Astor Piazzolla – 5 Tangos (violín & contrabajo)
Astor Piazzolla (1921-1992) – Cinco Tangos para violín y contrabajo Arreglo: Andreas Wiebecke-Gottstein Violín – Christine Kim Contrabajo – Jason Gekker Video original: • Five Tangos for Violin and Double Bass by ... Partitura: https://probass-musikverlag.gambioclo... Looking for new chamber music repertoire? Go take a look at the ContrebasseClassique website: https://www.contrebasseclassique.com/ Details by Wise Music Classical: https://www.wisemusicclassical.com/co... Astor Piazzolla (born March 11 1921, Mar del Plata, Argentina) was an Argentine musician and composer. A virtuoso on the bandoneon, Piazzolla left traditional Latin American tango bands in 1955 to create a new tango that blended elements of jazz and classical music. He was a major Latin American composer of the 20th century. He received his first bandoneón at age eight and learned to play both that instrument and the piano as a child. In Mar del Plata in 1936, Piazzolla began playing with a variety of tango orchestras. At age 17 he moved to Buenos Aires. He formed his own orchestra in 1946, composing new works and experimenting with the sound and structure of the tango. About the same time, he began to wite film music. In 1949 he disbanded the orchestra, unsatisfied with his own efforts and still interested in classical composition. Having won a composing contest with his symphonic piece Buenos Aires (1951), he went to study in Paris with Nadia Boulanger. She urged him to remain true to himself and to continue his experiments with the tango. Henceforth he combined his two musical passions, despite much criticism from tango traditionalists. He returned to Argentina in 1955 but moved once again to the United States, where he lived from 1958 to 1960. When he returned again to Argentina, he formed the influential Quinteto Nuevo Tango (1960), featuring a violin, electric guitar, piano, double bass, and bandoneón. Though many of his 750 compositions were written for that quintet, he also composed pieces for orchestra, big band, bandoneón, and cello. His innovations, including counterpoint and new rhythms and harmonies, were initially not well received in his country, but they were greatly admired in the United States and Europe. In Argentina Piazzolla’s new tango gradually gained acceptance, and his music influenced a new generation of tango composers and was featured during the 1970s and 1980s in film scores, television programs, and commercials. His later compositions included a concerto for bandoneón and orchestra (1979) and, commissioned by Kronos Quartet, Five Tango Sensations for bandoneón and string quartet (1989). Astor Piazzolla died in Buenos Aires on July 4, 1992. #piazzolla #astorpiazzolla #astorpiazzollaoficial #stringduo #violinandbass #duo #dúo #duetto #duos

Tango Workshop: The Music | Rythmical Structure 01

Escualo -3- ASTOR PIAZZOLLA y su Quinteto Tango Nuevo -live in Utrecht (1984) -3-

Theodor Albin Findeisen – Romantische Suite für Violine und Kontrabaß

Piazzolla: Five Tango Sensations - Camerata RCO & Ksenija Sidorova - Live concert HD

Rowan Atkinson's Brilliant Humor Leaves Celebrities in Tears!

Domenico Dragonetti - Duo for Cello and Double Bass

THIS Is What Happens When You Attack a US Aircraft Carrier

Kronos Quartet - Five Tango Sensations (1991) FULL ALBUM

Guitar LEGENDS: 5 Levels of BARRIOS

RODOLFO BIAGI - 8 GRANDES TANGOS INSTRUMENTALES

Asa Maynard | Handel-Halvorsen Passacaglia

Astor Piazzolla - "Five Tangos" for Violin and Double Bass

Libertango in Berlin Philharmonic (amazing!!!)

Argentine Tango, As Digested by a Classical Musician

Street Kid Playing Dylan's Song with Broken Guitar—Dylan Stopped Walking and Did THIS

5 Tangos full ballet

Serge Koussevitzky - Double Bass Concerto, Op. 3 (1902)

Adios Nonino -4- ASTOR PIAZZOLLA y su Quinteto Tango Nuevo -live in Utrecht (1984) -4-

Immortal Melodies of Classical Music (No Ads) 🎻 Mozart, Beethoven. Chopin | Relaxation and Healing

