Orfeo Ed Euridice: Melodie De Gluck (Ballet II)

Try this.  Get a tomato seed and place it in your hand.  Few of you would ever say that you have a tomato plant in your hand.  Now plant it in the ground.  It is now covered in dirt and you have begun to water it.  If you showed someone your tomato plant, many would still doubt that you have a tomato plant.  As the tomato plant goes through different stages towards maturity, you may still find those who still doubt that you have a tomato plant.
As a beginning flutist, I was introduced to the Melodie de Gluck.  I immediately fell in love with the piece and the flutist for his interpretation of the piece.  The piece became an inspiration to practice diligently.  At first I practiced the piece quite often.  At times I would record myself playing it, but I was never satisfied with my interpretation of the piece.  Time would march on and eventually I became intimately acquainted with the piece.  Playing it became more than an interpretation.  It became something that I could say–like speaking.

What I didn’t fully appreciate was the fact that a tomato plant is a tomato plant even if it hasn’t produced ripe tomatoes yet.  It is perfect at every stage of development.

Click the video below to play along with this piano accompaniment.  There are many place where you can get the sheet music free online.  Click here for one example>

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Bach, Handel & Mozart Flute Sonatas

The styles represented here are from the baroque and classical era in music.

Genre: Classical: Baroque

Release Date: 2013

Three composers are represented in this collection: Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.  The contrast between the Baroque and Classical style periods is represented here in both interpretation and instrumentation. And although, the same flute was used to play all of these pieces, the contrast is still evident. The baroque sonatas employ the use of harpsichord, while the Mozart selections use piano for accompaniment.  Originally for flute quartet, the sonata by Mozart uses a piano reduction for accompaniment.  The reduction itself is true to the original, although it was not personally reduced by Mozart.  As a bonus, two pieces from Die Zauberflöte, K. 620 are included.  They serve as interlude between the baroque composers.

Johann Sebastian Bach, a prolific composer, saw himself as a dutiful craftsman. This recording was approached in the same manner.  The idea here was to make, as much as possible, every aspect of each performance intentional.  The production style for this collection is uncommon in classical recordings.  Both the flute and piano parts are heard with exceptional clarity and detail.  Also, the treatment of the different genres is unique to each piece.

buy it now at ASR Music Store.  You can also find it at your favorite online store.

David E. Gonzalez Genre: Classical: Baroque Release Date: 2013

David E. Gonzalez
Genre: Classical: Baroque
Release Date: 2013