The Golden Age of Harpsichord Music : Rafael Puyana - 180g LP

Product no.: SR90304

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The Golden Age of Harpsichord Music : Rafael Puyana - 180g LP
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Speakers Corner / Mercury - SR90304 - 180 Gram Virgin Vinyl -

AAA 100% Analogue  - Pure Analogue Audiophile Mastering - Pressed  at Pallas 

Sound 5/5 Audiophile Audition

The Golden Age of Harpsichord Music" Works by Besard, Couperin, Francisque, Scarlatti, Freixanet, Bach, Bull, Byrd, Philips, Peerson, and Albéniz - Rafael Puyana (har)

The harpsichord, sometimes disrespectfully referred to as a plucked instrument with keys, left its stamp on the musical language of the Baroque as no other. Whether employed as a continuous bass to accompany delicate chamber music, or heard in heady open-air concerts, or just as a solo instrument, its bright sound, rich in overtones, was highly esteemed by all important composers and musicians of the era. Due to the construction of the instrument it is not possible to play with a differentiated volume of sound, so performers made a virtue of necessity in that they concentrated upon lively phrasing and a well-considered choice of register.
In the present recording Rafael Puyana plays a two-manual Pleyel harpsichord and interprets a wide and varied range of European keyboard works from the 17th and 18th centuries. Along with compositions by Louis Couperin and Domenico Scarlatti’s, both of whom had a great influence on style in their day, this compilation has at its heart works by the English composers John Bull, William Byrd and Peter Philips, which are taken from the most famous collection of all Baroque compositions, the "Fitzwilliam Virginal Book". Short notes on the back cover provide useful information on the works’ historical context.
 
Aufnahme: April und Mai 1962 im Ballroom Studio A von Fine Recording, New York City, von C. Robert Fine und Robert Eberenz
 
Many harpsichord aficionados and musicologists may turn up their noses at this fine recording due to the Pleyel two-manual concert harpsichord employed by Puyana – who was the last long-standing pupil of the great Wanda Landowska, who also performed on a Pleyel.  With its metal frame, the Pleyel is considered by the experts more of a piano than a harpsichord, and responsible for the disrespect the instrument has received from many. (Recall Beecham’s quip about it sounding “like two skeletons copulating on a tin roof.”) Today’s harpsichords are built closely to 17th and 18th century originals and have a more subtle, richer and less clangy sound.
 
However, my contention is that the reason Landowska’s recording all sound rather painful is the primitive recording technology used and her performing style rather than her instrument. After all, most of her recordings were made at her home on poorer portable equipment that RCA Victor brought in so she wouldn’t have to go to their NYC studios. While the Puyana recordings are forceful and less subtle, I find them light years better than Landowska’s.-  5/5 AudiophileAudition Review
 
Produktion: Wilma Cozart-Fine und Harold Lawrence
 
Born in Bogota, Columbia, Puyana was the most important pupil of the great Wanda Landowska, who was single-handedly responsible for the modern revival of the harpsichord. Unerring rhythmic vitality, penetrating scholarship and imposing technical mastery are the characteristics of Puyana's playing. Stokowski wrote to him, "I think you have explored every possibility of the harpsichord, revealing potentialities which no other performer I know has discovered until now." 
 
Harpsichordist Rafael Pyuana performs Concerto No. 3 by J.S. Bach.
 
Musicians:
Rafael Pyuana, harpsichord 
 
Selections:
Jean Baptiste Besard (c.1567-1625)
1. Branle Gay
Louis Couperin (c.1626-1661)
2. Tombeau de M. de Blancrocher
Antoine Francisque (c.1570-1605)
3. Branle de Montirande
Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757)
4. Sonata in E major, K. 381
Freixanet (c.1730-?)
5. Sonata in A major
J. S. Bach (1685-1750)
6. Concerto in D minor
John Bull (c.1563-1628)
7. Les Buffons (ms. 23623 British Museum)
William Byrd (1543-1623)
8. La Volta
Peter Philips ( c.1563-1628)
9. Pavana Dolorosa-Galiarda Dolorosa
Anonymous (circa 1500)
10. My Lady Carey's Dompe
Martin Peerson (c.1580-1650)
11. The Primerose-The Fall of the Leafe
John Bull (c.1562-1628)
12. The King's Hunt
Mateo Albeniz (1760-1831)
13. Sonata in D major
 

The Golden Age of Harpsichord Music : Rafael Puyana - 180g LP

 

 

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As a matter of principle, only analogue masters are used, and the necessary cutting delay is also analogue. All our cutting engineers use only Neumann cutting consoles, and these too are analogue. The only exception is where a recording has been made – either partly or entirely – using digital technology, but we do not have such items in our catalogue at the present time
 
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At the beginning of the ‘90s, in the early days of audiophile vinyl re-releases, the reissue policy was fairly straightforward. Companies such as DCC Compact Classics, Mobile Fidelity, Classic Records and others, including of course Speakers Corner, all maintained a mutual, unwritten code of ethics: we would manufacture records sourced only from analogue tapes. 
 
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