
Images of Brazil / Anderegg, Ribeiro
This is one of those discs youâd be tempted to overlook: seven works by seven different composers, most of them unknown (except for Villa-Lobos and Guarnieri), scored or arranged for violin and piano, and played (very well) by performers who arenât exactly household names. I dismissed it initially, but that was a mistake. My close friend was curious and gave it a listen. He was hooked. âPlay track three,â he insisted, and so I did (sound clip). I was hooked too. It just goes to show that you canât judge a CD by its cover. Youâve got to listen. If only there were more hours in the day!
So, that delicious third track is the last of CĂ©sar Guerra-Peixeâs Three Pieces for Violin and Piano, and very fetching they are. The major works, though, are Guarnieriâs powerful Violin Sonata No. 4; a splendid transcription for violin and piano by these players of LĂ©a Freireâs soulful Three Songs; Villa-Lobosâ curiously touching âThe Martyrdom of Insects,â with a finale that gives The Flight of the Bumblebee a run for its money; and Ernani Aguiarâs inventive Meloritmias No. 4 for solo violin. The other pieces, Edmundo Villani-CĂŽrtesâ âClear Waters,â and RadamĂ©s Guattaliâs âNight Flower,â would make terrific encores to any chamber music recital.
All that remains to be said is that violinist Francesca Anderegg and pianist Erika Ribeiro play all of this music with the same care and loving attention to detail that obviously went into choosing the program. You can audition the whole thing through at a sitting or take it in bits. Either way, you surely will enjoy this hour of vibrant, songful, alternately spiky and spicy music thatâs consistently captivating and worth your attention. Fine sonics too. Thank you, Shawn.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)
This is one of those discs youâd be tempted to overlook: seven works by seven different composers, most of them unknown (except for Villa-Lobos and Guarnieri), scored or arranged for violin and piano, and played (very well) by performers who arenât exactly household names. I dismissed it initially, but that was a mistake. My close friend was curious and gave it a listen. He was hooked. âPlay track three,â he insisted, and so I did (sound clip). I was hooked too. It just goes to show that you canât judge a CD by its cover. Youâve got to listen. If only there were more hours in the day!
So, that delicious third track is the last of CĂ©sar Guerra-Peixeâs Three Pieces for Violin and Piano, and very fetching they are. The major works, though, are Guarnieriâs powerful Violin Sonata No. 4; a splendid transcription for violin and piano by these players of LĂ©a Freireâs soulful Three Songs; Villa-Lobosâ curiously touching âThe Martyrdom of Insects,â with a finale that gives The Flight of the Bumblebee a run for its money; and Ernani Aguiarâs inventive Meloritmias No. 4 for solo violin. The other pieces, Edmundo Villani-CĂŽrtesâ âClear Waters,â and RadamĂ©s Guattaliâs âNight Flower,â would make terrific encores to any chamber music recital.
All that remains to be said is that violinist Francesca Anderegg and pianist Erika Ribeiro play all of this music with the same care and loving attention to detail that obviously went into choosing the program. You can audition the whole thing through at a sitting or take it in bits. Either way, you surely will enjoy this hour of vibrant, songful, alternately spiky and spicy music thatâs consistently captivating and worth your attention. Fine sonics too. Thank you, Shawn.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)
Original: $13.99
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$4.90Description
This is one of those discs youâd be tempted to overlook: seven works by seven different composers, most of them unknown (except for Villa-Lobos and Guarnieri), scored or arranged for violin and piano, and played (very well) by performers who arenât exactly household names. I dismissed it initially, but that was a mistake. My close friend was curious and gave it a listen. He was hooked. âPlay track three,â he insisted, and so I did (sound clip). I was hooked too. It just goes to show that you canât judge a CD by its cover. Youâve got to listen. If only there were more hours in the day!
So, that delicious third track is the last of CĂ©sar Guerra-Peixeâs Three Pieces for Violin and Piano, and very fetching they are. The major works, though, are Guarnieriâs powerful Violin Sonata No. 4; a splendid transcription for violin and piano by these players of LĂ©a Freireâs soulful Three Songs; Villa-Lobosâ curiously touching âThe Martyrdom of Insects,â with a finale that gives The Flight of the Bumblebee a run for its money; and Ernani Aguiarâs inventive Meloritmias No. 4 for solo violin. The other pieces, Edmundo Villani-CĂŽrtesâ âClear Waters,â and RadamĂ©s Guattaliâs âNight Flower,â would make terrific encores to any chamber music recital.
All that remains to be said is that violinist Francesca Anderegg and pianist Erika Ribeiro play all of this music with the same care and loving attention to detail that obviously went into choosing the program. You can audition the whole thing through at a sitting or take it in bits. Either way, you surely will enjoy this hour of vibrant, songful, alternately spiky and spicy music thatâs consistently captivating and worth your attention. Fine sonics too. Thank you, Shawn.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)























