Easy CD-DA | FLAC tracks | Covers | 1.11 Gb
3 CD | Date CD: 21/01/2008 | Brilliant
Giuseppe Baldassare Sammartini (1695-1750)
Giovanni Battista Sammartini (1700-1775)
Music for Flute, Violin, Oboe, Recorders
CD 1 - Giuseppe - Six solos for Flute, Violin or Oboe, Opus 13
CD 2 - Giuseppe - 12 Sonatas For Two German Flutes
CD 3 - Giovanni - Notturni a 4
Ensemble J.M. Anciuti
I Fiori Musicali
Il Rossignolo, Ottavio Tenerani
Marica Testi, flute
CD 1 - The Six Solos op. 13 are an example of Sammartini’s posthumous fame in that they were printed ten years after his death. “Solo” is the name given to sonatas for a solo instrument or an instrument accompanied by basso continuo. This term soon fell into disuse, as did the interchangeability of instruments foreseen in the early eighteenth century. The possibility to choose the instrument nonetheless still existed in the musical anthologies of many authors who, like Sammartini, legitimize the practice already in the titles, which they gave to their collections. The instruments employed in the Six Solos share more or less the same range: the oboe (the favored instrument of the composer), the German (or transverse) flute, and the dominating violin. The oboe, flute and violin each perform two compositions. The solo instruments are sustained in the basso continuo not only by the harpsichord but also by the bassoon in one case and by the cello in the other.
CD 2 - Perhaps the stylistic characteristic which best marks Sammartini as a composer goes beyond his warm and limpid melodic sensibilities. Indeed, his harmonic and contrapuntal sense reflects the exquisite taste with which he adapted his writing to the qualities and the possibilities of the instrument for which he composed. The Concerto in F Major for soprano recorder and strings is one of the best works ever dedicated to that instrument. Like Geminiani, Bersanti and others, Sammartini distances himself a bit from the compositional model of the early baroque period. Instead he experiments with certain felicitous innovations leaning toward the style galant, yet all the while upholding the Italian tradition. Despite the term “German flutes” which appears in the title, the destination for the recorder is confirmed by the tessitura and tonalities chosen (typical of the sonatas), as well as the typically English predilection for the instrument.
3 comments:
Thank you for an unusual post :)
FF links are always welcome.
Hello!
You can upgrates link?
Thank you!
thank you very much !
all the best
ricardo
Post a Comment