GIOVANNI BATTISTA COSTANZI Sinfonie per violoncello
GCD 923802
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Giovanni Sollima, violoncello
Monika Leskovar, violoncelloGianluca Ubaldi, timpani & tamburello
Arianna Art Ensemble: Cinzia Guarino, harpsichord Andrea Rigano, violoncello Paolo Rigano, archlute & baroque guitar
Production details
Total playing time 65:08 Recorded in Gratteri and in Verona, Italy, in April 2016 and January 2017 Engineered and produced by Filippo Lanteri Executive producers: Chantal Racine, Carlos Céster Booklet essay by Stefano Russomanno English – Français – Deutsch
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GIOVANNI BATTISTA COSTANZI (1704-1778)Sinfonie per violoncello
Sinfonia in D major for violoncello and basso continuo 01 Adagio staccato 2:01 02 Allegro 3:12 03 Amoroso 3:13 04 Minuetto amoroso 1:25
Sinfonia in B flat major for violoncello and basso continuo 05 Adagio 3:49 06 Spiritoso 4:35 07 Sarabanda (Amoroso) 4:16 08 Minuet 1:37
Sonata da Camera for two violoncellos «ad uso di corni da caccia» 09 Amoroso / Allegro assai / Amoroso 1:47 10 Adagio 1:40 11 Presto 1:03
Sinfonia in G major for violoncello and basso continuo 12 Grave 3:42 13 Allegro 1:27 14 Minuè 1:58
Sinfonia in E flat major for violoncello and basso continuo 15 Adagio 3:18 16 Allegro 2:11 17 Minuet 1:51
Giovanni Sollima: The Hunting Sonata 18 Adagio / Allegro 5:32 19 Siciliana 3:35 20 Giga 1:44
Sinfonia in C major for violoncello and basso continuo 21 Grave 2:17 22 Allegro 2:03 23 Allegro (Variazioni) 6:39
About this album
With one disc of cello sonatas by Giovanni Battista Costanzi behind him, Giovanni Sollima has decided to provide further proof of how Costanzi has hitherto been a woefully neglected but exciting compositional voice from that nebulous period between Baroque and Classical. With this new disc of Sinfonie per violoncello from Glossa, Sollima demonstrates once more the melodic inventiveness and harmonic liberty to which Costanzi was given together with a virtuoso’s capacity to relish the technical demands imposed by a Roman musician who was clearly also a star player on the instrument himself.
Together with the Arianna Art Ensemble Sollima has recorded five sinfonias for cello and continuo, and a sonata for two cellos by Costanzi where he is joined once again by Monika Leskovar. If the four movement sonata da chiesa structure favoured by Corelli is still apparent in some of these sinfonias, there is a greater openness to the galante style and influences coming from elsewhere in Europe and from across Italy, for all that Costanzi may have not ventured far outside the Eternal City (it is likely also that he taught the young Boccherini, who had made the considerable journey from Lucca for lessons with “Giovannino del Violoncelo”).
A new composition (The Hunting Sonata) by Sollima himself – another cellist-composer – takes off from Costanzi’s almost programmatic Sonata for two cellos, “ad uso di corni da caccia”.
With one disc of cello sonatas by Giovanni Battista Costanzi behind him, Giovanni Sollima has decided to provide further proof of how Costanzi has hitherto been a woefully neglected but exciting compositional voice from that nebulous period between Baroque and Classical. With this new disc of Sinfonie per violoncello from Glossa, Sollima demonstrates once more the melodic inventiveness and harmonic liberty to which Costanzi was given together with a virtuoso’s capacity to relish the technical demands imposed by a Roman musician who was clearly also a star player on the instrument himself. [read more...]