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Tuba and Piano
Piazzolla - Three tangos (Tuba and Piano)
Niklas Sivelöv & Øystein Baadsvik
with Piano (Milonga del Angel, Invierno Porteno, Adios Nonino)
$28.00
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The music of Ástor Piazzolla has long since left behind the label ‘tango’ and become concert music as part of the classical repertoire, without ever denying its popular origins. It was Piazzolla who managed to expand the tango’s horizons and to liberate it from the sleazy dives to which people seemed content to confine it, despite the opposition to this evolution – or rather revolution. He studied in Paris under Nadia Boulanger who, after hearing him play the tango (‘Here is the true Piazzolla! Never let him go!’), encouraged him not to abandon his roots – or rather to combine them with elements of jazz and classical music. The result was the ‘nuevo tango’, which mixed elements derived from jazz and an extended palette of instruments compared to the traditional tango style. Milonga del Angel was written in the mid-1960s, the composer’s most productive period. It is the second movement of a four movement suite; the term ‘Milonga’ refers to one of the original tango rhythms. Dating from 1970, Invierno Porteño is part of a four-movement cycle named Las cuatro estaciones porteñas or Four Buenos Aires Seasons which, as the name suggests, is a tribute to the tango of Buenos Aires and also to the baroque composer Antonio Vivaldi, who also wrote a certain cycle of concertos on the subject of the four seasons, and traces of whose music become apparent right at the end. Adiós Nonino was written in 1959 in memory of the composer’s father, who was known as Nonino. Here Piazzolla takes up a tango that he had composed in Paris some years earlier, modifying the melody but retaining the rhythmic structure.