
LA
GUITARRA
Spanish Music for
Guitar
LLOBET,
MORENO-TORROBA,
PUJOL, SOR & TARREGA
TUOMO TIRRONEN
Tuomo Tirronen
plays a 2003 Luciano Lovadina
MS1317 ~ $14.95
"[Tuomo
Tirronen's] playing is
solid and expressive, and he doesn’t fall into the trap that many do in
Tarrega, Llobet, or Pujol miniatures. His rubato is expressive, never
self-indulgent. The music is...very well played and nice to have in one recital.
Recommended to anyone interested in the music or the guitarist."
American
Record Guide ~ May/June 2010
"...indeed, all the music on La
Guitarra flourishes thanks to [Tirronen's] elegant phrasing,
tonal refinement, narrative finesse, and stylistic comprehension... this
[is a] beautifully played and recorded
program. Recommended to anyone interested in the music or the guitarist."
Robert
Schulslaper, Fanfare ~ May/June 2010
"Tuomo
Tirronen plays very well indeed..."
Turok's
Choice, Issue No.219 ~ March 2010
There
was a time when the guitar was unmistakably linked to Spain. The most important
guitar works were written by Spanish composers such as Gaspar Sanz and Luis
Milan. While working at the Royal Spanish Court, the Italian baroque composer Domenico
Scarlatti most certainly heard the sounds of these baroque guitar composers and
imitated themin his famous cembalo sonatas. Nowadays, the guitar is found in
genres of all kinds, all over the world. The remarkable renaissance of the
guitar is relatively new, though, and many people still picture bull-fighting
and castanets when they hear its—and with good reason. It was in Spain that
the guitar had its cradle and there that it developed into the instrument we
know today as the classical guitar. Normally, the Spanish guitar is closely
associated with southern Spain—more precisely Andalucia—where, among the
gypsies, flamenco music came about. However, the guitar in Spain is
more widespread than commonly thought. Some of the most influential people who
shaped the history of the classical guitar were not from southern Spain, but
from the north-east, more precisely the region of Catalonia.
*
* *
Finnish
guitarist Tuomo
Topias Tirronen started
playing guitar at the age of eight, studying with Karri Elo. He studied
classical guitar in Finland at the Turku Music Conservatory under Marianne
Gardberg, and then in Turku Music Academy until graduating in 2002 as a
"music pedagogue". Tirronen also studied in Sweden at the Malmö
Musikhögskola with Göran Söllscher and Gunnar Spjuth, and later attended
Musikhochschule Lucerne in Switzerland where in 2006 he received the highest
marks from Frank Bungartens. Tirronen, who has a keen interest in playing
Renaissance lute and Persian lute among other stringed instruments, has given
concerts in Germany, Italy, Sweden and Switzerland and actively in his native
Finland. An active chamber musician, Mr. Tirronen performs in the flute and
guitar duo Duo Arkipelag with flutist Visa Turunen, in the guitar duo Tirronen
& Buck with Christian Buck, and in the German alternative music group
Melkbook with Alex Goretzki and Christian Buck. Tirronen also performs with
Topias Tiheäsalo in T&T2, a chamber group focused on free improvisation. He
has given the premiere performances of Antti Haapalainen's Kivettynyt Metsä for
solo guitar and Satakieli for flute and guitar, as well as Aki Lappalainen´s
Suite for Guitar and Elf for flute and guitar. Tuomo Tirronen has participated
in master classes given by Eduardo Fernandez, Stephen Stubbs and Jorgen Bjorslev,
and himself teaches at the Music Institute Arkipelag and at Vakka-Suomi Music
Institute and has served as President of the Turku Guitar Society since 2003.
www.TuomoTirronen.com
ALSO AVAILABLE
from
TUOMO
TIRRONEN

ANFANGS
("Beginning")
New Works for Solo Guitar by
BROUWER, HAAPALAINEN, HOSOKAWA, OHANA,
SUILAMO, TAKEMITSU and WILSON
MS1214