Johann Abraham Peter Schulz (1747-1800): | ||
[1] | Largo for glassharmonica | 3'35 |
Johann Julius Sontag von Holt Sombach (* 1962): | ||
[2] | Rondeau for glassharmonica and string quartett | 5'36 |
Johann Friedrich Reichardt (1752-1814): | ||
[3] | Adagio for glassharmonica, string quartett and double bass | 6'35 |
Johann Gottlieb Naumann (1741-1801): | ||
Sonata Nr. III for glassharmonica | ||
[4] | Recitativo | 1'35 |
[5] | Andantino amoroso | 2'20 |
Wolfgang Amadé Mozart (1756-1791): | ||
[6] | Adagio for glassharmonica , KV 356 (617a) | 3'07 |
Adagio and Rondo for glassharmonica, flute, oboe, viola and cello, KV 617 | ||
[7] | Adagio | 4'22 |
[8] | Rondo | 7'46 |
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827): | ||
[9] | Melodram - Music for Frd. Dunker's drama Leonore Prohaska (speaker and glh.) | 1'00 |
Karl Leopold Röllig (1754(?)-1804): | ||
Kleine Tonstücke for glassharmonica | ||
[10] | Grave | 1'49 |
[11] | Comodetto | 1'27 |
David August von Apell (1754-1832): | ||
Il trionfo della musica, Cantata | ||
[12] | 9. Terzetto (S,A,T, glh. and harp) | 4'51 |
Johann Julius Sontag von Holt Sombach (* 1962): | ||
first suite for glassharmonica | ||
[13] | Fantasie | 0'46 |
[14] | Allemande | 2'42/td> |
Gaetano Donizetti (1797-1848): | ||
[15] | Mad scene from Lucia di Lammermoor, arranged for S, glassharmonica and piano | 15'56 |
Johann Julius Sontag von Holt Sombach (*1962): | ||
first suite for glassharmonica | ||
[16] | 2nd menuet (unfinished) | 1'16 |
Thomas Bloch (1962): | ||
[17] | Sancta Maria | 15'55 |
total time | 70'56 |
Thomas Bloch: glassharmonica ([1]-[17]), speaker ([9])
Yves Le Pech: sopranista ([12])
Fabrice di Falco: counter tenor ([12]) and sopranista ([17])
Damien Top: tenor ([12])
Montserrat Sanromà: soprano ([15])
Quatour Rosamonde:
Agnès Sulem Bialobroda: violin ([2], [3])
Thomas Tercieux: violin ([2], [3])
Jean Sulem: viola ([2], [3], [7], [8])
Xavier Gagnepain: violoncello ([2], [3], [7], [8])
Marc Marder: double bass ([3])
Philip Bernold: flute ([7], [8])
Maurice Borgue: oboe ([7], [8])
Christine Icart: harp ([12])
Ettore Borri: piano ([15])
recording: Auditorium France 3 Alsace (Strasbourg), January - March, 1997 ([1]-[16], originally released
as TGB 961)
Labo T (Neuilly Plaisance/F), may, 1998 ([17], originally the last track of the CD "Sopraniste" with Fabrice di
Falco)