermaid (Douglas Riva) (2005) FLAC (tracks), lossless

 "Solo piano music represents a large portion of Granados's compositional output of which a considerable amount has never been recorded. The Naxos undertaking to record all of it is therefore an important event. Having reached volume eight, the composer's most well known works have already been committed to disc, the policy having been to get the series off to a good start with the better works. As we come to the tail end of the enterprise there is little left except early works written when the composer was in his late teens and early twenties; one-off purchasers of this disc need to be warned that it does not contain a representative cross-section of the Granados piano music. Nevertheless, the disc is not without charm and there is interest in that two-thirds of all the pieces are receiving world premiere recordings.

The trouble with listening to music by a composer who has not yet fully realised his own voice is that it is almost impossible not to be constantly reminded of the work of other musicians. In my case, on hearing the first and third pieces, both salon–style waltzes, it was Scott Joplin, Granados’s direct contemporary that came to mind. This may seem bizarre but if you can imagine a triple time rag with modulations and structure similar to Joplin, then you will know what I mean. There cannot have been a direct influence but it does suggest the existence of a Western 19th century generic piano salon style that was being adapted to different national traditions. Only a few years after these pieces were written, both composers were being published and selling well on both sides of the Atlantic. Ironically, it was returning from America during the first war that Granados and his wife were killed, their ship being torpedoed by a German submarine.

Other music betrays real influences. The sixth piece, Royal March, derives from Schumann’s repeating block chords style and the one after that, Cardboard soldiers, with its stereotypical augmented seconds, is a nod to the so-called orient. What that really means is a Muslim influence coming to Spain via North Africa.

Among the twenty two pieces that comprise the Álbum de melodías, there are specific tributes to Chopin, Beethoven and Wagner, and their names are incorporated in the titles, one of them simply called Beethoven. Chopin gets pastiche Mazurka and Wagner is represented by some Tristanesque chromaticisms in a short and formless piece. The Album manuscript was, apparently, a kind of wide-ranging scrap book of musical jottings. Not just musical. It included aphorisms of Granados’ own written in margins, and a few sketches. Some of the pieces were unfinished (not included here) and others disconcertingly end in a different key from that in which they started. The Pianist, Douglas Riva, in his booklet note regards Primavera as the finest piece in the collection. At less than two minutes it is a little pianistic gem consisting of a simple, beautifully-shaped melody with a flowing, Mendelssohnian accompaniment.

For some time it has been the pianist, Alicia de Larrocha, who has been associated with the proselytising of Granados’s piano music. Douglas Riva, who knows her and has worked with her, brings a slightly different manner to the music that is perhaps straighter and more steady. I like his playing. He makes no attempt to make a case for these youthful pieces by overplaying them. The music is not characterised by ostentation or rhetoric but often by restrained and subtle textures. The great critic/writer, Ernest Newman, was an early supporter of Granados and said that playing through some of his piano music was, "like a joyous wading knee-deep through beds of gorgeous flowers - always with a sure way through and the clearest of light and air around us". Douglas Riva respectfully shows us that Granados’ special textural qualities are foreshadowed in much of this early work.

A disc of considerable interest in terms of Granados’s early development but also enjoyable in its own right." by John Leeman

Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1    Carezza (Caress)
2    Dolora
3    Clotilde
4    La sirena (The Mermaid)
5    Dans le bois (In the Forest)
6    Marcha Real (Royal March)
7    Soldados de carton (Cardboard Soldiers)
8    Elvira
9-30    Album de melodias, Paris 1888

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : Scarlatti Sonata Transcriptions (Douglas Riva) 2CD (2007) FLAC (tracks), lossless

“The Riva series is essential for anyone interested in Spanish piano music." (MusicWeb International)
This final volume in the Naxos edition of Granados' complete piano music begins with the composer's final work, an impassioned and colourful transcription of the Intermezzo from the opera Goyescas. The disc also includes several youthful works dedicated to or inspired by women, as well as works inspired by Nature. The intricate Marchas militares for piano duet are among the composer's most delightful compositions, while the brilliant transcription of Albéniz's Triana from Iberia is his only work scored for two pianos. NAXOS
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

CD1
1-13    Piano Sonatas 1 to 13

CD2    
14-27    Piano Sonatas 14 to 26

Douglas Riva - Piano

GRANADOS : In the Village • Goyescas • ALBENIZ : Triana (Douglas Riva, Jordi Masó) (2008) FLAC (tracks), lossless

“The Riva series is essential for anyone interested in Spanish piano music." (MusicWeb International)
This final volume in the Naxos edition of Granados' complete piano music begins with the composer's final work, an impassioned and colourful transcription of the Intermezzo from the opera Goyescas. The disc also includes several youthful works dedicated to or inspired by women, as well as works inspired by Nature. The intricate Marchas militares for piano duet are among the composer's most delightful compositions, while the brilliant transcription of Albéniz's Triana from Iberia is his only work scored for two pianos. NAXOS
About this Recording


Enrique Granados (1867-1916)

1    Goyescas. Intermezzo    
2-5    Melodias
6    Mazurca Alla Polacca
7    Mazurka in A Minor
8    Andantino espressivo
9    Andalucia-Petenera
10    Canto del pescador (Fisherman's Song)
11    La Berceuse
12-14    3 Marchas Militaires    
15-24    En la aldea, Poema
25-26    2 Marchas militares

Isaac Albéniz (1860-1909)
(arr. E. Granados for 2 pianos)
27    Iberia, Book 2: No. 3. Triana

MARKUS STOCKHAUSEN — Sol Mestizo (1996) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

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