Cesare Barison – Barison: Works for violin and piano (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:16:27 minutes | 1,35 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Aulicus Classics
Cesare Barizon (Italian Cesare Barison (January 15, 1885, Venice — April 15, 1974, Trieste) was an Italian violinist. The son of the artist Giuseppe Barizona.
He studied in his hometown at the Arturo Vram Music Lyceum, then in Prague with Otakar Shevchik. In 1907 he made his debut with a concert in Berlin. Later he performed as a soloist, especially with music of the XVIII century, and as an ensemble player with pianist Eugenio Visnovitz and cellist Ettore Sigon, then at the head of a string quartet. In 1945-1954, the director of the Trieste Opera — this period in the history of the theater, marked, among other things, by the tours of Herbert Karajan, who later headed the same theater, Raffaello de Banfield, called the golden age.
Throughout his life, he conducted teaching activities, published a textbook on violin playing (ital. Tecnica superiore del violino; 1962). Under the editorship of Barizon, violin compositions by ancient Italian composers — Francesco Geminiani, Pietro Nardini, Pietro Locatelli, Alessandro Stradella, etc. were published. He also published a technical analysis of ten caprices by Nicolo Paganini (ital. Analisi tecnica di 10 Capricci di Paganini; 1970). Barizon’s essay “Trieste, the most musical city” (Italian) was posthumously published in a separate edition. Trieste città musicalissima; 1975) — an overview of musical life in Trieste in the XIX — early XX century, partly based on personal impressions; the title of the book, implying a number of cultural references, became a landmark for further research and cultural work in the Trieste musical community.
In the late 1980s, the Cesare Barizon Prize was awarded at the International Chamber Music Festival in Trieste.
Tracklist:
1-1. Cesare Barison – Op. 2: Reve (05:45)
1-2. Cesare Barison – Op. 2: Chant D’Amour (04:02)
1-3. Cesare Barison – Op. 2: Au Printemps (03:56)
1-4. Cesare Barison – Op. 2: Mazurka (03:15)
1-5. Cesare Barison – Op. 2: Legende (05:31)
1-6. Cesare Barison – Op. 7: Mazurka Caprice (03:11)
1-7. Cesare Barison – Op. 8: Impromptu Hongrois (06:13)
1-8. Cesare Barison – Op. 9: Chanson Russe (02:36)
1-9. Cesare Barison – Op. 9: Danse Espagnole (01:36)
1-10. Cesare Barison – Op. 9: Petite Histoire (03:05)
1-11. Cesare Barison – Op. 10: Cloche Du Soir (01:40)
1-12. Cesare Barison – Op. 10: Danse Des Sylphes (02:48)
1-13. Cesare Barison – Op. 10: Vision (03:34)
1-14. Cesare Barison – Op. 11: Danse Visionnaire (01:43)
1-15. Cesare Barison – Op. 11: Chanson Du Rossignol (02:21)
1-16. Cesare Barison – Op. 12: Berceuse Mignonne (02:39)
1-17. Cesare Barison – Op. 12: Valse Romantique (02:43)
1-18. Cesare Barison – Op. 12: Marcia Festosa (01:12)
1-19. Cesare Barison – Op. 14: Canzone Lontana (02:02)
1-20. Cesare Barison – Op. 14: Danza Rustica (02:10)
1-21. Cesare Barison – Op. 15: Preghiera (02:59)
1-22. Cesare Barison – Op 15: Canzonetta (01:44)
1-23. Cesare Barison – Op 15: Notturno (02:37)
1-24. Fabrizio Falasca – Adagio Cantabile (Transcription of C. Barison) (04:05)
1-25. Cesare Barison – Fuga In Sol Maggiore (Transcription of C. Barison) (02:47)
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