Cover Dialoghi

Album info

Album-Release:
2011

HRA-Release:
27.06.2011

Label: Yarlung Records

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Elinor Frey & David Fung

Composer: Manuel de Falla

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

?

Formats & Prices

Format Price In Cart Buy
FLAC 88.2 $ 18.90
  • 1 7 Canciones populares espanolas: No. 3. Asturiana (arr. for cello and piano) 02:12
  • 2 Bunraku 08:54
  • 3 I. Prelude 02:22
  • 4 II. Allemande 04:41
  • 5 III. Courante 02:49
  • 6 IV. Sarabande 02:44
  • 7 V. Menuet I-II 03:14
  • 8 VI. Gigue 01:59
  • 9 Ricordanza 04:41
  • 10 Dialoghi 06:59
  • 11 Tema Sacher 01:08
  • 12 Sacher Variation 03:43
  • 13 Grave (version for cello and piano) 05:41
  • 14 I. Simple 02:29
  • 15 II. Alleluia 03:36
  • 16 III. Double 02:55
  • 17 No. 1. — 01:09
  • 18 No. 2. — 01:19
  • 19 No. 3. — 01:32
  • 20 No. 4. — 02:01
  • 21 No. 5. — 01:22
  • 22 No. 6. — 01:43
  • 23 No. 7. — 01:06
  • 24 7 Canciones populares espanolas: No. 5. Nana (arr. for cello and piano) 02:43
  • Total Runtime 01:13:02

Info for Dialoghi

The music on this album reveals dialogues in many forms, often dialogues within dialogues. We hear these conversations between ‘cello and piano, old and new (Bach and Saariaho for example), between original and newly created (Machaut and Lefkowitz, for example), between Folk Music and “High Art” (de Falla and Bach, for example), between Nature and Art (Saariaho, for example), and in every piece between musician and audience and between composer and musician. In discussing the music which forms the centerpiece of this program “Dialoghi–studi su un nome (Dialogues–studies on a Name), composer Steven Stucky explains his title: “Why ‘dialogues’? Partly because the theme notes and the non-theme notes so often interact in “conversation” throughout, but more importantly because the friendship recognized in this rests not only on my musical collaborations with Elinor Frey but also on our conversations about books, music, paintings, films, psychology, religion, food, and all things Italian (hence the title).”

David Fung, Piano
Elinor Frey, Cello

David Fung - Piano
Praised as having “undoubted talent” by the Los Angeles Times and described as being “impossibly virtuosic” by the Edinburgh Guide, young Australian pianist David Fung has performed as soloist with orchestras such as the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, the Israel Camerata, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra Ensemble Kanazawa of Japan, the Queensland Orchestra, the San Diego Symphony Orchestra, and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra among numerous others. Festival highlights include recital invitations at the Aspen Music Festival, Goslar Festival (Germany), Der Internationaler Klaviersommer (Germany), Music at Menlo, and the 2006 Edinburgh International Festival Queen’s Hall Series, where Fung was acclaimed as being “prodigiously talented... probably [doing] ten more impossible things daily before breakfast,” by Jonas Green in the Edinburgh Guide.

Mr. Fung was a top prizewinner at the 12th Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Masters Competition in Tel Aviv, where he was also distinguished by additional prizes for Best Classical Concerto and Best Performance of Chamber Music. He won 2nd Prize and the Audience Prize in the 3rd Lev Vlassenko Piano Competition, and was the grand prizewinner of the 2002 ABC Symphony Australia Young Performer of the Year Award.
Mr. Fung has recorded albums with NAXOS, Yarlung Records, Linn Records, and ABC Classics/Symphony Australia, and can also be heard on dozens of labels around the world.

Mr. Fung holds a Bachelor of Music and Artist’s Diploma from the Colburn Conservatory, where he worked with John Perry, and a Master of Music at the Yale University with Peter Frankl. Mr. Fung has also worked with world-class pianists such as Emanuel Ax, Boris Berman, Alfred Brendel, Yefim Bronfman, Leon Fleisher, Claude Frank, Andràs Schiff, and Arie Vardi. Mr. Fung is a Steinway Artist.

Elinor Frey - Cellist
Hailed as an 'Impeccable cellist' by Montreal's La Presse, 'A superb cellist' by the Syracuse Post-Standard, and an 'unquestionable and robust talent' by the Giornale di Brescia, Elinor Frey's recent accolades include the 2009/10 Fulbright Grant to Italy, as well as the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Canada Graduate Scholarship, and a Canada Council for the Arts grant facilitating her work on Italian baroque and modern unaccompanied cello music. Recognized for presenting dynamic and personal performances for her audiences, the 2010-11 seasons will bring Elinor to both North America and Europe, such as performing Bernstein's 'Three Meditations' with the Grand Junction Symphony, Colorado, Schumann Cello Concerto with the Rogue Valley Symphony in Ashland, Oregon, recitals and master classes at Istanbul Tecnhical University, Turkey, and, as a baroque cellist, concerts with Ensemble Caprice and Ensemble Masques.

Elinor's recent appearances have included unaccompanied cello recitals and master classes at the American Academy in Rome, Cornell University, Dartmouth University, Bowdoin College, Mesa State University, and Ithaca College. Passionate advocate of new music, Elinor is currently cellist of Ensemble KORE in Montreal, Quebec and her debut album, Dialoghi, was released in 2008 on the Yarlung Records label. Through generous grants from supporters, Elinor plays on a beautiful 1962 Mario Gadda cello, an un-named Klengenthal-style baroque cello from the mid-18th century, a Louis Begin baroque bow, and a superb Charles Espey modern bow which she recently commissioned.

Currently Doctor of Music candidate at McGill University, where she is also a course instructor, Elinor studies baroque cello with Paolo Beschi in Como, Italy, and in Montreal with Susie Napper, as well as modern cello with Matt Haimovtiz. She received a Master of Music degree from the Juilliard School and a B.M. from the Mannes College of Music. Elinor has served on numerous faculties including the Ithaca College Summer Chamber Music Institute, CAMMAC Ontario, the Ithaca Suzuki Institute, and Orvieto Musica in Italy.

Booklet for Dialoghi

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO