THE 1690 ‘TUSCAN’ STRADIVARI Violin sonatas in 18th-century Italy
GCD 923412
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Fabio Biondi, violin Antonio Fantinuoli, cello Giangiacomo Pinardi, theorbo Paola Poncet, harpsichord
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Total playing time 62:01 Recorded in Rome (Auditorium Parco della Musica) in January 2019 Engineered and produced by Fabio Framba Booklet essay by Andrea Zanrè & Stefano Russomanno English – Français – DeutschMade in Austria
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THE 1690 ‘TUSCAN’ STRADIVARIViolin sonatas in 18th-century Italy
1 Francesco Maria Veracini Ciaccona from Sonata “Accademica” op. 2 no 12 (D minor)
2-5 Francesco Geminiani:Sonata op. 4 no 8 (D minor)
6-9 Arcangelo CorelliSonata op. 5 no 9 (A major)
10-12 Giuseppe TartiniSonata op. 1 no 10 “Didone abbandonata” (G minor)
13-16 Pietro Antonio LocatelliSonata “Leufsta” (G minor)
17-20 Antonio VivaldiSonata F.XIII no 16, RV34 (Bb major)
About this album
?In the course of his illustrious career, Fabio Biondi has nurtured a remarkable empathy with Italian music from across many centuries, but strikingly so with the early Baroque violin sonata repertory, the development of which was dramatically propelled into the future by Arcangelo Corelli with his Op 5 collection. It is this empathy possessed by Biondi which has inspired the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome (from its bowed instrument collection) to make him a loan of the precious 1690 “Tuscan” violin made by Antonio Stradivari, for this Glossa recording.
Another skill possessed by Biondi is his deft assemblage of programmes, whether for concert or for CD, and this new release of early eighteenth-century violin works touches on the impact that Corelli’s music had on music-making in Dresden, Venice, Padua, London and Amsterdam, to name just a few of the destinations affected as the fame of “Arcangelo Bolognese” fanned out from Rome across Europe.
With a continuo team from his Europa Galante ensemble (Antonio Fantinuoli, cello, Giangiacomo Pinardi, theorbo and Paola Poncet, harpsichord), Biondi plays sonatas by Vivaldi, Corelli, Geminiani, Tartini and Locatelli, and a Ciaccona by Veracini. Recorded in Rome, on an instrument which was originally made for the Florentine court of Ferdinando de’ Medici (and which, over time, has survived all manner of vicissitudes on its journey to Rome!), Fabio Biondi expertly captures the flavour of the eighteenth-century violin sonata.