• logo

Giulia Ballaré - Heitor Villa-Lobos: Complete Solo Guitar Works (2025) [Hi-Res]

Giulia Ballaré - Heitor Villa-Lobos: Complete Solo Guitar Works (2025) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Giulia Ballaré

  • Title: Heitor Villa-Lobos: Complete Solo Guitar Works
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: Da Vinci Classics
  • Genre: Classical Guitar
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz
  • Total Time: 01:26:00
  • Total Size: 322 mb / 1.24 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

CD1
01. Cinq préludes, W 419: No. 1, Homenagem ao Sertanejo brasileiro
02. Cinq préludes, W 419: No. 2, Homenagem ao Malandro Carioca
03. Cinq préludes, W 419: No. 3, Homenagem à Bach
04. Cinq préludes, W 419: No. 4, Homenagem ao índio brasileiro
05. Cinq préludes, W 419: No. 5, Homenagem à Vida Social
06. Douze études, W 235: No. 1, Des arpèges: Animé, Lent
07. Douze études, W 235: No. 2, Des arpèges: Très Animé
08. Douze études, W 235: No. 3, Des arpèges: Un peu Animé
09. Douze études, W 235: No. 4, Des accords répétés: Un peu modéré
10. Douze études, W 235: No. 5, Andantino
11. Douze études, W 235: No. 6, Un peu Animé
12. Douze études, W 235: No. 7, Très animé, Moderé
13. Douze études, W 235: No. 8, Modéré
14. Douze études, W 235: No. 9, Des ornements: Un peu Animé
15. Douze études, W 235: No. 10, Animé
16. Douze études, W 235: No. 11, Lent, Animé, Lent
17. Douze études, W 235: No. 12, Un peu Animé

CD2
01. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 1, Mazurca-Chôro
02. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 2, Scottisch-Chôro
03. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 3, Valsa-Chôro
04. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 4, Gavotta-Chôro
05. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 5, Chôrinho
06. Suite populaire brésilienne, W 020: No. 6, Valse-Chôro
07. Choros No. 1 in E Minor, W 161 "Chôro típico"

Heitor Villa-Lobos was one of the least prolific composers of guitar music in the early 20th century, with only 24 pieces published during his lifetime, including Chôro No. 1, Suite Populaire Brésilienne, Cinq Préludes, and Douze Études. It is remarkable that despite his vast catalogue of composition and his affinity for the guitar, he has produced relatively few works for the instrument. Nonetheless, Villa-Lobos gained prominence in concert and recording programs starting in the 1960s due to the high musical quality of his works and his deep connection to the instrument. His relationship with the guitar has often been compared to that of Chopin with the piano; highlighting his natural and joyful style, though different in musical language.
It was the Spanish guitarist Andrés Segovia who first proposed this image in the preface to the first edition of the Douze Études in 1953: “Villa-Lobos has gifted the history of the guitar with fruits of his talent as vigorous and flavorful as those of Scarlatti and Chopin.” Notably, Segovia speaks of a gift: indeed, unlike most 20th-century guitar literature, Villa-Lobos’ guitar works are almost exclusively the result of a creative urge independent of any external prompt. Although he had contact with some of the best guitar virtuosos (from Segovia to Miguel Llobet, including Regino Sainz de la Maza, Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Abel Carlevaro, and Alirio Diaz), Villa-Lobos required no assistance from these artists, possessing a first hand, in-depth knowledge of the instrument’s capabilities.
Villa-Lobos was born in Rio de Janeiro on March 5, 1887, into a musically inclined family. His father, Raul, a government official and cellist, was his first teacher, introducing him to the cello and clarinet. Raul forbade, however, the young Heitor him from playing the guitar. After his father’s death, his mother, who wanted him to become a doctor, confiscated his musical belongings, which only fueled his passion for music. Without access to a piano, Villa-Lobos secretly studied guitar using 19th-century methods and developed a unique technique. He also immersed himself in Rio’s non-academic musical scene, participating in chôros performances. A largely self-taught composer, Villa-Lobos acknowledged his influence from classical works, especially Bach and Haydn, and studied Vincent D’Indy’s Cours de Composition musicale. Throughout his life, the guitar remained a key instrument for his musical experimentation.
It was during his first stay in Paris that Villa-Lobos decided to turn his youthful guitar passion into a professional artistic project. The composer spent a significant time in Paris between 1923 and 1930; an epoque during which, the French capital was a crossroads for meetings between famous guitarists and musicians. Andrés Segovia, who had made a historic debut in the city on April 7, 1924, regularly visited and never missed an opportunity to commission composers to write for the guitar. Musicians particularly sensitive to the instrument, such as Joaquín Turina, Joaquín Rodrigo, Georges Migot, and Manuel María Ponce, also lived there. During these years, Emilio Pujol began his editorial activity at Max Eschig with the prestigious Bibliothèque de Musique Ancienne et Moderne pour guitare, and publisher Henry Lemoine published two treatises by Jacques Tessarech, titled L’Évolution de la Guitare (1923) and La Guitare Polyphonique (1926). It was therefore natural that Villa-Lobos made use of his self-taught guitar skills in this context, exploiting the polyphonic capacities of the guitar. He embarked on a musical and editorial project that would lead to the publication of two major works for guitar, each in a different and opposite style: the modern Douze Études on one side, and the Suite Populaire Brésilienne on the other, referring to his youthful experience as a chorão (performer of chôros). Although Villa-Lobos delivered the two manuscripts to the publisher Max Eschig in the fall of 1928, a series of extra-musical circumstances led to a delay of more than twenty years in their actual publication: Douze Études was printed in 1953, and Suite Populaire Brésilienne in 1955. In 1928, Villa-Lobos also resumed writing a 1920 piece, Chôros No. 1 – Tipico, and sent manuscript copies to Miguel Llobet and Regino Sainz de la Maza.
The term Chôros has multiple meanings in Brazilian music. Etymologically derived from chorar (to cry or lament), it reflects the melancholic nature of much of Brazilian popular music. By the late 19th century, Chôro had two main interpretations: a formal composition in duple time (2/4) following a rondo scheme (ABACA), and an improvised, contrapuntal performance practice by chorões, who played serenades with small ensembles using instruments like guitar, cavaquinho, and mandolin, often based on European-origin dances. These features are present in the Suite Populaire Brésilienne, with the contrapuntal aspect humorously considered by Villa-Lobos to surpass classical counterpoint, though it’s limited when played on a single instrument.
The known early compositions were reworked later, with some revisions dating back to the late 1940s: this is the case with the dances forming the Suite Populaire Brésilienne, written between 1907 and 1923, with the final version, including two new dances (Valsa-Chôro and Gavotta-Chôro), completed in the 1950’s.
Chôros No. 1 is the first of a long series of pieces written for various ensembles (from piano and duo to orchestra) bearing the same title. Villa-Lobos consistently employed the term “tipico” alongside the title, presenting it as an example of a traditional Chôro not subjected, like all the other Chôros in the cycle, to speculative elaboration. The piece is dedicated to Ernesto Nazareth, a pianist famous for his Brazilian-style “rag-times.”
Villa-Lobos’ early guitar compositions were influenced by 19th-century traditions, adapting piano models with ease, similar to composers like Mauro Giuliani and Johann Kaspar Mertz. However, his Douze Études (1924-1928) marked a departure from external instrumental influences, focusing on the guitar’s characteristics. These études were revolutionary, transforming the guitar from its intimate, salon-style into an instrument with dramatic, percussive, and powerful expression, reflecting a modern musical language. The work was inspired by Villa-Lobos’ meeting with Andrés Segovia in 1924, who encouraged him to contribute to the creation of a modern guitar repertoire. The result was one of the most significant contributions to guitar literature.
Although often performed separately, the Douze Études were conceived as a unified whole, with each piece closely related tonally to the previous and following ones. The collection is divided into two large blocks, each consisting of six studies: the first block includes studies based on a single technical-musical formula repeated throughout the piece, while the studies in the second block adopt a more varied writing style, closer to the morceau de concert, and present greater formal complexity. Stylistically, the Douze Études are reflective of Villa-Lobos’ rich and multifaceted cultural influences: devotion to Bach’s music, evoked from the very first Étude No. 1 with a writing model borrowed from the opening piece of Das Wohltemperierte Clavier and later reaffirmed in the complex polyphonic writing of Étude No. 5, Romantic lyricism akin to Chopin present in Études No. 4 and 7, and traditional Brazilian music, both in its urban form, as seen in the stylized tango of Étude No. 6 or the Modhina of Étude No. 8, as well as African and Amazonian influences in the last studies. Études No. 2 and 3 clearly show the influence of 19th-century guitar literature, which Villa-Lobos considered a key part of his education on the instrument.
Upon returning to Brazil in 1930, Villa-Lobos witnessed a coup d’etat and the rise of Getúlio Vargas, who established an authoritarian regime. Forced to remain in Brazil, Villa-Lobos became one of the most celebrated artists of the regime. During this time, he worked extensively to promote basic music education across the country. However, overwhelmed by official duties and honors, Villa-Lobos reduced his focus on the guitar after 1930. He was hailed as a national hero upon his death on November 17, 1959.


As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • platico
  •  wrote in 00:20
    • Like
    • 1
gracias...