Angelo Gilardino, Alberto Mariani, Boris Vladimirovic Asafiev, Cristiano Porqueddu, Ermanno Brignolo, Eli Magen, Franco Cavallone, Fernande Peyrot, John Duarte, Kevin Swierkosz-Lenart, Lennox Berkeley, Leonardo Balada, Mark Delpriora, Oscar Bellomo, Reginald Smith-Brindle
Artist
Cristiano Porqueddu guitar
Format
3 CD
Cat. number
96651
EAN code
5063758966511
Release
March 2026
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Australia
Fish Fine Music Level 2, Shop 40-42 Queen Victoria Building Sydney CBD +61 (0)2 9264 6458 www.fishfinemusic.com.au
Thomas Music 31 Bourke Street Melbourne, Victoria, 3000 +61 (0)3 9650 9111 www.thomasmusic.net.au
The dazzling Sardinian guitarist returns to the studios for a breathtaking compendium of variation sets, many of them never recorded before, by many of the most enduring names in guitar composition of the last century.
Through the course of his long partnership with Brilliant Classics, Cristiano Porqueddu has attracted superlatives and enthusiasm from all corners of the critical press and listeners everywhere. there’s no denying the ability of Cristiano Porqueddu,’ wrote David Hurwitz in Classics Today, citing the guitarist’s ‘rich sound and dexterous handling of his instrument.’ His colleague Jed Distler noted that Porqueddu’s ‘nuanced articulation allows him to sustain and spin out legato lines as if his fingers had bows.’
Porqueddu’s collection of 20th-century variation sets surveys a kaleidoscopic variety of styles and idioms, demonstrating in the process the guitarist’s own breadth of vision as well as his virtuosic technique and insightful musicianship. He begins with a monster of the form: the 45-minute sequence of variations on a theme of Fernando Sor, by the US composer Mark Delpriora. Musician and listener are taken on an astonishing tour de force of invention, as Sor’s melancholy tune becomes the raw text for vivid pastiches and parodies in the style of canon composers from Beethoven through to Schoenberg and Busoni.
Characteristically, set the challenge to ‘follow that’, Porqueddu does just that, with a work of his own, which takes its inspiration from Foucault’s Pendulum. On the following discs, the withdrawn, lyrical chromaticism presents a compelling contrast with both the Russian romanticism of Boris Asafiev preceding him, and the implacable shadows of the Raighines by Ermanno Brignolo.
This last work was composed for Porqueddu himself, while John Duarte’s Variations on a Catalan Folksong were composed in 1956 at the suggestion of John Williams; and it is in this distinguished lineage that Porqueddu belongs. Some of the following works inspire wonder at their intricacy (both executive and compositional), such as the interwoven Variants on Two Themes of Bach by Reginald Smith-Brindle, while others major on charm, such as the first set of Mozartiana composed by Porqueddu’s teacher, Angelo Gilardino. There’s something for everyone.