Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Giangiacomo Pinardi. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Giangiacomo Pinardi. Mostrar todas las entradas
domingo, 12 de abril de 2020
lunes, 20 de mayo de 2019
Fabio Biondi THE 1690 "TUSCAN" STRADIVARI
In the course of his illustrious career, Fabio Biondi
has nurtured a remarkable empathy with Italian music from across many
centuries, but strikingly so with the early Baroque violin sonata
repertory, the development of which was dramatically propelled into the
future by Arcangelo Corelli with his Op 5 collection. It is this empathy
possessed by Biondi which has inspired the Accademia Nazionale di Santa
Cecilia in Rome (from its bowed instrument collection) to make him a
loan of the precious 1690 “Tuscan” violin made by Antonio Stradivari,
for this Glossa recording.
Another skill possessed by Biondi is
his deft assemblage of programmes, whether for concert or for CD, and
this new release of early eighteenth-century violin works touches on the
impact that Corelli’s music had on music-making in Dresden, Venice,
Padua, London and Amsterdam, to name just a few of the destinations
affected as the fame of “Arcangelo Bolognese” fanned out from Rome
across Europe.
With a continuo team from his Europa Galante ensemble (Antonio Fantinuoli, cello, Giangiacomo Pinardi, theorbo and
Paola Poncet, harpsichord), Biondi plays sonatas by Vivaldi, Corelli,
Geminiani, Tartini and Locatelli, and a Ciaccona by Veracini. Recorded
in Rome, on an instrument which was originally made for the Florentine
court of Ferdinando de’ Medici (and which, over time, has survived all
manner of vicissitudes on its journey to Rome!), Fabio Biondi expertly captures the flavour of the eighteenth-century violin sonata.
sábado, 23 de junio de 2018
Fabio Biondi / Giangiacomo Pinardi PAGANINI Sonatas for Violin and Guitar
Fabio Biondi
has chosen a selection of delightful virtuoso chamber music pieces by
Niccolò Paganini to mark his tenth album for Glossa. Together with his
long-term colleague from Europa Galante,
the plucked-string specialist Giangiacomo Pinardi (here playing an
original romantic guitar from c1825), Biondi delivers one of the most
special Glossa albums of recent times. The works, composed between 1804
and c1828, are mainly two-movement sonatas contained in the Centone di sonate collection, although the album also includes the popular Sonata concertata in A major.
Recorded
in Valencia by the engineer and producer Fabio Framba (another
well-known component of Biondi’s recording setups), the booklet of this
album includes a highly original essay signed by Pierre Élie Mamou, in
which he looks into the Devil/God dichotomy as applied to the figure of
Paganini by his own contemporaries. The graphic design for the CD takes
its inspiration from this idea, for another typically Glossa look,
listen and read experience… (GLOSSA)
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