|
|
|
Format : 1 CD Durée totale : 00:54:18
Enregistrement : 03-05/02/2025 Lieu : La Haye Pays : Pays-Bas Prise de son : Eglise / Stereo
Label : Challenge Classics Référence : CC720021 EAN : 0608917200218 Code Prix : DM019A
Année d'édition : 2026 Date de sortie : 01/02/2026
Genre : Classique
|
|
 |
Rocco Greco (?1650-1717)Sinfonia n° 2 à 2 violes Sinfonia n° 3 pour 2 violes Sinfonia n° 4 pour 2 violes Sinfonia n° 5 pour 2 violes "La prima viola suona li numeri" Sinfonia n° 6 pour 2 violes Sinfonia n° 7 pour 2 violes Sinfonia n° 10 pour 2 violes Gaetano Greco (?1657-1728)Toccata n° 7 pour clavecin Partimento pour clavecin Partimento pour archiluth Passacaille pour archiluth Tarantelle Sinfonia Ballo della Torcia Francesco Mancini (1672-1737)Toccata n° 6 Anonyme (Italie)Balletto francese I Mastricelli
Antonio Pellegrino, violoncelle, basse de violon Agata Sorotkin, clavecin Asako Ueda, théorbe, archiluth, guitare Marino Gonzalez Garcia, viole de gambe Alon Portal, basse de violon Caroline Kang, basse de violon
|
 
 This recording takes the listener deep into the heart of late-seventeenth-century Naples, where brothers Rocco and Gaetano Greco were central figures in the city’s thriving musical life. Their works, grounded in the practice of partimento — an improvisational method built around a given bass line — showcase the cello’s emancipation from a purely accompanying role into a fully expressive solo voice. Through vivid dialogues between lower string instruments and harpsichord, I Mastricelli revives a forgotten musical language in which virtuosity, counterpoint, and improvisation converge. The result is a rare glimpse into the creative processes that shaped the Neapolitan cello school and its lasting influence across Europe. The second part of the programme focuses on Gaetano Greco’s pedagogical legacy, presenting short dances, toccatas, and improvisations drawn from early-eighteenth-century student notebooks, alongside music by Francesco Mancini. I Mastricelli highlights the diversity of Neapolitan musical culture — from the earthy energy of the tarantella to the refined contrapuntal art of the keyboard. The ensemble’s instrumentation — including cellos, bass viols, bass violins, theorbo, lute, guitar, and harpsichord — evokes the rich timbral world of Baroque Naples. Combining scholarly research with living performance, this debut album offers both an artistic rediscovery and a celebration of the improvisatory freedom at the core of the partimento tradition.

|
| . |
 |
|
|