Cheap Golden Age Of The Russian Guitar (Music) (Nikolay Ivanovich Aleksandrov, Vasily Sergeyevich Alferiev, Anonymous, Ignatz von Held, Vladimir Morkov, A. Palevich, Vasilii Stepanivich Sarenko, Andrei Osipovich Sychra, Alexander Vetrov, Mikhail Timofeevich Vysotsky) Price
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| ARTIST: | Nikolay Ivanovich Aleksandrov, Vasily Sergeyevich Alferiev, Anonymous, Ignatz von Held, Vladimir Morkov, A. Palevich, Vasilii Stepanivich Sarenko, Andrei Osipovich Sychra, Alexander Vetrov, Mikhail Timofeevich Vysotsky |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Dorian Recordings |
| TYPE: | Chamber, Chamber Music, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Artists, Guitar Solo, Miscellaneous, Miscellaneous Music, World Music |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | As From Beyond The Forest, Polonaise, God Save the Tsar, Polonaise Melancholique, Where Shall I Find?, I Am A Gypsy Girl, Kamarinskaia, Prelude, Luchinushka, Kamarinskaia, As Behind The Dear River, Oh, It Hurts, Barynia, Ballade, Potpurri From Glinka's Opera 'Ruslan and Liudmila', Impromptu, Capriccio, Tyrolian Waltz, 'At The Seashore' Fantasia, Ukranian Dance |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 053479317025 |
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Customer Reviews of Golden Age Of The Russian Guitar
This is a question rather than review This is not really a review but I have a question regarding the second item of the CD: Polonaise. <
>It has struck me that the composer mentioned is Andrei Osipovich Sychra. This is because all my life I have known that the composer of that piece was a polish composer Michal Kleofas Oginski and the name of that polonaise was "Farewell to homeland" (in polish "Pozegnanie ojczyzny") and originally it was written for a piano. <
>I would appreciate if some well informed person would enlighten me in that matter.
It's a treat to discover the unusual Russian tradition!
I stumbled on a great little nugget of unusual repertoireby attending a concert by the artist (The CD was recently reviewed in Fanfare, if you have access to that pub.)
Timofeyev plays roughly 20 pieces in over 65 minutes of really unusual Russian Romantic music on the native Russian guitar (7 strings, tuned to an open G chord). His tonal palette is very broad -- he reminds me somewhat of Bream in this regard. It's a real treat to hear music that hasn't been recorded by anyone else. (Apparently Timofeyev discovered many of the pieces himself in "lost" manuscripts he studied while completing his doctorate.)
His concert also included some wonderfully shmaltzy Russian songs for coloratura.
Much as I love the Spanish and Latin American masters, it's a real treat to discover a whole, new, decidedly different tradition to enjoy.