Sophie Yates - Handel: Harpsichord Works, Vol.3 (2002)
BAND/ARTIST: Sophie Yates
- Title: Handel: Harpsichord Works, Vol.3
- Year Of Release: 2002
- Label: Chandos Records
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 70:58
- Total Size: 497 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
[01-04] Suite No. 6 in F sharp minor, HWV 431 (9:03)
[05-10] Suite No. 7 in G minor, HWV 432 (19:51)
[11-15] Suite No. 8 in F minor, HWV 433 (13:31)
[16-19] Suite No. 7 in B flat major, HWV 440 (8:38)
[20-26] Suite No. 8 in G major, HWV 441 (18:09)
[27] Preludio from Suite No. 9 in G major, HWV 442 (1:23)
Performers:
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
[01-04] Suite No. 6 in F sharp minor, HWV 431 (9:03)
[05-10] Suite No. 7 in G minor, HWV 432 (19:51)
[11-15] Suite No. 8 in F minor, HWV 433 (13:31)
[16-19] Suite No. 7 in B flat major, HWV 440 (8:38)
[20-26] Suite No. 8 in G major, HWV 441 (18:09)
[27] Preludio from Suite No. 9 in G major, HWV 442 (1:23)
Performers:
Sophie Yates, harpsichord
Sophie Yates brings formidable technique and strong dramatic feeling to these suites. The works of the first collection (1720, HWV426-33) are the more demanding, each of them opening with a prelude (or overture) – complex, pensive, often sombre – with a large-scale, fully worked fugue.
Yates plays these in an appropriately rhetorical manner, rhythmically taut yet with enough flexibility and attentiveness to the music's caesuras to shape and characterise it, at the same time giving it some sense of the improvisatory. Then she takes the fugues at a lively pace, just a touch too fast for the music to sound comfortable: this is brilliant, edge-of-your seat playing. Her playing, with its thoughtful details of timing, clearly conveys the structure of the music. She finds the same grandeur of manner in the Passacaille that ends the G minor Suite. For the rest, it's mainly dance music: some lively courantes and exuberant gigues, sober and deliberate allemandes, spacious and noble sarabandes – the crisp and precise fingerwork in that of the B flat Suite in the Second Set (1733), with its intensely detailed line, is a delight. These are the most appealing versions of Handel's suites: fresh, alive, with a real command of style and technique but also just a hint of risk about the playing. Handel's harpsichord music has sometimes been called dull, but there isn't a moment here when you'd believe that.
Yates plays these in an appropriately rhetorical manner, rhythmically taut yet with enough flexibility and attentiveness to the music's caesuras to shape and characterise it, at the same time giving it some sense of the improvisatory. Then she takes the fugues at a lively pace, just a touch too fast for the music to sound comfortable: this is brilliant, edge-of-your seat playing. Her playing, with its thoughtful details of timing, clearly conveys the structure of the music. She finds the same grandeur of manner in the Passacaille that ends the G minor Suite. For the rest, it's mainly dance music: some lively courantes and exuberant gigues, sober and deliberate allemandes, spacious and noble sarabandes – the crisp and precise fingerwork in that of the B flat Suite in the Second Set (1733), with its intensely detailed line, is a delight. These are the most appealing versions of Handel's suites: fresh, alive, with a real command of style and technique but also just a hint of risk about the playing. Handel's harpsichord music has sometimes been called dull, but there isn't a moment here when you'd believe that.
Classical | FLAC / APE | CD-Rip
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