- School of Languages and Linguistics - Research Publications
School of Languages and Linguistics - Research Publications
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ItemJosquin and eternal life - Josquin y la vida eternaGriffiths, J (Note 1 Music GMBH, 2021)Booklet to accompany the CD "The Josquin Songbook" by María Cristina Kiehr, Jonatán Alvarado and Ariel Abramovitch
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Item«il piu bel secreto et arte» Vincenzo and Vidal — a five-hundred-year legacyGriffiths, J (Stradivarius Edizioni Musicali, 2021)In Venice, around 1517, a lutenist named Vidal embarked on producing a beautiful manuscript of lute tablature, emulating a style he already knew from other lute books published in the same city a few years earlier. His book comprises one hundred and forty pages of music written in numeric tablature consisting of forty-two compositions, preceded by a table of contents and six detailed introductory pages. Vincenzo Capirola is only slightly less of a mystery figure. It has been revealed that he was from Brescia, born into a wealthy mercantile family in 1474 and that he lived a long a life until he was in his mid-seventies. He is last recorded alive in 1548 when he was seventy-four. Documentary evidence confirms his presence in Brescia in 1489, 1498, and 1548. He was in Venice in 1517. His book is one of the most important sources of lute music of the early sixteenth century. Paul Beier performs close to one third of them on this CD.
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ItemLa tiorba encantadaGriffiths, J (Aula Records, 2021)The sumptuous and sensuous sounds of the theorbo are one of the special delicacies of the music of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The theorbo was one of a series of innovations that saw the renaissance lute transformed beyond the wildest dreams of its earlier masters and makers. From the 1580s we learn of experiments taking in place in both France and Italy, musicians endeavouring to bring novelty to the renaissance lute, changes that would allow it to adapt to new sonorities and new ways of thinking about music. The theorbo was one of the products of these experiments, a lute that could compete with the harpsichord and that was to cast its own spell on the music of 17th-century Italy and France.
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ItemBach y Bogdanovic comparten escenario / Bach andy Bogdanovic share the stageGriffiths, J (Contrastes Records, 2021)The point of intersection between Johann Sebastian Bach and Dusan Bogdanovic is significantly deeper than the shared B of their surnames. On the outside, their language is very different but in the depths of their communicative spirit they are on a similar wavelength. We need to hear them in juxtaposition—play the tracks of this CD in an aleatoric (dis_order—to hear the way they intersect in the continually changing musical landscape of our civilisation. One strong link between them is the place of improvisation in their musical identity. Born in 1685, Bach grew up an organist in a family of musicians at a time when improvisation was an essential skill that was widely practised. Bach was renowned for his capacity to improvise fugues of up to six voices, an ability that is also evident in the depth of the contrapuntal works he crafted on paper in his daily compositional activity. Bogdanovic was born 270 years later in 1955 but seems to have inherited both the stylistic complexity and love of improvisation often associated with Bach, but at a different time and place, in a musical world of different stimuli.
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ItemPer voi ardoGriffiths, J (IBS Records, 2021)A new style of lute song blossomed along the northern Mediterranean seaboard in the 1530s, especially in Italy and Spain, closely connected with the rebirth of Classical culture, and the activity of literary humanists. It was to remain in fashion for much longer than might have been expected, right until the end of the century. It all began fifty years earlier with Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) who made the first Latin translations of Plato and awoke curiosity about ancient Greece, its poetry and its music. Per voi ardo thus presents a large number of Italian madrigals in the form they are preserved in Spain in the vihuela books of Enríquez de Valderrábano (1547), Diego Pisador (1552) and Miguel de Fuenllana (1554). They are complemented by settings by Alonso Mudarra, original compositions like Milán’s, using Italian texts of the same flavour, and with accompaniments that parallel the arranged madrigals in many ways.
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ItemUn círculo, un mundo, una sonata / a Circle, a World, a SonataGriffiths, J (Contrastes Records, 2020)The Italian sonata has a n accidental origin in the early seventeenth century but came to be one of the central instrumental forms of the subsequent three centuries. Originally an ensemble work, the solo sonata came to dominate the solo repertoire for keyboard and violin in the eighteenth century through to well into the twentieth. This recital program presents solo sonatas for guitar by Italian composers from 1750 until 1977.
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ItemTárrega-LlobetGriffiths, J (Contrastes Records, 2020)Expanatory notes for a program of music by Francisco Tárrega and Miguel Llobet
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ItemLe DépartGriffiths, J (Contrastes Records, 2020)
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ItemNovaeGriffiths, J (Contrastes Records, 2020-06-19)
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ItemEating out in Napier in the 60s and 70s: My Grandmother CookingAnderson, L (Aristologist, 2020)