J. Haydn - per il cembalo solo by Pierre Gallon ECL1701E

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Free Shipment for European Union and Switzerland. Product details : Composer : Joseph Haydn Artists :Pierre Gallon, harpsichord Program : Partita HobXVI:6 "Divertimento per il cembalo Solo“ - "Geistlisches Lied“ HobXXVIa:17 - Sonata per Clavicembalo HobXVI:27  - Divertimento HobXVI:12 - Sonata ...En savoir plus
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Free Shipment for European Union and Switzerland.

Product details :

Composer : Joseph Haydn

Artists :Pierre Gallon, harpsichord

Program : Partita HobXVI:6 "Divertimento per il cembalo Solo“ - "Geistlisches Lied“ HobXXVIa:17 - Sonata per Clavicembalo HobXVI:27  - Divertimento HobXVI:12 - Sonata per Cembalo "a Principe Niccolo Esterhàzy“ op.13 HobXVI:24 - Capriccio HobXVII:1 „Acht Sauschneider müssen seyn“ - Auf mein Vaters Grab“ HobXXVIa:24

Sonata per Cembalo „a Principe Niccolo Esterhàzy“ op.13 HobXVI:24 Allegro
Geistlisches Lied“ HobXXVIa:17  

Press round-up :

"Pierre Gallon llega a evocar, con respecto a estas composiciones de la época rococó, "un canto del cisne" del clavicémbalo." Clasica2

"Sin dalle prime note le sonorità, ricche e piene, giustificano la scelta di questa registrazione, e cioè di adottare il clavicembalo (...) per l’interpretazione delle composizioni per tastiera." Ferruccio Nuzzo GreyPanthers
 
"Gallon produces exciting but controlled playing, whose pacing is always well-judged and comfortable to listen to. He makes effective use of agogic accents and rubato to compensate for the lack of weight on the harpsichord, but also uses the registration possibilities of his double-manual instrument very effectively." Noel O'Regan Early Music Review "
 
 "This release on the French L'Encelade label enters unfamiliar territory, although this concerns not the repertoire, but the instrument. As an harpsichordist I have enjoyed exploring some of this music, but it is rare to hear Haydn in the concert hall or on CD, erformed on my own instrument. This recording points to the fact that for much of his creative life, the harpsichord was Haydn's own instrument too. (...) There may still be some diehards who regard the harpsichord as an inexpressive instrument, compared to the piano. I recommend this CD as thorough antidote to such view." Colin Booth - The Consort
 
"Pierre Gallon trifft mit seinem schlackenfreien Spiel und großem klanglichen Einfühlungsvermögen genau die richtige Balance für die Möglichkeiten seines Instruments an der Epochengrenze. Eine Bereicherung des Repertoires, das die Geburtsstunde der Wiener Klassik weiter ausleuchtet." von Detlef Krenge BR Klassik
 
Overview :

“The story of “aesthetic truth” on the keyboard is like something out of a novel and so, more than two centuries after Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) wrote his keyboard music, the question of which instrument is best-suited to its appreciation is among those that this recording appears to raise.

As far as Early Music is concerned, Germanic Romanticism played a founding role in the history of musical taste. That century of virtuosi and transcribers, with its sensitivity to the distant past, accustomed the modern listener to appreciating - if not necessarily exploring - the keyboard music of the 17th and 18th centuries. Liszt and Mendelssohn’s passion for Bach, along with Brahms’s interest in Handel, at a time when both composers had fallen into obscurity, signalled a sea change involving a return to the very roots of the music they were playing. Even so, this resurrection was essentially played out… on the piano. Even as recently as the 1960s, the next truly legendary generation of modern virtuoso pianists such as Clara Haskil, Richter and Horowitz mostly used Steinway pianos, played in a Russian style with a velvety, detached timbre and no harshness, to recreate the world of Haydn or Scarlatti, both in concert and in the recording studio.

In 2017, we now have a mature conception of what the term “Baroque” means, and this Haydn project offers listeners a fresh perspective on one of the major artists of the 18th century. This recording is an unusual milestone in the modern approach to Baroque keyboard music, as it introduces Joseph Haydn in the guise of a master harpsichord player. In fact, this was the first instrument that the maestro ever played, we might even call it his own private instrument, as it was the one he used to improvise, to give concerts and, above all, to compose.

The period covered by these seven pieces, circa 1766 to 1781, came after the absolute peak of the harpsichord’s popularity, in other words the period between Frescobaldi and Johann Sebastian Bach. Although, when talking about these Rococo era compositions, Pierre Gallon goes as far as to call them “a swan song” of the harpsichord, let us not be misled, this is merely a matter of highlighting a paradox; although the vogue for the instrument was on the wane, this was also very definitely a period of gestation and, albeit often referred to as a “transitional phase”, for want of a better description, it actually led to the advent of the incomparable Viennese Classical Style.” 

C. Himelfarb