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Landowska Plays Scarlatti Sonatas (2001)

Posted By: Benzok
Landowska Plays Scarlatti Sonatas (2001)

Landowska Plays Scarlatti Sonatas (2001)
EAC rip | APE, log, cue, covers | RAR Rec. 3% | 357 MB | hotfile, filesonic
Classical | Label: Pearl | 2CD

Recordings of the keyboard sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti come and go. Reissues of those made in Paris in the 1930s by Wanda Landowska seem to be always with us. A recent reissue of 26 of them quickly earned a rarely-bestowed rosette in a prestigious CD guide, and the comment, "her playing has more character than that of most modern players put together; it is electrifying in its sheer vitality and imagination".

Now comes a 2 CD reissue of all Landowska's Scarlatti recordings from Pearl Records. It also includes some Bach and Handel items and a first release of a C P E Bach concerto, taken from a 1943 Toronto broadcast. 150 minutes in all.

Extensive notes by Landowska's friend Denise Restout provide scholarly, eye-witness accounts of Landowska at work. For the original issue of 20 of these sonatas, Landowska provided notes, assessments, and some imaginative programs, and these are also included here. Recording of a further 20 was completed in Paris in March 1940. As Denise Restout writes, the take of K 490 was kept "as a testimony of those dangerous times". Anti-aircraft gunfire can be heard, alerting citizens to put on gas masks and run for shelter. Landowska, deeply absorbed in her playing, never faltered. No one in the studio dared to move, and the four minute recording was completed. Unlike some other recordings Landowska made at this time in Paris, all of the second series of 20 Scarlatti sonatas survived the German occupation, and were eventually released in 1947. Hearing the series in 1947 for the first time, Landowska wrote to a friend, "I listened to it with total joy". --Amazon

Biography

Perhaps the single most influential popularizer of the harpsichord in the twentieth century, Wanda Alexandra Landowska began playing piano at the age of four. She had lessons with Jan Klecynski, entered the Warsaw Conservatory where she studied piano with Aleksander Michalowski, and studied in Berlin with Moritz Moszkowski. In Berlin, she also studied composition, but admitted that she was put off by the textbook rules that bound the early stages of study in that craft.

Landowska Plays Scarlatti Sonatas (2001)


She had a strong predilection for the music of Bach in her earliest piano recitals. She began to tour widely as a pianist and, increasingly, as a harpsichordist. In 1909, on a tour of Russia, she played for the elderly writer Count Lev Tolstoi, who took a keen interest in her views of classical music performance. Her husband, writer Henry Lew, assisted her in her intense study of musical style and interpretation of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. She focused on reviving the harpsichord as a living concert and recital instrument, becoming an ancestor of the "original instruments" and "authentic performance" movements of the twentieth century. In 1912, she commissioned the Pleyel piano manufacturing firm to construct the first of many harpsichords built to her specifications.

In 1913, after being invited by Kretzschmar to give a harpsichord seminar at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik, she became trapped in Germany when World War I began. She and her husband were granted limited freedom as "civil prisoners on parole" for the duration as Russian subjects (Poland at the time was a province of Russia). After their release at the end of the war, her husband was killed in an automobile accident in Berlin. Soon after, she played the continuo part in a performance of Bach's St. Matthew Passion in Basel, the first time in that century that the harpsichord was used in the performance of the great work. Landowska had become convinced that only the harpsichord was truly appropriate to the Baroque and early Classical periods. She began teaching at the Basel Conservatory in 1919 and then returned to teach in Paris. She toured the United States for the first time in 1923, taking four Pleyel harpsichords with her. On this tour, she appeared with Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra, making her first acoustic recordings. (She had previously made piano rolls.)

She established L'Ecole de Musique Ancienne in St.-Leu-la-Forêt, near Paris, in 1925. She appeared in concerts in Paris, sometimes still playing piano. She commissioned from Manuel de Falla a masterpiece of modern harpsichord literature, the Concerto for harpsichord and chamber ensemble, and then another one, Francis Poulenc's Concert champêtre for harpsichord and orchestra.

When the Germans invaded France, Landowska fled her establishment, leaving behind many harpsichords and a library of 10,000 volumes. She reached Banyuls-sur-mer, in the Pyrenees, and managed to get passage to the United States in 1941. She gave a concert of harpsichord music in New York on February 2, 1942, and returned to teaching as her main occupation. She toured widely and was particularly noted for her performance of Bach's Goldberg Variations. She found a new home in Lakeville, CT, and recorded a highly acclaimed collection of the complete Well-Tempered Clavier at the age of 70. She lived a few weeks past her 80th birthday.

Her playing was vigorous, rhythmic, and colorful. She had a predilection for a very strong-voiced, richly colored instrument that is questioned today by some; it is opined that this was a reaction against the instrument's general reputation for being dry and colorless. She developed modern harpsichord technique, which permits a considerable degree of legato playing despite the instrument's nature as a producer of individually plucked notes. ~ Joseph Stevenson, Rovi

Landowska Plays Scarlatti Sonatas (2001)


Tracklisting:

CD1
01. Sonata in D L96 La Chasse <2:45>
02. Sonata in d minor K9 Pastorale <3:17>
03. Sonata in C K159 <1:23>
04. Sonata in f minor L462 <3:38>
05. Sonata in G K124 <2:10>
06. Sonata in g minor K8 <1:54>
07. Sonata in A K429 Barcarolle <3:58>
08. Sonata in F K17 <2:49>
09. Sonata in f minor K519 <1:30>
10. Sonata in b minor K377 <1:35>
11. Sonata in D K430 Tempo di Ballo <2:27>
12. Sonata in F sharp minor K447 <1:22>
13. Sonata in D K397 <3:02>
14. Sonata in C sharp minor K247 Meditative <3:47>
15. Sonata in E K206 Les Adieux <4:16>
16. Sonata in E K20 <1:27>
17. Sonata in G K328 Les Cloches <3:25>
18. Sonata in g minor K450 <1:55>
19. Sonata in E flat major K193 <2:28>
20. Sonata in E K380 <4:35>
21. Sonata in F K107 <2:07>
22. Sonata in F K6 <1:38>
23. Sonata in D K490 Gris Cendre <4:03>
24. Sonata in b minor K27 <1:49>
25. Sonata in D K400 <1:55>
26. Sonata in C K423 <3:39>
27. Sonata in a minor K109 <4:23>

CD2
01. Sonata in F minor K69 <2:24>
02. Sonata in F K276 <2:03>
03. Sonata in D minor K141 <3:48>
04. Sonata in G minor K234 <2:52>
05. Sonata in D minor K32 <1:11>
06. Sonata in D K443 <3:55>
07. Sonata in D K492 <4:16>
08. Sonata in D K29 <2:37>
09. Sonata in B flat K544 <1:59>
10. Sonata in F K256 <4:20>
11. Sonata in F minor K481 <4:06>
12. Sonata in G K259 <2:51>
13. Sonata in C K515 <1:30>
14. Sonata in D K281 <2:56>
15. Sonata in B Flat K440 <1:51>
16. Sonata in D K443 <2:48>
17. Sonata in D minor K32 <1:15>
18. J.S. Bach: Fantasia in C minor BWV906 <3:23>
19. Handel: Air and Variations in B flat minor <4:38>
20. C.P.E. Bach Concerto in D for Harpsichord and Strings: Allegro <8:27>
21. Andante <7:17>
22. Allegro di molto <6:23>

EAC extraction logfile from 19. November 2006, 14:10 for CD
Wanda Landowska / Landowska plays Scarlatti CD1

Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A Adapter: 2 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Combined read/write offset correction : 0
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo

Other options :
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Installed external ASPI interface


Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename E:\Landowska plays Scarlatti\CD1\CDImage.wav

Peak level 95.5 %
Range quality 100.0 %
CRC 26BB2A9D
Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

EAC extraction logfile from 19. November 2006, 14:45 for CD
Wanda Landowska / Landowska plays Scarlatti CD2

Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A Adapter: 2 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Combined read/write offset correction : 0
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo

Other options :
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Installed external ASPI interface


Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename E:\Landowska plays Scarlatti\CD2\CDImage.wav

Peak level 97.2 %
Range quality 100.0 %
CRC 0CFF2A2A
Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report


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