Composer: Camargo Guarnieri
- Piano Concerto No. 1: I. Salvagem
- Piano Concerto No. 1: II. Saudosamente
- Piano Concerto No. 1: III. Depressa
- Piano Concerto No. 2: I. Decidido
- Piano Concerto No. 2: II. Afetuoso: Scherzando
- Piano Concerto No. 2: III. Vivo
- Piano Concerto No. 3: I. Allegro deciso
- Piano Concerto No. 3: II. Magoado
- Piano Concerto No. 3: III. Festivo
Max Barros, piano
Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra
Thomas Conlin, conductor
Date: 2005
Label: Naxos
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Enthusiastic accounts of concertos by a composer well worth getting to know
This is a most encouraging issue. In the wake of BIS’s continuing series of Mozart Camargo Guarnieri’s symphonies, Naxos – knowing a good thing when they hear it – have collected his three piano concertos onto a single disc, the First being a premiere recording with neither of the others otherwise available. Indeed, there is little enough of Guarnieri’s bright and attractive music in the catalogue at all. Recording the appealing First Concerto highlighted some major textual issues with the score, as James Melo succinctly summarizes in the booklet. The manuscript being missing, the present recording was made from a reconstruction sourcing instrumental parts, two piano reductions (each with different endings!), a private recording conducted by the composer and revisions to the piano part from the 1960s. The result is completely convincing, however, a relatively compact, exciting concerto full of good tunes deftly orchestrated. Guarnieri’s personal style is already clearly audible (he was just 24 when he wrote it) though there are inevitable traces of influences: Villa-Lobos, Prokofiev, Bartók. The central Saudosamente even has a touch of Gershwin about it.
The Second (1946) and Third (1964) are more cosmopolitan in idiom but still decidedly Latin American through and through. In the former one can detect that Guarnieri’s frame of reference had widened to include Stravinsky and North and South American composers such as Copland (who decsribed Guarnieri as ‘the most authentic composer on the continent’) and Ginastera; but whatever the stylistic mix he remained his own man. I doubt whether the Warsaw Philharmonic had played much of his music beforehand, but they respond with gusto and evident enjoyment to all three works, expertly directed by Thomas Conlin. Max Barros – brought up in Brazil – sounds completely comfortable and confident in the solo parts. Had this been released a few months earlier, it might have made the Editor’s Top 100 Budget CDs.
-- Guy Rickards, Gramophone
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Camargo Guarnieri (February 1, 1907 – January 13, 1993) was a Brazilian composer. He was born in Tietê, São Paulo, and studied piano, composition, and conducting in São Paulo and Paris, where his teachers include Charles Koechlin, among others. A key figure in the Brazilian national school, Guarnieri served as a conductor, a member of the Academia Brasileira de Música, and Director of the São Paulo Conservatório. His extensive oeuvre includes symphonies, concertos, operas, chamber music, piano pieces, and songs. He was regarded by some as the most important Brazilian composer after Heitor Villa-Lobos.
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Born in California and raised in Brazil, since 1984 italian-brazilian-american pianist Max Barros resides in New York City, where he has performed frequently at the city’s main concert halls. Well known for his stylistic and historically informed interpretations. Barros founded the Barros Classical Consort, a period-instrument trio, and together with Stephanie Chase and Christine Gummere, he recorded the complete Trios of Luigi Boccherini and Stephen Storace on period instruments. A dedicated champion of Brazilian music, Barros has premiered and recorded several works by the nation’s foremost composers.
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