Texte paru dans: / Appeared in: |
|
Outil de traduction (Très approximatif) |
|
Reviewer:
Iain Fenlon
It was also in Venice that most of his music was published, and it is from the four volumes of sonatas that form the core of his writing for instruments that most of the works on this recording are taken. In purely structural terms, Legrenzi’s instrumental sonatas follow the traditions established by earlier generations of Italian composers. Each consists of four or five movements, with the slow ones often being purely functional, to facilitate transition rather than establishing a contrasting mood. By way of contrast, Clematis have included a number of pieces from the Op 16 Balletti e correnti, dance types that were to feed into the fully fledged sonata da camera.
All are
essentially designed for performance by strings, and Clematis have sensibly
decided to vary the overall sound by imaginatively scoring the continuo lines
for a wide range of supporting instruments including theorbo, guitar, positive
organ and harpsichord. This welcome variety increases the almost kaleidoscopic
shifting of focus, for all these works are short. Legrenzi’s real gifts lie in
writing catchy tunes, the adroit manipulation of short motifs and attractive
quasi-fugato writing. Clematis have responded with carefully thought-out
phrasing, a well-balanced control of ensemble and a sensitive feel for style;
the result, recorded in two different locations to good acoustic effect, makes
for attractive listening. |
Cliquez l'un ou l'autre
bouton pour découvrir bien d'autres critiques de CD
Click either button for many other reviews