℗ 2022 Brilliant Classics
Released April 22, 2022
Duration 2h 00m 21s
Record Label Brilliant Classics
Catalogue No. BC96470
Genre Classical (Chamber)
 

Rheinberger: Chamber Music with Organ

Cristina Monticoli, Michela Bergamasco, Marco Dalsass, Manuel Tomadin

Available in 96 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC high resolution audio formats
  • Select Format
    • AIFF 96 kHz | 24-bit
    • FLAC 96 kHz | 24-bit
Add to cart
discounted price

 
Suite for Organ, Violin and Cello, Op. 149  
1.1
I. Con moto
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
9:37
1.2
II. Thema mit Veranderungen
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
10:48
1.3
III. Sarabande
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
10:29
1.4
IV. Finale
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
8:33
6 Pieces for Violin and Organ, Op. 150  
1.5
No. 1, Abendlied (version for cello and organ / Version for cello and organ)
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
5:33
Organ Sonata No. 7 in F Minor, Op. 127  
1.6
II. Andante (Arr. For oboe and organ)
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Anonymous; Cristina Monticoli; Manuel Tomadin
5:46
6 Pieces for Violin and Organ, Op. 150  
1.7
No. 3, Élégie (Version for cello and organ)
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
5:43
1.8
No. 2, Pastorale (Version for cello and organ)
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Marco Dalsass; Manuel Tomadin
6:07
Suite for Violin and Organ in C Minor, Op. 166  
1.9
I. Praeludium
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
5:53
1.10
II. Canzone
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
4:08
1.11
III. Allemande
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
6:01
1.12
IV. Moto perpetuo
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
4:57
Organ Sonata No. 4 in A Minor, Op. 98  
1.13
II. Andante pastorale (version for oboe and organ / Version for oboe and organ)
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Cristina Monticoli; Manuel Tomadin
4:41
6 Pieces for Violin & Organ, Op. 150  
1.14
No. 5, Abendlied
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
4:03
1.15
No. 2, Pastorale
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
4:13
1.16
No. 3, Gigue
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
5:15
1.17
No. 4, Élégie
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
3:29
1.18
No. 1, Overture
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
7:39
1.19
No. 6, Theme and Variations
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger; Michela Bergamasco; Manuel Tomadin
7:26
Digital Booklet
Arrangements and original chamber-music works by a pre-eminent Romantic-era master of the organ. The organ sonatas of Josef Rheinberger still feature large in the repertoire of church organists everywhere, thanks to their attractive melodies and fluent writing for the instrument. Rheinberger’s industry and his skill as a teacher have overshadowed his gifts as a composer in other genres, which this new release helps to redress with suites and tone-pictures for the combination of strings and organ. Oboist Cristina Monticoli also joins her Italian colleagues for two arrangements which sympathetically transfer the main melodies of movements from the organ sonatas to the oboe. While Rheinberger’s Abendlied Op.69 No.2 holds a Brahmsian appeal for choruses, his instrumental Abendlied Op.150 is much less familiar. Yet the combination of string-instrument and organ is intensely evocative of the warm mood of recollection intrinsic to the German genre of ‘Evening Songs’; Rheinberger balances the two instruments with great skill and sympathy so that the organ always supports the cello’s noble cantabile. The Abendlied features here in two recordings; arranged for cello, and in its original version for violin, as part of the complete set of six pieces. Cellist Marco Dalsass also contributes an arrangement of the Pastorale and Elegie from the same set, and it proves fascinating to compare the angelic song of the violin with the warmer baritonal register of the cello in the same music. Both violin and cello join the organ for the Suite Op.149: a substantial four-movement work lasting 40 minutes, opening in a passionate but Baroque-inflected C minor. A meditative set of variations on an original theme is followed by a solemn sarabande, beautifully conceived for all three instruments in the vein of a Romantic slow movement but essentially ecclesiastical in tone. Baroque forms – a free-flowing prelude, a tender Canzone and graceful Allemande – also soften the C minor tonality of the Suite Op.166 for violin and organ, before the Moto perpetuo finale brings the suite to a dazzling close with the most extrovert music in the collection. Any listener with a taste for Romantic chamber music will take pleasure from this new release, recorded on a historically appropriate organ (dating from 1874, built by the German Steinmeyer firm) in the Lutheran Evangelical Church in Trieste. Josef Rheinberger (1839-1901) was a German romantic composer of mainly works for the organ, his own instrument. He was one of the leading figures in the “Cecilian Movement” which, in a world of increasing secularization, propagated the return to religious values of the past, expressing itself in a renewed interest in Gothic architecture and polyphony. Rheinberger’s works are a happy blend of the Romantic spirit of his time and a healthy dose of polyphony and counterpoint, in this he was a worthy successor of Felix Mendelssohn. This new recording presents works for organ in combination with other solo instruments: the violin, cello and oboe, resulting in highly attractive works full of melodious charm and beauty, embedded in the rich coloristic possibilities of the organ. Included are a Suite for violin, cello and organ, a Suite and 6 Stücke for violin and organ, and several shorter works for cello and organ and oboe and organ. Played with loving affection by Michela Bergamasco (violin), Cristina Monticoli (oboe), Marco Dalsass (cello) and Manuel Tomadin (organ). The organ is an historic instrument, built by Georg Friedrich Steinmeyer in 1874, in the Lutheran Evangelical Church in Trieste, Italy, the specifications of which are included in the booklet.
96 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Brilliant Classics Studio Masters
Track title
Peak
(dB FS)
RMS
(dB FS)
LUFS
(integrated)
DR
Album average
Range of values
-2.77
-6.61 to -0.30
-21.52
-24.39 to -18.58
-19.18
-22.10 to -16.20
11
10 to 13
1
I. Con moto
-2.13-20.53-18.311
2
II. Thema mit Veranderungen
-0.39-20.13-18.111
3
III. Sarabande
-2.92-21.49-19.211
4
IV. Finale
-0.30-19.76-17.312
5
No. 1, Abendlied (version for cello and organ / Version for cello and organ)
-4.87-22.82-20.610
6
II. Andante (Arr. For oboe and organ)
-2.30-22.51-19.813
7
No. 3, Élégie (Version for cello and organ)
-0.60-20.83-18.811
8
No. 2, Pastorale (Version for cello and organ)
-0.33-20.00-18.112
9
I. Praeludium
-3.17-19.84-17.810
10
II. Canzone
-4.44-23.19-21.111
11
III. Allemande
-4.01-22.35-19.811
12
IV. Moto perpetuo
-1.00-20.04-17.612
13
II. Andante pastorale (version for oboe and organ / Version for oboe and organ)
-2.30-22.87-19.812
14
No. 5, Abendlied
-6.61-24.39-22.110
15
No. 2, Pastorale
-6.12-23.76-21.611
16
No. 3, Gigue
-1.93-19.51-17.211
17
No. 4, Élégie
-4.34-22.61-20.311
18
No. 1, Overture
-0.71-18.58-16.211
19
No. 6, Theme and Variations
-4.25-23.66-20.812

Offers & New Releases

exclusive benefits for mailing list members

Subscribe Now

What is High-Resolution Audio?

High-resolution audio offers the highest-fidelity available, far surpassing the sound quality of traditional CDs. When you listen to music on a CD or tracks purchased via consumer services such as iTunes, you are hearing a low-resolution version of what was actually recorded and mastered in the studio. ProStudioMasters offers the original studio masters — exactly as the artist, producers and sound engineers mastered them — for download, directly to you.

What do I need for playback?

You may need additional software / hardware to take full advantage of the higher 24-bit high-res audio formats, but any music lover that has heard 16-bit vs 24-bit will tell you it's worth it!

Software for Mac OS X

Software for Windows

Hardware Suggestions