CARL FRIEDRICH ABEL The Drexel Manuscript
Paolo Pandolfo
GCD 920410
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Performing artists
Paolo Pandolfo, viola da gamba
Production details
Total playing time 79:28 Recorded at Église de Franc-Waret, Belgium, in February 2008 Engineered and produced by Manuel Mohino Executive producer: Carlos Céster Design: Valentín Iglesias Booklet essay: Paolo Pandolfo English - Français - Deutsch - Español
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CARL FRIEDRICH ABEL (1723-1787)
The Drexel Manuscript
01-10 I. Suite in D major (Prélude) – Allegro – Vivace – Andante (Allegro) – Adagio – (Tempo di Minuetto) (Aria) – Tempo di Minuet – (Minuetto) 11-16 II. Suite in D minor (Arpeggiata) – (Minuetto) – Allegro – Adagio (Allegro) – Tempo di Menuet (D major) 17-26 III. Suite in D major (Prélude) – Allegro – (Allegro) – (Aria con Variazioni) – Fuga – Adagio – Tempo di Minuet (Petit Prélude) – Tempo di Menuet – (Minuetto) 27-28 IV. Two pieces in A major Allegretto – Allegro
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La fama que Carl Friedrich Abel disfrutó en vida no tuvo continuidad en los dos siglos transcurridos desde su muerte. En su tiempo, tanto sus extraordinarias cualidades como intérprete de la viola da gamba como el nivel de sus composiciones fueron celebradas en toda Europa, y junto con J. C. Bach fue responsable de poner en marcha los Bach-Abel-Concerts, la primera serie de conciertos por suscripción de la historia de la música. Incluso un prodigio de la talla de Mozart se benefició de las enseñanzas de Abel (y fue durante mucho tiempo considerado el autor de una de las sinfonías del propio Abel).
Todo esto era bien sabido por personalidades de la época como Charles Burney, J. F. Reichardt o Goethe, y afortunadamente ahora, en el siglo XXI, Paolo Pandolfo recoge el testigo y nos ofrece un brillante recital de la música siempre inventiva de Abel, que incluye preludios, adagios y diversas formas de danza. ¿Y cómo clasificar esta música "tardía" para la viola da gamba? Desde luego, no es música barroca, y apunta más bien en la dirección clasicista, la de un Mozart, un Haydn o incluso un Beethoven. O mejor, y como dice Paolo Pandolfo -que añade aquí y allá una pincelada de su avanzadísima técnica improvisatoria- en las notas, "Simplemente, ¡es Música!".
It seemed that the music of Carl Friedrich Abel was proving singularly impervious to modern performance initiatives. More is known about the life and times of this Köthen-born composer than about his actual music (he can be placed as a pupil of JS Bach and as someone who died in the year of the 17 year-old Beethoven’s first visit to Vienna). Yet it was as a virtuosic improviser on the by then (surely?) outdated instrument of the viola da gamba that Abel was equally known for by his contemporaries. So, the most suitable candidate in the 21st century for bringing back Abel’s music to its rightful place needs to be not only a supreme interpreter on the viola da gamba and steeped in its repertory but one capable of understanding the almost lost art of improvisation. [read more...]
Widely admired as a virtuoso exponent of the viola da gamba through his concert performances and recordings of key composers from Germany, France, Spain, England and his native Italy, Paolo Pandolfo has in recent years been concentrating on his instincts and skills for improvising and composing (not to mention continuing with his teaching). An artist who can bring out the expressive vitality and poetry in the viol music of composers such as Sainte-Colombe, Marin Marais or J.S. Bach is plainly also relishing the challenges of other musical explorations that have included, on disc, an unaccompanied tour de force in A Solo and a travelogue (from this artist who is a modern, high-tech nomad himself) in Travel Notes. [read more...]