Scarlatti: Fortepiano Sonatas cover

Scarlatti: Fortepiano Sonatas

Released

When we think of the keyboard works of the great baroque composer Domenico Scarlatti, we think most often of the harpsichord – but he also wrote for the fortepiano, a transitional instrument between the harpsichord and the modern pianoforte. Its sound is a bit more muted than that of a modern piano and it doesn’t have the same dynamic range – but it is mellower (and more dynamic) than the harpsichord. On this recording David Schrader plays a generous program of Scarlatti’s keyboard sonatas on a modern replica of a 1929 fortepiano, and it makes for a unique and lovely listening experience.

Rick Anderson

Suggestions
Moon, Sun & All Things cover

Moon, Sun & All Things

Ex Cathedra, Jeffrey Skidmore
Baroque cover

Baroque

Miloš Karadaglić
Marais: Ariane et Bacchus cover

Marais: Ariane et Bacchus

Le Concert Spirituel Orchestra & Chorus, Hervé Niquet
Recomposed by Max Richter: Vivaldi - The Four Seasons cover

Recomposed by Max Richter: Vivaldi - The Four Seasons

André de Ridder, Konzerthaus Kammerorchester Berlin, Daniel Hope
Pavans & Fancies for the Viols cover

Pavans & Fancies for the Viols

Richard Mico, Concerto di Viole
Fasch: Quartets and Concertos cover

Fasch: Quartets and Concertos

Ensemble Marsyas, Pamela Thorby, Peter Whelan
Rameau: Une symphonie imaginaire cover

Rameau: Une symphonie imaginaire

Marc Minkowski, Les Musiciens du Louvre
Mozart: Betulia liberata cover

Mozart: Betulia liberata

Amanda Forsythe, Sandrine Piau, Christophe Rousset, Teresa Iervolino, Les Talens Lyriques
Encounter cover

Encounter

Igor Levit
Guillemain: Conversations Galantes & Amusantes cover

Guillemain: Conversations Galantes & Amusantes

Ensemble Les Conversations, Valérie Balssa-Jaffrès, Emmanuel Balssa
Missa 1724 cover

Missa 1724

Collegium 1704, Václav Luks