Bach meets Monk

Fire and fugue, swing and sonata – when jazz and classical meet

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Dusan Bogdanovic, (Pio) Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Bruck Wolters, Roland Dyens, Mauro (Giuseppe Sergio Pantaleo) Giuliani, Thelonius Monk, Johann Sebastian Bach

Genre:

Instrumental

Label: Wildner

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 61

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: KWW58201

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Waltzes, Movement: No. 4 (1923) (Pio) Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Composer
(Pio) Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Sonata for Guitar Mauro (Giuseppe Sergio Pantaleo) Giuliani, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Mauro (Giuseppe Sergio Pantaleo) Giuliani, Composer
(3) Sonatas and 3 Partitas, Movement: Sonata No. 3 in C, BWV1005 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Round Midnight Thelonius Monk, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Thelonius Monk, Composer
Afruitarra Bruck Wolters, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Bruck Wolters, Composer
Sonata Dusan Bogdanovic, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Dusan Bogdanovic, Composer
Barcarole (Pio) Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Composer
(Pio) Agustín Barrios Mangoré, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Libra Sonatine, Movement: Fuoco Roland Dyens, Composer
Augustin Wiedemann, Guitar
Roland Dyens, Composer
This gorgeous, moody recital, captured live with – so the otherwise less than informative booklet-notes tell us – no cutting and little post-production, is a diverse one. Nevertheless, guitarist Augustin Wiedemann adopts a consistently lyrical posture throughout. The results are something special.

The opening Barrios is all insouciance, yet Wiedemann’s considerable musicianship is also capable of lending dignity to Giuliani’s far shallower Sonata in C. Dignity is hardly wanting in Bach’s Adagio and Fugue, from the Solo Violin Sonata, BWV1005: here Wiedemann renders the successive waves of tension and release with a touching warmth and a fearless use of variation in tempo and tone-colour. Fans of Barenboim’s Bach will relish this approach. And how effective to follow this with Thelonious Monk’s Round Midnight (in Roland Dyens’s arrangement)! Wiedemann may not quite swing like Monk but the sensitive phrasing is utterly lovely.

Dyens’s “Fuoco” from Libra Sonatine and Buck Wolters’s Afruitarra really put both Wiedemann and the 1933 Hauser I – the mellow treble and rich bass of which have been captured to perfection on this recording – through their paces, resulting in some of the most exhilarating playing on the disc. The final work, the Lento from Dusan Bogdanovich’s Jazz Sonata, allows both Wiedemann’s and the instrument’s exquisite tone to shine through.

Munich-based Wildner Records is affiliated with the Hermann Hauser Guitar Foundation, whose aim is to “support and promote science and culture” within the fields of guitar and lute playing. If their issuing of this recital is anything to go by, they’re doing a wonderful job.

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