Spanish Missions of San Antonio
Track Listings
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1. Dawn on the Mission Trail
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2. Fiesta at Mission San Juan
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3. Mission Espada - Reveries of the Three Bells
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4. Interlude: Romance of the River
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5. Mission San Jose - Queen of the Missions
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6. Interlude: Legend of the Cloisters
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7. Mission Concepcion - Two Towers, Two Worlds
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8. The Alamo
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Editorial Reviews
About the Artist
Terry Muska is a native of San Antonio, who recalls visiting the missions as far back as his early childhood. As an adult, Muska has been invited to perform at each of the five missions. Having studied with Manuel Lopez-Ramos and Pepe Romero, Muska is now one of the most in-demand classical artists in Texas. He has appeared as a soloist on two CDs, and in the Musette duo with flutist Madalyn Blanchett on two more all on the Iago label. On this recording, Muska plays a 1998 Blackshear guitar. Michael Fink, musical composer-arranger-historian, has led a varied career spanning Hollywood recording studios, concert halls, and college classrooms. The author of more than 25 musical publications and two books, Fink now expresses his musical thoughts through his digital studio,VirtualHarmony. He feels that combining varied synthesized sounds with the consistent warmth of an acoustic instrument (like the classical guitar) affords a unique listening experience.
Album Description
"Spanish Missions of San Antonio" is a concept album. Inspired by the five magnificent mission edifices and the stories behind them, the artists built a "legend in music" around these Southwestern treasures. (Associating familiar classical music with real world images resembles a movie using popular recordings to elicit certain feelings in particular scenes). Employing mainly classics from the Spanish repertoire, Michael Fink arranged the music for classical guitar and synthesized sound (mainly orchestral). Terry Muska's masterful work on guitar maintains focus on the album's concept: the five missions and other scenes around them.
Spanish Missions of San Antonio, Music, Terry Muska, Michael Fink Terry Muska , Michael Fink, Various
Average customer rating:
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Spanish Missions of San Antonio
Manufacturer: Notes
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000CAEGTY
Release Date: 2000-01-01 |
Average customer rating:
- Low anytime fare to San Antonio - just pop in this CD!
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Spanish Missions of San Antonio
Terry Muska , Michael Fink Terry Muska , Michael Fink , and Various
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Classical
| Indie Music
| Stores
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B00004TIRY
Release Date: 2000-05-01 |
Tracks:
- Dawn on the Mission Trail
- Fiesta at Mission San Juan
- Mission Espada - Reveries of the Three Bells
- Interlude: Romance of the River
- Mission San Jose - Queen of the Missions
- Interlude: Legend of the Cloisters
- Mission Concepcion - Two Towers, Two Worlds
- The Alamo
Album Description
"Spanish Missions of San Antonio" is a concept album. Inspired by the five magnificent mission edifices and the stories behind them, the artists built a "legend in music" around these Southwestern treasures. (Associating familiar classical music with real world images resembles a movie using popular recordings to elicit certain feelings in particular scenes). Employing mainly classics from the Spanish repertoire, Michael Fink arranged the music for classical guitar and synthesized sound (mainly orchestral). Terry Muska's masterful work on guitar maintains focus on the album's concept: the five missions and other scenes around them.
Customer Reviews:
Low anytime fare to San Antonio - just pop in this CD!.......2000-07-13
On this collection of popular Spanish guitar classics, two superb San Antonio musical artists capture perfectly the many moods of Texas' five beloved San Antonio missions. Guitarist Terry Muska's technically crisp, sensitive, yet not overly-sentimental style clearly establishes why he is one of the Lone Star State's most sought-after classical artists. Arranger Michael Fink's creative blending of imaginative digital embellishments - keyboards ranging from lyrical to regal to aggressive neo-funk (flashback to `switched-on Bach'?), evocative militaristic horn effects, and thrilling percussion riffs, and oh! the bells! - are pleasantly surprising, delightful, yet consistently tasteful and appropriate. I. Albeniz' "Cordoba" begins our journey, evoking a sunrise approach to the Mission Trail across pristine rolling Texas countryside. Our next stop is pure fun: fiesta! at Mission San Juan to the accompaniment of "Sevilla: sevillanas", also by I. Albeniz. For every visitor to the Mission Trail one of these lovely limestone relics inevitably stands above the rest as a personal favorite; mine is the intimate and charming Mission Espada, whose spirit is perfectly expressed on track 3 (an arrangement of Catalan folksongs), right down to the melancholy, haunting chime of her sweet, ancient bells, just as I'd always imagined them. Each of the missions in turn is musically represented in this imaginative thematic approach, along with a special tribute to the San Antonio River herself via a fresh but faithful rendition of the enduring Spanish folksong "Romanza" (cut 4). For me, this cut also evoked strong, peaceful images of the acequia (aquaduct) - a portion of which still flows today - an engineering marvel which connected the missions and served as a source of water for irrigating the surrounding cultivated fields. Stirring variations on the traditional "La Folia" (cut 5) describe well the past grandeur of Mission San Jose - called the Queen of the Missions. Both "La Folia" and cut 6, the 11th century "Victimae Paschali Laudes" serve as vivid reminders of the original purpose behind the founding of these missions and make veiled reference to tensions simmering just below the surface as the long arm of the Inquisition reached far from its roots into this territory. Cut 7, "Albeniz' "Preludio", dramatically contrasts the two cultures which struggled fiercely to coexist within the walls of Mission Concepcion. And of course, what tour of San Antonio would be complete without a stop at Texas' most popular tourist attraction, the Alamo? It is here that Fink and Muska leave us to pause, in the heart of the city, with I. Albeniz' stirring "Asturias: leyenda" (cut 8), a fitting close to our special day along the Mission Trail. This cut serves as a reminder that San Antonio, while clearly a city deeply rooted in history, is also very much a city of today. Listeners familiar with these beautiful Texas shrines and the San Antonio Riverwalk will recognize echoes of their favorite places, while those who've yet to experience the charms of this historic Texas village-at-heart will enjoy a bargain-priced but memorable aural armchair tour. Fink's and Muska's synergistic blend demonstrates that they know their city and their craft intimately as they offer up the auditory equivalent of a perfect Texas day from sunrise to sunset - truly music to soothe and uplift the spirit. This collection will provide to the novice an easy introduction to the joys of classical Spanish guitar, but also deserves a prominent place in every classical music collection. Both the casual listener and the serious aficionado of classical guitar will find much to like on this CD. I am thoroughly enjoying it as I eagerly anticipate future releases by these two gifted collaborators. Y'all buy it now, y'hear?
Music Track:
- Stanford Songs, Vol. 2
- Strauss & Elgar: Works For Piano
- Strauss: Sinfonia Domestica / Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme
- Strozzi - Cantates / Susanne Ryden
- Suite Pointillistique
- Sviatoslav Richter 1977 Salzburg Recital
- The Complete Solo Piano Transcriptions And Arrangements Of Sergei Rachmaninoff
- The English Kreisler
- The Fire and the Rose: Aquitanian Chant & Polyphony - Heliotrope
- The Nutcracker Suite
Music Track
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