Released
August 25th 2007
Grand Music for horns
Grand Sextet's opus
10 for
natural horns in different keys
Grand Trio's opus
4 for natural horns in E
Richard Burdick, natural horns
This release date
marks the completion of the recording of all of Dauprat's
horn ensemble music by Richard Burdick. With the 2nd volume
of Horn Duets opus 13 on CD 18, the Grand Sextets, opus
10 and the Grand Trios opus 4 on CD19 and a special release
of the Grand Trio opus 26 on a disk for those who buy both
CD18 & 19!
This special release is only available from
www.i-ching-music.com
or
Naturalhorn.com |
Already released are CD16; the Duets opus 14,
and CD14; Quartets, opus 8; which is all of the published music for
horn ensemble of Dauprat.
Why is this important? Louis-François
Dauprat was the horn professor at the Paris conservatory in Beethoven's
time. He was singly responsible for stalling the development of
the Valve horn in France, by as much as 40 years! His compositions
are fine early romantic works highly influenced by his teacher
Anton Reicha. His writing for natural horn is unbelievably chromatic
with keys remote from what would be expected in what normally would
be a very limited instrument.
His works are outstanding! His Grand sextets are
his most popular works partialy due to his use of the High C horn,
which resluts in high D for the modern horn or concert G's above
the treble clef staff!
Performance of his works could
only be done by a virtuoso! Great mastery of the natural horn is
required to play these works; hear one of today’s few natural
horn artist. in this amazing recording.
| Grand Sextets for horns in different
keys, opus 10 by Dauprat |
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| Grand Trios, opus 4 #1 |
|
| Grand Trios, opus 4 #2 |
|
| Grand Trios, opus 4 #3 |
|
Total time 75:55 |
Dauprat’s intimate knowledge
of hand horn techniques makes this opus a compositional tour de
force. Not only does he use all twelve notes of the chromatic scale
in nearly every piece, he also pioneers the use of key signatures
of up to four sharps and four flats for an instrument which was
generally restricted to C major. His stated purpose in writing
these duos was
to write in all the major and minor scales practicable on a single
crook. His ideas of what was practicable went far beyond the usual
practice of his time, and his goal was at least as much aesthetic
as technical. He exploited the positioning of stopped notes to produce
distinct moods and tone qualities for each key, much as J.S. Bach
did in the Well-Tempered Clavier. For the natural horn, C major and
the sharp keys are cheerful and brilliant because they contain many
open notes. The sharp notes are often leading tones, so the hand
position is more open than would otherwise be the case.
Richard plays a horn made by Marcel-Auguste Raoux
in the 1840s, modified by Lowell Greer.

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