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             Flights of Fantasy - Early Italian Chamber Music 
               
              Dario CASTELLO (1st half 17th C) 
               
              Sonata XIV à 4, due soprani e due tromboni overo violete [06:37] 
               
              Carlo FARINA (c.1604-1639)  
              Capriccio Stravagante [15:45]  
              Francesco CAVALLI (1602-1676) 
               
              Sonata à 6 (1656) [05:30]  
              Biagio MARINI (1594-1663)  
              Passacaglio à 4  
              Heinrich Ignaz Franz VON BIBER (1644-1704) 
               
              Harmonia artificiosa-ariosa:  
              Partia VI [16:14]  
              Giovanni LEGRENZI (1626-1671) 
               
              Sonata à 5 La Fugazza (1671) [04:51]  
              Dario CASTELLO  
              Sonata II à sopran solo [05:13]  
              Antonio BERTALI (1605-1669) 
               
              Sonata à 5 [08:16]  
              Girolamo FRESCOBALDI (1583-1643) 
               
              Canzona III (1627/37) [04:23]  
              Dario CASTELLO  
              Sonata XVI à 4 per stromenti d'arco [06:37]  
                
              Irish Baroque Orchestra Chamber Soloists (Monica Huggett, Claire 
              Duff (violin), Emilia Benjamin (alto viola, lirone, viola da gamba), 
              Alfonso Leal del Ojo (alto viola), Louise Hogan (tenor viola), Sarah 
              McMahon (bass violin), Thomas Dunford (theorbo), Siobhán Armstrong 
              (arpa doppia), Malcolm Proud (harpsichord, organ))/Monica Huggett 
               
              rec. 19-21 January 2009, St Peter's Church, Drogheda, County Louth, 
              Ireland. DDD  
                
              AVIE AV2202 [78:56]   
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                  The title of this disc perfectly expresses 
                  the character of Italian instrumental music of the 17th century. 
                  In the 16th century the scene was dominated by vocal music in 
                  general, and sacred works in particular. This dominance came 
                  to an end towards the end of the century, and composers felt 
                  free to experiment with textures, harmony, scoring and compositional 
                  techniques. The programme on this disc is an amalgam of the 
                  various ways composers used their freedom.  
                   
                  Some pieces are close to the style of the late 16th century. 
                  The Sonata à 6 by Francesco Cavalli, for instance, is 
                  dominated by counterpoint, with all parts treated on equal footing. 
                  Interestingly, it shows the influence of the Venetian polychoral 
                  technique in that it contains several episodes in which high 
                  and low strings are juxtaposed. Like Cavalli Giovanni Legrenzi 
                  worked in Venice, and his Sonata à 5 La Fugazza also 
                  has a polyphonic texture. In fact, this piece is pretty close 
                  to the consort music which was in fashion around 1600. This 
                  kind of music was also held in high esteem in Austria, in particular 
                  at the imperial court. Here Antonio Bertali worked from 1631 
                  until his death, since 1649 as Kapellmeister. His Sonata 
                  à 5 is also rather conservative.  
                   
                  At the other end of the spectrum we find Carlo Farina, who was 
                  a virtuosic violinist, and worked at the court of Dresden for 
                  a number of years. Several volumes of his music were printed 
                  there, and through them he heavily influenced violin playing 
                  in Germany. His Capriccio stravagante is his most famous 
                  work, in which he uses the string instruments - one violin and 
                  two violas - to imitate instruments, like the trumpet and the 
                  guitar, or animals, like the cat and the hen. Several composers 
                  from Germany and Austria, in particular Johann Jacob Walther 
                  and Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber, followed in his footsteps 
                  and frequently included this kind of imitations in their compositions. 
                   
                   
                  The latter also experienced with tunings, and in particular 
                  the scordatura. His collection of seven Partias, which 
                  were published under the title of Harmonia artificiosa-ariosa, 
                  show his experiments in this regard. The Partia VI is a brilliant 
                  example. Experiments with harmony are also present in the Passacaglio 
                  à 4 by Biagio Marini, which contains dissonances and chromaticism. 
                   
                   
                  Instrumental effects which were popular in Italy were the echo 
                  and the tremolo. These are included in the Sonata II à sopran 
                  solo by Dario Castello. This is a virtuosic sonata for a 
                  solo instrument and basso continuo. The fact that he was a wind 
                  player himself explains the fact that the scoring is not specified. 
                  It can also be played on, for instance, the cornett. The two 
                  other pieces by Castello are ensemble sonatas. The Sonata 
                  XIV à 4 which opens the programme, is for two treble instruments 
                  and two lower instruments; for the latter Castello specified 
                  either trombones or violete. Here these parts are played 
                  on viola da gamba and bass violin. The disc ends with Castello's 
                  Sonata XVI à 4. This is specifically scored for strings, 
                  and we hear two violins, tenor viola and bass violin.  
                   
                  The inclusion of a keyboard piece by Girolamo Frescobaldi may 
                  seem a little odd, but in fact it makes much sense. The likes 
                  of Castello and Farina expressed their "flights of fantasy" 
                  in instrumental music, Frescobaldi did so in his keyboard oeuvre. 
                  Through this he strongly influenced the style of composing in 
                  the whole of Europe, and this influence reaches as far as Johann 
                  Sebastian Bach.  
                   
                  If one listens to this disc it is easy to understand that composers 
                  from above the Alps went southwards to listen and to learn, 
                  and that Italian composers who travelled north found open ears 
                  for their art. Their music was exciting, full of new ideas and 
                  highly experimental, and the way they let their fantasy fly 
                  was greatly inspiring. Monica Huggett and their colleagues have 
                  found the right way to make this understandable to a modern 
                  audience. They let their own fantasy fly, and this results in 
                  bold and engaging interpretations. But their performances are 
                  always disciplined. That is definitely right, considering the 
                  fact that several composers warned for excessive ornamentation. 
                  In particular in Fontana's Capriccio stravagante it is 
                  tempting to do too much, and to add some effects to those written 
                  by the composer. That could easily make a caricature of this 
                  piece. But Ms Huggett is too sincere a musician to do so. She 
                  and her colleagues use their own great skills at the service 
                  of the composers and their skills.  
                   
                  John Cunningham has written excellent programme notes in English, 
                  with translations in German and French. The booklet also contains 
                  a list of the instruments used in this recording.  
                   
                  Johan van Veen 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     
             
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