CELLO TWENTIETH CENTURY- Le Violoncelle a L'ecole
After the signal event that was World War I, young, hopeful, gifted composers trooped into the French metropolis. In 1925, the publisher Michel Dillard coined the term École de Paris (School of Paris) for the foreign composers then living in Paris, especially the Hungarian Tibor Harsányi (1898-1954), Pole Alexandre Tansman (1897-1986), Czech Bohuslav Martinu (1890-1959), Russian Alexander Tcherepnin (1899-1977), and Romanian Marcel Mihalovici (1898-1985), whose works he specialized in disseminating. All five composers came to Paris from Eastern Europe and all, with the exception of Martinu, died there. All five initially attempted to translate the principal aspects of the difficult-to-notate idioms of folk music from their homelands into standard musical notation. Some works can be heard in a World Premiere Recording.
Tracklist:
- Rhapsody For Cello & Piano
- 2 Pièces: No. 1, Mélodie
- 2 Pièces: No. 2, Capriccio
- Variations Sur Un Thème Slovaque, H. 378
- Cello Sonata: I. Sempre Allegro
- Cello Sonata: II. Adagio
- Cello Sonata: III. Vivace
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 1, Georgian Song
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 2, Tartar Dance
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 3, Russian Song
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 4, Kazakh Dance
- Sonata In The Character Of A Lyric Scene, Op. 108
After the signal event that was World War I, young, hopeful, gifted composers trooped into the French metropolis. In 1925, the publisher Michel Dillard coined the term École de Paris (School of Paris) for the foreign composers then living in Paris, especially the Hungarian Tibor Harsányi (1898-1954), Pole Alexandre Tansman (1897-1986), Czech Bohuslav Martinu (1890-1959), Russian Alexander Tcherepnin (1899-1977), and Romanian Marcel Mihalovici (1898-1985), whose works he specialized in disseminating. All five composers came to Paris from Eastern Europe and all, with the exception of Martinu, died there. All five initially attempted to translate the principal aspects of the difficult-to-notate idioms of folk music from their homelands into standard musical notation. Some works can be heard in a World Premiere Recording.
Tracklist:
- Rhapsody For Cello & Piano
- 2 Pièces: No. 1, Mélodie
- 2 Pièces: No. 2, Capriccio
- Variations Sur Un Thème Slovaque, H. 378
- Cello Sonata: I. Sempre Allegro
- Cello Sonata: II. Adagio
- Cello Sonata: III. Vivace
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 1, Georgian Song
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 2, Tartar Dance
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 3, Russian Song
- Russian Songs & Dances, Op. 84: No. 4, Kazakh Dance
- Sonata In The Character Of A Lyric Scene, Op. 108