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John Kitchen - Instruments from the Raymond Russell Collection Vol. 2 (2005)

Posted By: ArlegZ
John Kitchen - Instruments from the Raymond Russell Collection Vol. 2 (2005)

John Kitchen - Instruments from the Raymond Russell Collection Vol. 2 (2005)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 445 Mb | Total time: 77:22 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Delphian | # DCD34039 | Recorded: 2005

Edinburgh University’s Russell Collection is one of the world’s finest collections of early keyboard instruments. The second volume in John Kitchen’s ongoing project to bring its musical exhibits to life matches music by Handel, Purcell, the Scottish composer Robert Bremner and others including Mozart’s son Franz Xaver with a gloriously vigorous menagerie of spinets, virginals, chamber organs, clavichord and harpsichords.

John Kitchen - Instruments from the Russell Collection Vol. 1 (2001)

Posted By: ArlegZ
John Kitchen - Instruments from the Russell Collection Vol. 1 (2001)

John Kitchen - Instruments from the Russell Collection Vol. 1 (2001)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 472 Mb | Total time: 75:53 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Delphian | # DCD34001 | Recorded: 2000

This disc is intended to introduce a collection of keyboard instruments in Edinburgh, Scotland, but actually it accomplishes much more. The instruments featured here were built all over Europe, with the majority from the British Isles or France. They date from between 1586 and 1810, with the first example being an Italian virginal and the final one a fortepiano. Along the way come harpsichords of various kinds, a clavichord, and a small organ. Brief but relevant and engaging histories are given for each instrument.

Jean-Patrice Brosse - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pièces de Clavecin (2001)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Jean-Patrice Brosse - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pièces de Clavecin (2001)

Jean-Patrice Brosse - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pièces de Clavecin (2001)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 487 Mb | Total time: 76:16 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Pierre Verany | # PV700026 | Recorded: 2000

French musician Jean-Patrice Brosse is a versatile performer on both harpsichord and organ. In his discography of over 50 recordings, he has concentrated on French music, exploring the works of such composers as Couperin, Dandrieu, Corrette, Agincourt, and Balbastre. He has also made a number of thematic recordings, such as Le Clavecin au siècle de Louis XIV, Battles at Versailles, and A Concert of Bird Music at Versailles. Brosse is artistic director of the Festival du Comminges and directs the ensemble Concerto Rococo.

Sophie Yates - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pieces de Clavecin (2005)

Posted By: Designol
Sophie Yates - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pieces de Clavecin (2005)

Sophie Yates - Armand-Louis Couperin: Pièces de Clavecin (2005)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 490 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 189 Mb | Artwork included
Classical | Label: Chandos (Chaconne Series) | # CHAN 0718 | Time: 01:19:49

The New Grove Dictionary has entries on 10 musically active members of the Couperin dynasty, of whom Armand-Louis is, chronologically speaking, the eighth. Born in 1725, he was the son of one of the great François Couperin’s cousins, and held a number of organ posts in Paris, including the virtually family-owned one of St Gervais, on the way to Vespers at which he was killed in a road accident just a few months before the Revolution. According to accounts he was a likeable man whose life was led free from strife and uncorrupted by ambition, and it is not fanciful to say that such are the qualities which inform his harpsichord music. Mostly rather rangy character pieces, though with a sprinkling of dances, they show the bold textural richness of the later French harpsichordist-composers, if without the galloping imagination of figures such as Rameau, Balbastre or Royer. Instead, they prefer to inhabit a contented rococo world, into which they bring considerable professional polish. If that makes the pieces sound predominantly ‘pleasant’, well, so they are… as agreeable a body of solo harpsichord music as any. But they are not vapid and neither are they easy, and we can be grateful that this selection has fallen to a player as technically assured and as musically sympathetic as Sophie Yates.