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Ginastera: Harp Concerto, Op. 25 / Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23
Alberto Ginastera

Sidsel Walstad | Norwegian Radio Orchestra | Miguel Hart-Bedoya

Ginastera: Harp Concerto, Op. 25 / Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23

Price: € 19.95
Format: CD
Label: Lawo Classics
UPC: 7090020182049
Catnr: LWC 1182
Release date: 04 October 2019
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Label
Lawo Classics
UPC
7090020182049
Catalogue number
LWC 1182
Release date
04 October 2019
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN

About the album

Alberto Ginastera (1916-1983) is a distinctive voice in twentieth-century classical music, and together with the master of the tango, Astor Piazzolla, he is the towering musical figure of Argentina.

Born in Buenos Aires of an Italian mother and a Catalonian father, Ginastera is a complex composer and personality, shaped by the traditional folk culture and history of his native country and by impulses from the world at large, during a time of radical upheavals in the realm of Western classical music.

The Harp Concerto was commissioned in 1956 by Edna Phillips. Composing commissioned works was, however, not always Ginastera’s strong suit, so the work was not premiered until 1965, and then it was the Spanish harpist Nicanor Zabaleta. (Thus regarded, the harp concerto belongs both to the composer’s second and to his third composition period.) Sidsel Walstad has studied the original manuscripts and read the correspondence between Ginastera and Zabaleta and discovered that the composer added a few cubits to his knowledge of the harp in the process. Walstad bases her recording on a revised version from 1968 (also recorded by Zabaleta).

When the concerto first appeared, it became a brilliant addition to the harp literature and twentieth-century instrumental concertos. Ginastera significantly expands the range of expression as well as the expectations of what a harp can represent as a solo instrument. Here we encounter the harp as a rhythmic motor that accentuates the percussive quality of the music, but also brings out parts with intense and mystical beauty. Ginastera’s work calls for a level of pedal technique not attempted until then and introduces nail effects on the strings. Despite the tremendous demands on the soloist, the concerto has become a standard work (still one of very few) for harp and orchestra.

Variaciones concertantes was completed more than ten years earlier and was premiered in Buenos Aires in 1953. In Ginastera’s own words: “These variations have a subjective Argentinian quality. Instead of using traditional folk material, I try to achieve an Argentinian mood by using my own thematic and rhythmic elements.” The music is an irresistable combination of orchestral timbres and virtuosity communicating directly with the listener, especially as regards the entertainment aspect inherent in virtuosic orchestral sound and a demanding soloist performance. Solo parts are given to all the instruments in the orchestra, before the gauchos ride again in orchestral tutti in the closing rondo.

Artist(s)

Sidsel Walstad (harp)

Harpist Sidsel Walstad describes playing Ginastera’s harp concerto as “climbing a mountain.” Whether it feels like that for most harpists, Walstad has the best qualifications for tackling Ginastera’s demanding rhythms and complexity. As solo harpist in the Norwegian Radio Orchestra she is exposed to a wide variaty of genres, compositions and arrangements that take the harp far from classical music’s beaten path. Sidsel also does this of her own accord, as, for example, when she collaborates on electric harp with percussionists, expanding her repertoire and the boundaries of what a harp is good for. Just as Walstad is in frequent demand as a classical musician in concerts and at festivals in Norway and abroad, the list of artists she has worked with...
more
Harpist Sidsel Walstad describes playing Ginastera’s harp concerto as “climbing a mountain.” Whether it feels like that for most harpists, Walstad has the best qualifications for tackling Ginastera’s demanding rhythms and complexity. As solo harpist in the Norwegian Radio Orchestra she is exposed to a wide variaty of genres, compositions and arrangements that take the harp far from classical music’s beaten path.
Sidsel also does this of her own accord, as, for example, when she collaborates on electric harp with percussionists, expanding her repertoire and the boundaries of what a harp is good for.
Just as Walstad is in frequent demand as a classical musician in concerts and at festivals in Norway and abroad, the list of artists she has worked with in pop, jazz and folk music, among others, is strikingly long — and she is likewise a groovy principal artist with her electric harp over her shoulder.
Walstad studied at the Norwegian Academy of Music, the University of Indiana, and at the Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen. She was Principal Harp with the Norwegian National Opera & Ballet Orchestra before she accepted the much sought-after soloist position with the Norwegian Radio Orchestra (KORK), with which she performs a broad stylistic palette. In her continuing encounters with new composers and arrangers, she shares invaluable knowledge of how a harp can be used and ought to sound.
In the harp concerto she comes face to face with her own personality, delighting in the contrasts and especially the rhythmic quality — the dance. And it doesn’t hurt to have danced ballet when playing a malambo
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Norwegian Radio Orchestra

The Norwegian Radio Orchestra is known as “the whole land’s orchestra” and is today regarded with a unique combination of re­spect and affection by its music-loving public. With its remarkably diverse repertoire, this is no doubt the orchestra most heard through­out the land – on the radio, television, and online, and at various diverse venues around the country.   It is a flexible orchestra, performing all from symphonic and contemporary classical mu­sic to pop, rock, folk, and jazz. Each year the orchestra performs together with internation­ally acclaimed artists at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert, which is aired to millions of viewers worldwide. Those with whom the orchestra has collaborated in recent years include the Kaizers Orchestra, Mari Boine, Jarle Bern­hoft, Diamanda Galàs,...
more
The Norwegian Radio Orchestra is known as “the whole land’s orchestra” and is today regarded with a unique combination of re­spect and affection by its music-loving public. With its remarkably diverse repertoire, this is no doubt the orchestra most heard through­out the land – on the radio, television, and online, and at various diverse venues around the country.
It is a flexible orchestra, performing all from symphonic and contemporary classical mu­sic to pop, rock, folk, and jazz. Each year the orchestra performs together with internation­ally acclaimed artists at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert, which is aired to millions of viewers worldwide. Those with whom the orchestra has collaborated in recent years include the Kaizers Orchestra, Mari Boine, Jarle Bern­hoft, Diamanda Galàs, Renée Fleming, An­drew Manze, Anna Netrebko, and Gregory Porter.
The Norwegian Radio Orchestra was found­ed by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corpora­tion in 1946. Its first conductor, Øivind Bergh, led the ensemble in a series of concerts from the broadcasting company’s main studio, es­tablishing the basis of its popularity and se­curing its status as a national treasure. The orchestra continues to perform in the context of important media events. It is comprised of highly talented classical instrumentalists and yet its musical philosophy has remained the same: versatility, a light-hearted approach, curiosity for all kinds of music, and an un­willingness to pigeonhole musical styles. Petr Popelka is currently the orchestra’s Chief Conductor.

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Miguel Harth-Bedoya (conductor)

It is not entirely a coincidence to be recording an album of Ginastera’s music with Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Peruvian Chief Conductor of the Norwegian Radio Orchestra. Like Ginastera, Miguel’s heart pounds for South American music and culture, and he is one of the conductors who has contributed most to spreading music from his own continent out into the world. Here we are talking about music from several centuries and from all countries from north to south along the Inca Road, Caminos Del Inka, which is also the name of an organisation begun by Harth-Bedoya. Caminos Del Inka works to hunt up music in dusty archives and bring it into concert halls, and also see that commissions for new music are...
more
It is not entirely a coincidence to be recording an album of Ginastera’s music with Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Peruvian Chief Conductor of the Norwegian Radio Orchestra. Like Ginastera, Miguel’s heart pounds for South American music and culture, and he is one of the conductors who has contributed most to spreading music from his own continent out into the world. Here we are talking about music from several centuries and from all countries from north to south along the Inca Road, Caminos Del Inka, which is also the name of an organisation begun by Harth-Bedoya. Caminos Del Inka works to hunt up music in dusty archives and bring it into concert halls, and also see that commissions for new music are given to young South American composers and performed the world over. The Norwegian Radio Orchestra has been an important part of this journey involving a number of album releases and concerts.
In addition, Harth-Bedoya has eagerly immersed himself in Norwegian music, from National Romanticism to premiere performances of Norway’s leading living composers.
Miguel Harth-Bedoya was born in Lima and studied at the Juillard School and Curtis Institute. An Emmy winner and a Grammy nominee, he regularly conducts the leading orchestras in the USA and is in frequent demand on all continents. He has been Music Director of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra for almost 20 years and became Chief Conductor of the Norwegian Radio Orchestra in 2013. The list of prominent soloists with whom he has worked is long, but two we can name are Yo Yo Ma (including the collaboration between Yo Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project and Caminos Del Inka) and René Fleming. It was in a concert with her that the first sparks were lit between KORK and Miguel.

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Composer(s)

Alberto Ginastera

Alberto Evaristo Ginastera (Spanish pronunciation  April 11, 1916 – June 25, 1983) was an Argentine composer of classical music. He is considered one of the most important 20th-century classical composers of the Americas. Ginastera was born in Buenos Aires to a Catalan father and an Italian mother. During the last few years of his life, he preferred to pronounce his surname in its Catalan pronunciation, with a soft 'G' as in 'George' rather than a Spanish 'J' sound. In fact this would be the local Argentine pronunciation of his name if it were spelled Yinastera or Llinastera. Ginastera studied at the conservatory in Buenos Aires, graduating in 1938. As a young professor, he taught at the Liceo Militar General San Martín. After a visit to the United States in 1945–47, where he studied with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood, he returned to Buenos Aires and co-founded the League of Composers. He held...
more
Alberto Evaristo Ginastera (Spanish pronunciation April 11, 1916 – June 25, 1983) was an Argentine composer of classical music. He is considered one of the most important 20th-century classical composers of the Americas. Ginastera was born in Buenos Aires to a Catalan father and an Italian mother. During the last few years of his life, he preferred to pronounce his surname in its Catalan pronunciation, with a soft 'G' as in 'George' rather than a Spanish 'J' sound. In fact this would be the local Argentine pronunciation of his name if it were spelled Yinastera or Llinastera.
Ginastera studied at the conservatory in Buenos Aires, graduating in 1938. As a young professor, he taught at the Liceo Militar General San Martín. After a visit to the United States in 1945–47, where he studied with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood, he returned to Buenos Aires and co-founded the League of Composers. He held a number of teaching posts. Among his notable students were Ástor Piazzolla (who studied with him in 1941), Alcides Lanza, Waldo de los Ríos, Jacqueline Nova and Rafael Aponte-Ledée. See: List of music students by teacher: G to J#Alberto Ginastera.
Ginastera moved back to the United States in 1968 and then in 1970 to Europe. He died in Geneva, Switzerland, at the age of 67 and was buried in the Cimetière des Rois there.

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Press

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01.
Harp Concerto, Op. 25: I. Allegro giusto
08:36
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
02.
Harp Concerto, Op. 25: II. Molto moderato
06:30
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
03.
Harp Concerto, Op. 25: III. Libramente capriccioso – Vivace
08:31
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
04.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: I. Tema per Violoncello ed Arpa
02:14
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
05.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: II. Interludio per Corde
02:01
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
06.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: III. Variazione giocosa per Flauto
01:05
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
07.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: IV. Variazione in modo di Scherzo per Clarinetto
02:01
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
08.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: V. Variazione drammatica per Viola
03:39
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
09.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: VI. Variazione canonica per Oboe e Fagotto
02:41
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
10.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: VII. Variazione ritmica per Tromba e Trombone
00:38
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
11.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: VIII. Variazione in modo di Moto perpetuo per Violino
01:05
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
12.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: IX. Variazione pastorale per Corno
02:23
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
13.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: X. Interludio per Fiati
01:19
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
14.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: XI. Ripresa dal Tema per Contrabasso
02:04
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
15.
Variaciones concertantes, Op. 23: XII. Variazione finale in modo di Rondo per Orchestra
03:34
Sidsel Walstad, Norwegian Radio Orchestra
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Often bought together with..

Johannes Brahms, Arnold Schönberg
Piano Quartet No. 1, Op. 25 / Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80
Würth Philharmoniker

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