COLORES DEL SUR Baroque dances for guitar
GCD P33301
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Enrike Solinís, baroque guitar, theorbo & lavta
Euskal Barrokensemble:David Jiménez “Chupete”, percussion Dani Garay, percussion Miren Zeberio, baroque violin Josetxu Obregón, baroque cello Pablo Martín Caminero, violone Iñaki Aranegi, theorbo Vicente Parrilla, recorder
Production details
Total playing time 54:20 Recorded in Sevilla (Estudio Sputnik) in June 2013 Engineered by Jordi GilProduced by Fahmi Alqhai & Enrike Solinís Executive producer: Carlos CésterBooklet in English - Français - Deutsch - Español - Euskera
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01 Canarios Gaspar Sanz (1640-1710)
02 Cumbés Santiago de Murcia (c.1682-c.1740)
03 Pasacalle Gaspar Sanz
04 Jácaras Antonio de Santa Cruz (fl.c.1700)
05 Sonata K 14 Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757)
06 Sonata K 1 Domenico Scarlatti
07 Arpeggiata Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger (c.1580-1651)
08 La KapsbergerGiovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
09 Makam Huseyni Aga Riza, from the collection of Dimitrie Cantemir (1673-1723)
10 Capona Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
11 Sonata K 380 Domenico Scarlatti
12 Sonata K 27 Domenico Scarlatti
13 “Errekaxilo” Fandangoa Traditional
14 Passacaglia Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
15 Colassione Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
16 Marionas Gaspar Sanz
About this CD
The new stream of performers coming from Spain – who are interested in addressing music from the past – is as equally determined to show off its improvisatory skills as it is to demonstrate its knowledge of the “score”; both attributes available in abundance on the first recording on Glossa by guitarist Enrike Solinís. With his Euskal Barrokensemble, Solinís – raised in Bilbao and largely self-taught on plucked instruments – displays on Colores del Sur a creative openness to other musical genres and styles and a lack of reverence for interpretative certainties.
The result is a captivating collation of marionas, canarios, cumbés, jácaras, fandangos and passacaglias drawn from the Spanish and Italian Baroque traditions. Music by Sanz, Santiago de Murcia and Kapsberger provide the starting points on this new disc, along with musical ideas from Domenico Scarlatti and a makam as compiled by the Moldavian prince-philosopher Dimitrie Cantemir (which sees Solinís also performing on the lavta). However, Solinís and his colleagues overlay all this music with 21st-century sensibilities, alive to inspiration from all corners of the globe, not just Europe, and not least Andalucía.
The risk-taking adventurousness of Colores del Sur comes, perhaps not surprisingly, with coproduction work from Fahmi Alqhai (whose Rediscovering Spain album was released by Glossa recently), another unquiet musical spirit from Spain questioning the basis of playing music from the Baroque and before.