
Oh where, oh where has that Surinach gone? Oh where, oh where can it be? Here we have one-and-a-half Alicia de Larrocha albums: the whole
This is not going to be an “objective” review, because I specifically asked that Australian Eloquence issue this compilation for the express purpose of bringing
Debussy’s ubiquitous Ibéria opens the program, perhaps as an appetizer for the less familiar Turina works. Jesús López-Cobos takes a swift and breezy approach, leaving
Are there any bad recordings of the Concierto de Aranjuez? This certainly isn’t one. Luis Orlandini plays very enthusiastically, with a focused tone and plenty
Joaquin Turina composed a tremendous quantity of excellent piano music. Antonio Soria’s difficult-to-obtain but well made complete edition for Edicions Albert Moraleda runs to some
Anyone who loves Spanish music will tell you that it’s a constant source of frustration that there aren’t more orchestral scores by the great 19th
Joaquin Turina’s skillfully-wrought brand of Spanish Romanticism never fails to delight the ear, especially in the hands of a pianist sensitive enough to project the
Joaquin Turina’s piano trios have enjoyed a degree of popularity in recent years, with recordings by the Beckova Trio (Chandos) and Trío Arbós (Naxos) preceding
This disc duplicates exactly the contents of an RCA CD by the late Antonio de Almeida and the Bamberg Symphony containing performances rather more strongly
Madrid-based Trío Arbós offers a compellingly performed survey of Joaquin Turina’s four piano trios, works that document the evolution of his singular style, which was