The inauguration of a Villa-Lobos piano music series from Brazilian pianist Marcelo Bratke, who is ideally equipped to bring out the mixture of Brazilian and European elements in the composer's music, is cause for minor celebration. Villa-Lobos' piano music is not terribly common on concert programs, but he wrote a good deal of it, and it presents aspects of his compositional thinking in miniature. Both of the large collections of pieces on this album, Cirandinhas and Cirandas, date from the peak of Villa-Lobos' career in ...
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The inauguration of a Villa-Lobos piano music series from Brazilian pianist Marcelo Bratke, who is ideally equipped to bring out the mixture of Brazilian and European elements in the composer's music, is cause for minor celebration. Villa-Lobos' piano music is not terribly common on concert programs, but he wrote a good deal of it, and it presents aspects of his compositional thinking in miniature. Both of the large collections of pieces on this album, Cirandinhas and Cirandas, date from the peak of Villa-Lobos' career in the mid-'20s. The titles of both works refer to types of children's songs, and these are only some of the Villa-Lobos pieces that relate to children. Yet they are not children's pieces. Many of them work out a single idea in a crisp, economical way. What's most interesting here (and beautifully brought out by Bratke) is the contrast between these two works, even though both are made up of short programmatic works in simple forms with mostly diatonic melodies. The Cirandinhas are...
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