Free Global Shipping Starts at $50 • SHOP NOW
Best Violin & Guitar Music Collection | Classical & Contemporary Duets | Perfect for Concerts, Weddings & Relaxation
Best Violin & Guitar Music Collection | Classical & Contemporary Duets | Perfect for Concerts, Weddings & RelaxationBest Violin & Guitar Music Collection | Classical & Contemporary Duets | Perfect for Concerts, Weddings & Relaxation

Best Violin & Guitar Music Collection | Classical & Contemporary Duets | Perfect for Concerts, Weddings & Relaxation

$3.14 $5.71 -45%

Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50

Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international

People:23 people viewing this product right now!

Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!

Payment:Secure checkout

SKU:77054746

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa

Product Description

Historically informed new recordings of virtuoso duo concertantes scored for a popular 19th-century combination of instruments by the Paganini of the Guitar. Born in the south of Italy in 1781, Mauro Giuliani settled in Vienna in 1806 and quickly became famous as the greatest living guitarist. As the citys leading light in the classical guitar movement, Giuliani was a teacher, performer and composer of a rich repertory for the instrument (nearly 150 works with opus number, 70 without), much of which Brilliant Classics has recorded to an extent unrivalled by any other label. With this album we turn to the combination of violin and guitar which inspired a great deal of attractive music written for amateur performers, often featuring operatic melodies in variation sets such as Giuliani composed for the opening of his Op.25 Duo Concertant and the second movement of his Op.125 Serenade. Composed in Vienna in 1812, the Op.25 work is the most complex and imposing duo of the genre, beginning with an expansive sonata-form movement and continuing with a lyrical set of variations in which the two instruments alternate between soloist and accompanist. The influence of Giulianis most famous Viennese contemporary can also be felt in the Op.87 Duo Concertant, where an elegant Allegro maestoso is followed by an Andante molto sostenuto of almost Beethoven-like impact. Next comes a Scherzo that begins with a restless series of grace notes on the violin and a slight discrepancy between meter and rhythm that is reminiscent of certain Beethoven scherzos. The Serenade dates from after Giulianis return to his Italian homeland in 1819, and it also reflects a more traditional disposition of instruments, where the violin stars as the protagonist. Nevertheless Giulianis invention and Viennese experience may be relished in the brilliance of the concluding Rondo, which includes a disoriented reference to Papagenos music in The Magic Flute.

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

aangenaam

Top