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01. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor: Allegro comodo
02. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor: Andantino
03. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor: Menuetto con moto
04. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor: Allegro giusto
05. Cuarteto Op. 44 nº 4 (G. 223) en sol mayor "La Tirana": Presto
06. Cuarteto Op. 44 nº 4 (G. 223) en sol mayor "La Tirana": Tempo di minueto
07. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor: Allegro assai
08. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor: Adagio
09. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor: Menuetto
10. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor: Allegro comodo
11. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor: Largo
12. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor: Allegro
This recording allows us to dispel the myth of Luigi Boccherini (Lucca, 1743 - Madrid, 1805) as a composer of light, gallant or even superficial works, and introduces us to deeper facets of his writing, aligned with the Central European Sturm und Drang aesthetic and musical currents.
Luigi Boccherini is a pivotal, albeit controversial, figure in Spanish music history. On the one hand, his birth in Lucca in Italy marginalised him from the discourses with a nationalist tinge expounded by Spanish musicologists of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, despite the fact that most of his life and career were spent under the wing of Spanish institutions. What is more, the supposed Italian invasion that “contaminated” Spanish music throughout the eighteenth century also made him an uncomfortable figure to tackle. At the same time, traditional historiography has considered Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) the “inventor” of two instrumental genres of great importance in all later European music: the symphony and the string quartet. This supposed invention, which in reality consisted of the adoption of the local Viennese style as a universal (European) model of composition, helped to establish a German-centric canon that considered all other composing traditions, like the Italian-Spanish style of Boccherini, as inferior. Popular knowledge of Boccherini’s music usually goes no further than the celebrated minuet of his String Quintet in E Major (G. 275) and his quintet La Musica Notturna delle strade di Madrid (G. 324). These pieces have portrayed the composer as light-hearted and superficial. Fortunately, many musicologists have studied various aspects of the life and work of Boccherini, offering a revised image of the composer. This historiographical revision, together with the elaboration of the definitive edition of his works, brings evidence of the high quality and depth of his music and contradicts the idea of the isolation that Boccherini supposedly suffered in Spain.
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FILE LIST
Filename
Size
01. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor Allegro comodo.flac
46.5 MB
02. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor Andantino.flac
37 MB
03. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor Menuetto con moto.flac
46 MB
04. Cuarteto Op. 32 nº 5 (G. 205) en sol menor Allegro giusto.flac
42.7 MB
05. Cuarteto Op. 44 nº 4 (G. 223) en sol mayor La Tirana Presto.flac
48.9 MB
06. Cuarteto Op. 44 nº 4 (G. 223) en sol mayor La Tirana Tempo di minueto.flac
47 MB
07. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor Allegro assai.flac
55.4 MB
08. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor Adagio.flac
66.9 MB
09. Cuarteto Op. 24 nº 6 (G. 194) en sol menor Menuetto.flac
38.8 MB
10. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor Allegro comodo.flac
61.9 MB
11. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor Largo.flac
68.8 MB
12. Cuarteto Op. 2 nº 1 (G.159) en do menor Allegro.flac