Paradisi (orthographié selon son origine napolitaine) ou Paradies (selon son deuxième lieu de carrière : l’Angleterre) est un contemporain de Domenico Scarlatti. Avec celui-ci, il possède des idiomes communs : virtuosité, harmonie, prédilection pour les contrastes. Son œuvre se partage entre l’opéra et le clavecin. A ce dernier, il a dédié 12 sonates, et trois concertos (jouables également à l’orgue). L’interprète de ces 12 sonates, Alessandro Simonetto, est un curieux personnage : compositeur dès son plus jeune âge, il écrivit alors des parodies de Mazurkas de Chopin et des musiques de films ; il est aussi jazzman, joueur de synthétiseur, pianiste, présentateur de radios, organisateur de compétitions musicales, et… claveciniste. Par ce double CD, sans doute a-t-il voulu prouver qu’il pouvait même être un « baroqueux » (il joue d’ailleurs sur une copie de Ruckers) ! Si l’on ne peut nier sa virtuosité, lui manquerait toutefois un certain sens de la poésie, par exemple dans l’Aria de la Sonate n° 3, un peu raide, ou encore le Minuetto de la Sonate n° 4, joué curieusement piqué. Tel quelle, cette intégrale permet de connaître Paradisi, mais il est permis d’en attendre une version plus "achevée". (Jean-Paul Lécot) Pietro Domenico Paradies (1710-1792) was a Neapolitan-born harpsichordist, teacher and composer who lived for most of his career in London. His own output was considerable, much of it preserved in manuscript at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge. A sparkling Toccata entered the repertoire of pianists in the early 20th century such as Dame Myra Hess and received a few recordings as well as ‘Hooked on Classics’ style arrangements, but his collection of 12 sonatas (of which the Toccata is the finale of the sixth) remains comparatively obscure. Published in London in 1754, the sonatas quickly won admirers among professional and amateur musicians alike. In December 1774 Leopold Mozart, on one of his concert tours with Wolfgang, wrote home to Salzburg that 'Nannerl should practice the clavier most diligently, especially the sonatas of Paradisi and Bach.’ Without rivalling the grandeur or the unpredictable invention of comparable works by the likes of CPE Bach, the sonatas nonetheless possess features that distinguish them from most of their contemporaries. All 12 are cast in two movements, with both slow and quick finales: more similar in this regard to the earlier Scarlattian genre than the Classical norm of a three- or four-movement sonata. Yet Paradies writes with an attractive mixture of Baroque and Classical styles, a rich and expressive harmonic vocabulary, and an original grasp of form, especially in the first movements. The brilliant, Scarlattian figuration, textures, rhythmic vitality, and the lack of technical difficulty in relation to late Baroque contrapuntal music are probably key to the Toccata's enduring popularity, but these qualities can also be found throughout the collection. In his albums for Brilliant Classics, Alessandro Simonetto has made a speciality of under-recorded harpsichord music from this artistically mercurial late-Baroque era. His set of the nine suites by Pieter Bustijn (94187) was recommended by MusicWeb as a ‘Bargain of the Month’: ‘a disc that no lover of Baroque or harpsichord music in general should be without: nearly eighty minutes of enormously appealing, high-octane invention superbly rendered by Alessandro Simonetto.’ His set of the 12 Suites by Johann Mattheson (95588) also won three stars in the French magazine Diapason.
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