L’ENTROPIA Von Westhoff, Pandolfo Mealli, Kapsberger, ...
GCD 924704
—
Lina Tur Bonet, baroque violinJadran Duncumb, theorbo & baroque guitar—
Production details
Recorded at MuziekHaven Zaandam, Amsterdam (The Netherlands), 17-19 July 2024 Recording: Northstar Recording Services BV Producer, engineer, editing & mastering: Bert van der Wolf - Oude Avenhuis Executive producers: Lina Tur Bonet, Jadran Duncumb, Michael Sawall (note 1 music) Essays by Lina Tur Bonet and Jadran Duncumb English – Français – Deutsch
Comprar este producto
L’ENTROPIAVon Westhoff, Pandolfo Mealli, Kapsberger, ...
1 Johann Paul von Westhoff (1656-1705) “Imitazione delle Campane” 2:14 Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi Mealli (1624-1670)2 Sonata “La Vinciolina” 7:11 Biagio Marini (1594-1663) 3 Romanesca 5:03 Giuseppe Colombi (1635-1694) 4 Sarabanda con la scordatura 1:08 Samuel Capricornus (1628- 1665) 5 Sonata in E minor 5:42 Jean-Baptiste Drouart de Bousset (1662-1725) 6 “Printemps” 2:29 Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger (1580-1651) 7 Ballo 4:25 Giovanni Battista Fontana (1571-1630) 8 Sonata Seconda 7:01 Nicola Matteis (1650-1714) 9 Preludio in Fantasia 1:34 10 Scaramuccia 1:08 11 Passaggio Rotto 2:31 12 Fantasia 1:46 Biagio Marini (1594-1663) 13 Sonata Quarta 9:15 Francesco Corbetta (c. 1615-1681) 14 Folias 3:44 Nicola Matteis 15 Adagio 2:22 16 Ciaccona sopra la vecchia Sarabanda 4:55 Bartolomé de Selma y Salaverde (1595-1640) 17 Sonata Terza 6:53
About this album
In physics, entropy measures the degree of disorder in a system and the associated arrangement possibilities. Lina Tur Bonet chose this term as the title for her new CD on Glossa, on which she – together with theorbist Jadran Duncumb – interprets Italian violin music of the so-called stylus phantasticus. This style developed in Italy in the late 16th century from the practice of improvisation. It is characterised by extremely expressive playing in which short, sometimes dissonant and bizarre figures, sometimes extreme chromaticism, rapid virtuoso runs and sections with ostinato bass are combined as in a free improvisation. Johann Mattheson confirmed this impression in his book Der vollkommene Kapellmeister in 1739: ‘For this style is the freest and most unrestrained way of setting, singing and playing that one can imagine, since one soon comes up with these and then those ideas, since all kinds of otherwise unusual passages, hidden ornaments, meaningful turns and embellishments are produced, without actual observation of the act and tone; sometimes hasty, sometimes hesitant; sometimes monophonic, sometimes polyphonic; sometimes also for a short time after the act: without soundmass; yet not without intention to please, to hurry and to astonish. ’