Antonio De Innocentis – Duarte: Orchestral and Concertante Works for Guitar (2023) [FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

Antonio De Innocentis - Duarte: Orchestral and Concertante Works for Guitar (2023) [FLAC 24bit/96kHz] Download

Antonio De Innocentis – Duarte: Orchestral and Concertante Works for Guitar (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:15:03 minutes | 1,21 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © Brilliant Classics

John W. Duarte was born in Sheffield, England on 2 October 1919. His father was a Scottish soldier, who died in 1919, and he was raised by his mother and maternal grandparents. He started playing the ukulele, but soon moved to the guitar at the age of 15.The advent of guitar phenomenon John Williams, whom Duarte taught for 18 months before the young musician’s entry into the Royal College of Music, London, gave the composer an opportunity to expand his chamber music oeuvre. An article by Williams’s father, Len, in The Classic Guitar Journal (January–April 1956) informed readers that ‘Duarte is already at work’ on what became the Concertante Quartet Op.22, a substantial work in four movements. The 1st movement, in a Neo-Baroque style, is in Sonata form with a substantial guitar cadenza. The sharp-eared listener may hear a reference to the folk song ‘Barbara Allen’. The 2nd movement is a lovely lilting siciliana, and the opening theme is first a guitar solo, then for violin with a guitar descant in the style of Renaissance divisions. The 3rd movement, also arranged as a guitar duet for the Presti/Lagoya duo in 1964 under the title Badinerie, also suggests baroque origins.

In 2021 the composer’s son, Christopher Duarte, discovered some folk songs arranged for guitar and small orchestra among his father’s manuscripts. There is no mention of these arrangements in his list of works and no correspondence relating to their creation, but from the composer’s handwriting these probably date from the mid-late 1950s and may have been written for John Williams to play with fellow RCM students. Next Market Day, scored for piccolo, snare drum and strings, is an energetic rendering of an Irish love song which Duarte revisited several times.

The Coolin of Rùm (or, The Rùm Cuillin), scored for flute, oboe and strings, is a tune from the Isle of Rùm, one of the small islands near the Isle of Skye in the Hebrides. Cuillin is the name for a range of mountains in this area and Duarte may have been alluding to the name of a previous owner of Rùm, Maclean of Duart.

Tracklist:

1-1. The Belfort Chamber Orchestra – A Tudor Fancy, Op. 50: I. Tower Hill (05:11)
1-2. The Belfort Chamber Orchestra – A Tudor Fancy, Op. 50: II. The Fall of the Leafe (All in a Garden Green) (11:32)
1-3. The Belfort Chamber Orchestra – A Tudor Fancy, Op. 50: A Gigge (06:21)
1-4. The Belfort Chamber Orchestra – Next Market Day (02:09)
1-5. The Belfort Chamber Orchestra – The Coolin of Rùm (05:20)
1-6. The Belfort Chamber Ensemble – Concertante Quartet, Op. 22: I. Deciso (03:58)
1-7. The Belfort Chamber Ensemble – Concertante Quartet, Op. 22: II. Con Tenerezza (06:05)
1-8. The Belfort Chamber Ensemble – Concertante Quartet, Op. 22: III. Giocoso (04:17)
1-9. The Belfort Chamber Ensemble – Concertante Quartet, Op. 22: IV. Con Brio (04:25)
1-10. The Belfort Guitar Duo – Concierto alegre, Op. 101: I. (07:14)
1-11. The Belfort Guitar Duo – Concierto alegre, Op. 101: II. (11:54)
1-12. The Belfort Guitar Duo – Concierto alegre, Op. 101: III. (06:31)

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