Smaro gregoriadou biography examples
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Classical CDs Weekly: Henrique Oswald, Saint-Saëns, Tilson Thomas, Smaro Gregoriadou
You can never have enough of Saint-Saëns’ Piano Concerto No. 5, a piece tailor-made to soothe and delight during stressful times. It gets better and better with repeated listenings. Where to start? With the opening bars – a few seconds of perfumed incense, before the piano’s innocent, unadorned entry. We’re a long way from the Brahms D minor. Clélia Iruzun gets the work’s playfulness and charm, knowing exactly when to inject some adrenalin or pull things back. Sample her tenderness in the first movement’s tender second subject, or her pulling the stops out in the development. Saint-Saëns’ slow movement is a treat here, Iruzun’s opening flourish ear-catching, her impersonations of frogs, crickets and Javanese gamelan wholly convincing. Ships’ propellers rumble away in the motoric last movement, one of the most joyous concerto finales out there. It’s a genuinely marvellous piece. We’re not short of g
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Bach, Britten, Gubaidulina, Hetu; Smaro Gregoriadou; DELOS
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 29 March 2021 Star rating: 3.5 (★★★½)
Music by Bach and three 20th century composer performed on modern developments of the classical guitar
Under the title A Healing Fire on Delos, the Greek guitarist Smaro Gregoriadou performs Bach's Violin Sonata No. 2 in A minor BWV 1003, Britten's Nocturnal after John Dowland, Op.70, Sofia Gubaidulina's Serenade and Jacques Hetu's Suite pour guitar, Op. 41. Gregoriadou describes the works in the programme as intending to 'offer encouragement and hope against today’s dystopia and chaos; they explore spirituality, self-knowledge and transcendence, illuminating dark and ambiguous regions of the human psyche with a different kind of light, a different sort of fire.'
Rather than playing a standard classical guitar, on this disc Gregoriadou plays a pair of instruments inspired by Kertsopoulos Aesthetics, a programm
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George Hadjinikos
Greek musician (1923–2015)
George Hadjinikos (Greek: Γιώργος Χατζηνίκος; Volos, 3 May 1923 – Athens, 29 November 2015) was a Greek pianosoloist, conductor, teacher, and author.
Biography
[edit]Hadjinikos was born in Volos, Greece in 1923. He began his musical education as a child at the Volos Conservatoire in Greece. After moving to Athens in 1934, he continued at the Athens Conservatoire, graduating in 1943 with a piano diploma and a grad in harmony. During this period, he decided to abandon his studies at the Faculty of lag at the University of Athens and devote han själv exclusively to music.
During his ungdom, he was a close friend of the great Greek composer Manos Hadjidakis and according to what Hadjinikos had confided to his lärjunge and mutual friend Kostas Grigoreas,[1] he was, unofficially, one of Hadjidakis piano teachers.
After World War II, he continued his studies at the Mozarteum in Salzburg and graduated with piano and conduct