Полное собрание фортепианных сонат Гиацинта Жадена (27.04.1776 – 27.09.1800) в исполнении Ричарда Фуллера (3 CD).
http://narod.ru/disk/16591203000/Hyacinthe%20Jadin%20Sonatas%20piano.rar.html mp3 \ 112 kbps \ 164 mb
Информация о диске и исполнителе:
Richard Fuller plays Jadin on a Nannette Streicher built in Vienna in 1814. This instrument is from a private Austrian collection and was restored in 2004 by Albrecht Czernin, Vienna, Austria.
Richard Fuller was born in Washington State (USA), studied piano and musicology at Central Washington University and the University of Oregon. He studied harpsichord and fortepiano in San Francisco and Vienna. The emphasis of his artistic work lies in the interpretation of the piano, chamber music and the Lied repertoire of the Viennese Classical and early Romantic periods, performed on the fortepiano and clavichord.
Richard Fuller is one of the few who has sought to address himself exclusively to the interpretive potential of the fortepiano - the sensitivity and delicacy of an earlier keyboard culture - and who succeeds in convincingly projecting these qualities to the listener. His artistic work has provided a decisive impulse to the Fortepiano revival in Germany and Austria. Since 1982, his concert appearances have led him to the musical centers of North America and Europe where he appears as soloist, accompanist and member of various chamber music ensembles. In addition he has collaborated with James Levine (and the Vienna Philharmonic), Emma Kirkby, Andrew Manze, Klaus Mertens, Claus Ocker, Festetics String Quartet (Budapest), Vienna Academy Orchestra, Musica Aeterna Bratislava, and the Vienna Fortepiano Trio.
Live concerts in radio and television, film, broadcast productions for German Radio (Cologne), North German Radio (Hamburg), Austrian National Radio, BBC and the Hungarian National Radio as well as numerous CD recordings document the artist's versatile achievements. He was honored in 2002 by the University of Oregon School of Music as Distinguished Alumnus of the Year.
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