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Letizia Calandra- Song Cycles (CD)

SKU: 5028421957982
Regular price $13.99
Unit price
per
the album cover for Letizia Calandra - Song Cycles
the album cover for Letizia Calandra - Song Cycles

The Argentinian composer Carlos Guastavino (1912-2000) was unafraid to distance himself from contemporary modernism. He resolutely followed his own path, leaving experimentation to others, creating a catalogue of over 500 intimate, autobiographical works harking back to the 19th century, many of them for voice and piano. In keeping with the aesthetic of these songs, this album has been given a 'vintage' sound quality, evocative of the 45 and 78 rpm records of a bygone era. Guastavino studied chemical engineering in the Argentinian town of Santa Fe, before going to Buenos Aires in 1938, having received a district grant to study music at the National Conservatory. But on arriving there, instead of entering the conservatory, he elected to take private lessons. His earliest published songs date from around this time, and they became taken up by European artists who were entranced by Guastavino's gift for memorable, singable melody. Concert tours took him across the world, but his music was always flavoured by the sound of his homeland nostalgia for Argentina, it's people, and especially it's flora and fauna in such works as Flores Argentinas (1969) and Siete Canciones sobre poesías de Rafael Alberti (1946). The intelligence and artistic sensitivity of Cuban pianist Marcos Madrigal and Italian soprano Letizia Calandra, combined with the poetics of Guastavino, make for an album of warmth, tranquility and delight. Letizia Calandra combines perfect diction with a gift for creating different vocal colours, and a dramatic skill that conveys the theatrical quality of Guastavino's settings. For his part, Marcos Madrigal is sensitive to all the little nods and winks in Guastavino's writing, accentuating for example his quotation of instrumental commonplaces of other periods, such as the horn call in 'Jardín de amores' (Garden of love), the first of the Alberti songs.

Tracklist:

  1. Flores Argentinas: I. Cortadera, Plumerito
  2. Flores Argentinas: II. El Clavel Del Aire Blanco
  3. Flores Argentinas: III. Campanilla ¿a Dónde Vas?
  4. Flores Argentinas: IV. El Vinagrillo Morado
  5. Flores Argentinas: V. ¡que Linda La Madreselva!
  6. Flores Argentinas: VI. Las Flores Del Machachín
  7. Flores Argentinas: VII. Las Achiras Coloradas
  8. Flores Argentinas: VIII. Jazmín Del País. ¡qué Lindo!
  9. Flores Argentinas: IX. Aromito, Flor De Tusca
  10. Flores Argentinas: X. La Flor Del Aguapé
  11. Flores Argentinas: XI. Ay, Aljaba, Flor De Chilco
  12. Flores Argentinas: XII. Ceibo, Ceibo Zuiñandí
  13. Flores Argentinas: XIII. La Rosa Y El Sauce
  14. Elegía Para Un Gorrión
  15. Se Equivocó La Paloma
  16. Jardín De Amores
  17. ¡a Volar!
  18. Nana Del Niño Malo
  19. La Novia
  20. Geografía Física
  21. ¡al Puente De La Golondrina!
  22. Elegía
  23. El Sampedrino
Format: New CD/Classical

Letizia Calandra- Song Cycles (CD)

SKU: 5028421957982
Regular price $13.99
Unit price
per

Release Date: 08.28.2020

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to FOUR copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

The Argentinian composer Carlos Guastavino (1912-2000) was unafraid to distance himself from contemporary modernism. He resolutely followed his own path, leaving experimentation to others, creating a catalogue of over 500 intimate, autobiographical works harking back to the 19th century, many of them for voice and piano. In keeping with the aesthetic of these songs, this album has been given a 'vintage' sound quality, evocative of the 45 and 78 rpm records of a bygone era. Guastavino studied chemical engineering in the Argentinian town of Santa Fe, before going to Buenos Aires in 1938, having received a district grant to study music at the National Conservatory. But on arriving there, instead of entering the conservatory, he elected to take private lessons. His earliest published songs date from around this time, and they became taken up by European artists who were entranced by Guastavino's gift for memorable, singable melody. Concert tours took him across the world, but his music was always flavoured by the sound of his homeland nostalgia for Argentina, it's people, and especially it's flora and fauna in such works as Flores Argentinas (1969) and Siete Canciones sobre poesías de Rafael Alberti (1946). The intelligence and artistic sensitivity of Cuban pianist Marcos Madrigal and Italian soprano Letizia Calandra, combined with the poetics of Guastavino, make for an album of warmth, tranquility and delight. Letizia Calandra combines perfect diction with a gift for creating different vocal colours, and a dramatic skill that conveys the theatrical quality of Guastavino's settings. For his part, Marcos Madrigal is sensitive to all the little nods and winks in Guastavino's writing, accentuating for example his quotation of instrumental commonplaces of other periods, such as the horn call in 'Jardín de amores' (Garden of love), the first of the Alberti songs.

Tracklist:

  1. Flores Argentinas: I. Cortadera, Plumerito
  2. Flores Argentinas: II. El Clavel Del Aire Blanco
  3. Flores Argentinas: III. Campanilla ¿a Dónde Vas?
  4. Flores Argentinas: IV. El Vinagrillo Morado
  5. Flores Argentinas: V. ¡que Linda La Madreselva!
  6. Flores Argentinas: VI. Las Flores Del Machachín
  7. Flores Argentinas: VII. Las Achiras Coloradas
  8. Flores Argentinas: VIII. Jazmín Del País. ¡qué Lindo!
  9. Flores Argentinas: IX. Aromito, Flor De Tusca
  10. Flores Argentinas: X. La Flor Del Aguapé
  11. Flores Argentinas: XI. Ay, Aljaba, Flor De Chilco
  12. Flores Argentinas: XII. Ceibo, Ceibo Zuiñandí
  13. Flores Argentinas: XIII. La Rosa Y El Sauce
  14. Elegía Para Un Gorrión
  15. Se Equivocó La Paloma
  16. Jardín De Amores
  17. ¡a Volar!
  18. Nana Del Niño Malo
  19. La Novia
  20. Geografía Física
  21. ¡al Puente De La Golondrina!
  22. Elegía
  23. El Sampedrino