1.-3. Malcolm Arnold - Guitar Concerto, op.67 [22'20]
4.-5. Leo Brouwer - Retrats Catalans [15'49]
6.-8. Herbert Chappell - Guitar Concerto No.1 (Caribbean Concerto) [21'42]
Eduardo Fernandez (guitar), English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Barry Wordsworth
(flac & scans)
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3/12/2014
7/27/2013
Guitar Music
Works for Guitar
Grosse Sonate, Opus 7, Sonate, Opus.12
Adagio e Rondo, Opus10
Sei Landler, Marche funèbre
Massimo Agostinelli, guitar
Urania Records LDV 14002
Recorded in 2011
Flac and scans
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3/01/2009
Happy birthday, Leo Brouwer
Cuban guitarist, composer and conductor Leo Brouwer (b. 1 March 1939) began his formal guitar studies in 1953 with Isaac Nicola and started composing shortly thereafter. By 1956 he had made his performance début and his first compositions had been published. He received grants for advanced guitar study at the University of Hartford (Connecticut) and for composition at the Juilliard School of Music; his teachers included Isadore Freed, Edward Diemente, Joseph Iadone, Vincent Persichetti and Stefan Wolpe.On his return to Cuba, he composed for cinema at the Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos (ICAIC), where he headed the music department; he was music advisor at Radio Habana Cuba, and taught at the Conservatorio Municipal in Havana. With composers Juan Blanco and Carlos Fariñas and conductor Manuel Duchesne Cuzán, Brouwer initiated the Cuban avant-garde music movement in the 1960s. He has long been an advocate of the Havana Concurso y Festival de Guitarra, and was principal conductor of the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra. In the 1990s, he directed the formation of the Orquesta de Córdoba, Spain, which he conducted until 2001.
Three phases are generally identified in Brouwer’s compositions. The first period is characterized by the use of traditional musical forms (sonatas, variations), strongly influenced by Cuban folk music. In the second period, inspired by the Polish school in the early 1960s, Brouwer experimented with a variety of modernist approaches, including serialism and aleatorism. The third phase shows what Brouwer terms a “new simplicity”, with neo-Romantic and minimalist elements, lyricism and the return of traditional forms.
His guitar works include over a dozen concertos, a large number of solo pieces, and arrangements. Other works include orchestral compositions, chamber and vocal works, and numerous film scores.
Sources: Grove Music Online, the Oxford Dictionary of Music (access date 100209)
The first comment includes links to several samples of Brouwer’s music for guitar from the 1960s through the 1990s. READ MORE...
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