MARIN MARAIS Grand Ballet
Paolo Pandolfo
GCD 920406
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Performing artists
Paolo Pandolfo, viola da gambaGuido Balestracci, viola da gambaThomas Boysen, theorbo and baroque guitarDolores Costoyas, baroque guitar and theorboMitzi Meyerson, harpsichord
Production details
Playing time: 69'45 Recorded in Berlin (Siemensvilla), Germany, in October 2001 Engineered and edited by Manuel Mohino Produced by Manuel Mohino and Paolo Pandolfo Design: Carlos Céster Photographs: Juan Lucas Booklet essay by Pierre Jaquier Paolo Pandolfo French, English, Spanish, German
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MARIN MARAIS (1656-1728)
Grand Ballet Suite en La mineur (IIIe Livre)1 Prélude2 Fantaisie3 Allemande4 Courante5 Sarabande6 Gigue + Double7 Gavotte8 Menuets 1 & 29 Grand Ballet Suite en Sol majeur (IIIe Livre)10 Prélude11 Caprice12 Allemande + Double13 Courante14 Sarabande grave15 Gigue à l'angloise16 Gigue La Petite17 Gavotte18 Menuets 1 & 219 Muzette (IVe Livre)20 Chaconne (Ve Livre)Suite en Ré mineur (IIe Livre)21 Prélude22 Bourrasque23 Allemande24 Courante25 Sarabande26 Gigue27 Menuets 1 & 228 Double Rondeau
Mitzi Meyerson has been delving of late for Glossa into unjustly forgotten keyboard repertory from the Baroque. Praised by no less a critic than Nicholas Kenyon for her recording of Gottlieb Muffat’s Componimenti Musicali per il Cembalo (“Eureka! I’ve known these wonderful pieces for years, having bought an old edition of the music, but have never heard them properly performed. So it’s a joy to hear Mitzi Meyerson’s glorious realisation of these 18th-century suites, which lie at the heart of the high baroque style...”), Meyerson now turns her attention to the shadowy figure of Englishman Richard Jones. [read more...]
Mitzi Meyerson’s insight into (and experience with) the harpsichord literature of the Baroque is such that when she makes a visit to the recording studio, one knows that something rare, fascinating and illuminating will emerge. This has been the case in recent years with both the Claviersuiten by Georg Böhm and the Musique de Salon of Claude-Bénigne Balbastre (which have also appeared on Glossa); the latest exploration beyond the mainstream undertaken by Mitzi Meyerson – Muffat’s Componimenti Musicali – is charged with the same character and sense of expectation. This is not the Georg Muffat who studied in Paris with Lully but his son, Gottlieb (also known as Theofilo), who spent much of his career in Vienna and whose set of six harpsichord suites Componimenti Musicali appeared towards the end of the 1730s. [read more...]
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...]
Mitzi Meyerson signals her return on Glossa with a further example of her ability to seek out entertaining music that for too long has been ignored and perform it with all the subtlety, charm and musical skill that such music demands. For her new Glossa release she presents a demonstration of the compositional joys provided by one of the lesser-known French keyboard masters – Claude-Bénigne Balbastre. In her substantial discography there are already recordings given over to other bypassed talents such as Jacques Duphly, Georg Böhm, Antoine Forqueray and even the Fourth Book of François Couperin. [read more...]