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Liuwe Tamminga|Giovanni Gabrieli: Dialoghi musicali

Giovanni Gabrieli: Dialoghi musicali

Liuwe Tamminga & Leo Van Doeselaar

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Langue disponible : anglais

Giovanni Gabrieli is one of these Venetian musicians who appears in all music history surveys, but who is actually much less well known than he deserves to be. Modern brass ensembles sometimes perform some of his instrumental pieces in odd transpositions, and motets in concertato style end up in anthologies to illustrate the combination of cori spezzati sacred music. Yet, he was one of the major organists of his time, who wrote in virtually all common vocal and instrumental musical genres, introduced new compositional techniques, worked in the most important Venetian sacred institutions after a sojourn in Bavaria, and trained some of the most important German and Italian composers of the early 17th century.
Giovanni Gabrieli’s complete compositional output is preserved in both printed and manuscripts collections, and consists of about 250 compositions between madrigals (mostly in anthologies), motets, instrumental canzonas and sonatas, and organ pieces (Intonazioni, Ricercari, Canzoni, Toccate, Fughe, and Fantasie). The printed collections of instrumental music that became best known were the Canzoni per sonare con ogni sorte di stromenti (Venice, 1608), and the posthumous Canzoni e Sonate (Venice 1615). Why such polyphonic compositions designated “per ogni sorte di stromenti” (for all sorts of instruments) are performed by two organists in this recording is a consequence of absolute common practice in the 16th and early 17th centuries.
In the present recording, the organists have selected eleven double-choir instrumental pieces (for 8, 10 and 12 parts) taken from the three aforementioned prints (of 1597, 1608, and 1615). This selection of eight-to-twelve-part pieces, performed on two of the most beautiful and suitable organs for this repertoire—the two magnificent organs of the San Petronio Basilica in Bologna (unfortunately no comparable organs have survived in Venice) — offers an excellent panorama of Giovanni Gabrieli’s double-choir compositions in the older (canzoni and madrigals) and newer (sonate) forms and styles of the two decades between the late 16th and the early 17th century in Venice. © Passacaille

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Giovanni Gabrieli: Dialoghi musicali

Liuwe Tamminga

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1
Fuggi pur se sai. Aria da sonar a 8, Ch. 116 (from "Dialoghi musicali raccolte da diversi eccellentissimi", Venice, 1590)
00:05:18

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

2
O che felice giorno. Hodie Christus natus est a 8, Ch. C8 (from "Dialoghi musicali raccolte da diversi eccellentissimi", Venice, 1590)
00:03:22

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

3
Chiar' Angioletta. Aria da sonar a 8, Ch. 117 (from "Dialoghi musicali raccolte da diversi eccellentissimi", Venice, 1590)
00:02:43

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

4
Dormiva dolcemente a 8, Ch. 115 (from "Dialoghi musicali raccolte da diversi eccellentissimi", Venice, 1590)
00:04:09

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

5
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 29, Canzon per sonar septimi toni a 8, Ch. 171
00:05:00

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

6
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 33, Sonata pian e forte, Ch. 175
00:06:30

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

7
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 31, Canzon per sonar noni toni a 8, Ch. 173
00:03:44

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

8
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 30, Canzon per sonar septimi toni a 8, Ch. 172
00:04:22

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

9
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 32, Canzon per sonar duodecimi toni a 8, Ch. 174
00:04:26

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

10
Sacrae symphoniae, Liber 1 (1597): No. 59, Sonata octavi toni a 12, Ch. 184
00:05:25

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

11
Canzon vigesimasettima 'fa-sol-la-re' a 8, Ch. 190 (No. 27 from "Canzoni per sonare con ogni sorte di stromenti", Venice, 1608)
00:03:44

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

12
Canzon vigesimaottava 'sol-sol-la-sol-fa-mi' a 8, Ch. 191 (No. 28 from "Canzoni per sonare con ogni sorte di stromenti", Venice, 1608)
00:02:37

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

13
Canzoni et sonate (1615): Canzon XII a 8, Ch. 205
00:04:41

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

14
Canzoni et sonate (1615): Canzon XIV a 10, Ch. 207
00:04:31

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

15
Canzoni et sonate (1615): Canzon VIII a 8, Ch. 202
00:06:29

Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer - Leo van Doeselaar, MainArtist - Liuwe Tamminga, MainArtist

(C) 2020 Passacaille (P) 2020 Musurgia

Chronique

Giovanni Gabrieli is one of these Venetian musicians who appears in all music history surveys, but who is actually much less well known than he deserves to be. Modern brass ensembles sometimes perform some of his instrumental pieces in odd transpositions, and motets in concertato style end up in anthologies to illustrate the combination of cori spezzati sacred music. Yet, he was one of the major organists of his time, who wrote in virtually all common vocal and instrumental musical genres, introduced new compositional techniques, worked in the most important Venetian sacred institutions after a sojourn in Bavaria, and trained some of the most important German and Italian composers of the early 17th century.
Giovanni Gabrieli’s complete compositional output is preserved in both printed and manuscripts collections, and consists of about 250 compositions between madrigals (mostly in anthologies), motets, instrumental canzonas and sonatas, and organ pieces (Intonazioni, Ricercari, Canzoni, Toccate, Fughe, and Fantasie). The printed collections of instrumental music that became best known were the Canzoni per sonare con ogni sorte di stromenti (Venice, 1608), and the posthumous Canzoni e Sonate (Venice 1615). Why such polyphonic compositions designated “per ogni sorte di stromenti” (for all sorts of instruments) are performed by two organists in this recording is a consequence of absolute common practice in the 16th and early 17th centuries.
In the present recording, the organists have selected eleven double-choir instrumental pieces (for 8, 10 and 12 parts) taken from the three aforementioned prints (of 1597, 1608, and 1615). This selection of eight-to-twelve-part pieces, performed on two of the most beautiful and suitable organs for this repertoire—the two magnificent organs of the San Petronio Basilica in Bologna (unfortunately no comparable organs have survived in Venice) — offers an excellent panorama of Giovanni Gabrieli’s double-choir compositions in the older (canzoni and madrigals) and newer (sonate) forms and styles of the two decades between the late 16th and the early 17th century in Venice. © Passacaille

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