Raphaëlla Smits - Johann Kaspar Mertz: Le Romantique (2015)
BAND/ARTIST: Raphaëlla Smits
- Title: Johann Kaspar Mertz: Le Romantique
- Year Of Release: 2015
- Label: Accent
- Genre: Classical Guitar
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:18:52
- Total Size: 329 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Harmonie du soir
02. Le Romantique
03. Bardenklänge, Op. 13: No. 6, Tarantelle
04. Introduction et Rondo brillant, Op. 11
05. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 6, Lob der Thränen
06. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 5, Das Fischermädchen
07. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 1, Ständchen
08. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 2, Liebesbotschaft
09. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 4, Aufenthalt
10. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 3, Die Post
11. Le carnaval de Venise, Op. 6
12. 3 Morceaux, Op. 65: No. 3, Le gondolier
13. Pianto dell'Amante
14. La Rimembranza
15. Souvenir de Choulhoff
Johann Kaspar Mertz (1806-1856), originally from Pressburg (today Bratislava), lived and worked in Vienna from 1840; this city was the focal point of the musical world during the first half of the 19th century. Mertz was one of the best-known guitar virtuosos of his time, composing brilliant works for his own use on his numerous concert tours. In these compositions, he orientated himself on the romantic piano music of Mendelssohn, Schumann, Chopin and especially Liszt, but the influences of Italian Belcanto in the style of Donizetti or Bellini can be clearly heard as well. Many guitarists and composers of the 19th century used instruments with an expanded range. Mertz changed from a six-stringed guitar to an instrument with eight strings, finally settling on a guitar with ten-strings.
Raphaëlla Smits, the Belgian Grande Dame of the Guitar, uses two historic French instruments for this recording (by Mirecourt c1827 and by Roudhloff c1830), as well as an eight-stringed instrument by the luthier John Gilbert. The present recording features the grand fantasias 'Harmonie du soir' and' Le Romantique', the latter of which has provided the title of the CD. Alongside several other works, some of which were published posthumously, Raphaëlla Smits has also recorded Mertz's transcriptions of six Schubert Lieder, influenced by Liszt's Schubert transcriptions for piano, and the listener completely forgets that these works once had texts.
01. Harmonie du soir
02. Le Romantique
03. Bardenklänge, Op. 13: No. 6, Tarantelle
04. Introduction et Rondo brillant, Op. 11
05. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 6, Lob der Thränen
06. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 5, Das Fischermädchen
07. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 1, Ständchen
08. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 2, Liebesbotschaft
09. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 4, Aufenthalt
10. 6 Schubert'sche Lieder (Arr. J. Mertz for Guitar): No. 3, Die Post
11. Le carnaval de Venise, Op. 6
12. 3 Morceaux, Op. 65: No. 3, Le gondolier
13. Pianto dell'Amante
14. La Rimembranza
15. Souvenir de Choulhoff
Johann Kaspar Mertz (1806-1856), originally from Pressburg (today Bratislava), lived and worked in Vienna from 1840; this city was the focal point of the musical world during the first half of the 19th century. Mertz was one of the best-known guitar virtuosos of his time, composing brilliant works for his own use on his numerous concert tours. In these compositions, he orientated himself on the romantic piano music of Mendelssohn, Schumann, Chopin and especially Liszt, but the influences of Italian Belcanto in the style of Donizetti or Bellini can be clearly heard as well. Many guitarists and composers of the 19th century used instruments with an expanded range. Mertz changed from a six-stringed guitar to an instrument with eight strings, finally settling on a guitar with ten-strings.
Raphaëlla Smits, the Belgian Grande Dame of the Guitar, uses two historic French instruments for this recording (by Mirecourt c1827 and by Roudhloff c1830), as well as an eight-stringed instrument by the luthier John Gilbert. The present recording features the grand fantasias 'Harmonie du soir' and' Le Romantique', the latter of which has provided the title of the CD. Alongside several other works, some of which were published posthumously, Raphaëlla Smits has also recorded Mertz's transcriptions of six Schubert Lieder, influenced by Liszt's Schubert transcriptions for piano, and the listener completely forgets that these works once had texts.
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