In her quest for "the recorder at its widest", Lucie Horsch takes her listeners on a Grand Tour, a tour of the musical landscape of Europe during the Baroque era. Indeed, the most virtuoso compositions for recorder were written during that period. After it, the instrument fell into oblivion for centuries; it played no significant role in the classical and romantic era. Only since the 1960s has the recorder been taken seriously again among musicians and composers. 'There is no established order in the recorder world yet as there is in the violin world, for example, with legends like Yehudi Menuhin,' Horsch says. This gives her the freedom to play her instrument with an audible lightness and open-mindedness.
Tracklist
1. Lucie Horsch - Lavolette
2. Lucie Horsch - The Arrival Of The Queen Of Sheba
3. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In D Minor BWV 1059r
4. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In D Minor BWV 1059r
5. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In D Minor BWV 1059r
6. Lucie Horsch - Erbarme Dich
7. Lucie Horsch - Badinerie
8. Lucie Horsch - Sonata Seconda
9. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In F Major
10. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In F Major
11. Lucie Horsch - Concerto In F Major
12. Lucie Horsch - Couplets De Folies
13. Lucie Horsch - Le Rossignol En Amour
14. Lucie Horsch - Concerto C Major, Op. 17 No. 1
15. Lucie Horsch - Concerto C Major, Op. 17 No. 1
16. Lucie Horsch - Concerto C Major, Op. 17 No. 1
17. Lucie Horsch - Divisions On A Ground
18. Lucie Horsch - Dido's Lament
19. Lucie Horsch - Engels Nachtegaeltje