Francesco Corti – Frescobaldi and the South. Intendomi chi può che m’intend’io (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Francesco Corti – Frescobaldi and the South. Intendomi chi può che m’intend’io (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

In 1594 Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa, arrived in Ferrara for his marriage to Donna Eleonora d’Este. His meeting with the musical circles of Ferrara, and in particular with Luzzasco Luzzaschi, was to make an important impact on the musical development of the young Girolamo Frescobaldi. In his maturity Frescobaldi arrived at a deeply personal fusion between the musical forms of North Italian (and more specifically Venetian) derivation and the musical experimentation of the southern school. The aim of this recording project is to explore the reciprocal influences between great keyboard master from Ferrara and his colleagues from the Kingdom of Naples. Represented here in a dialogue with Frescobaldi’s works are not only the great experimental figures from the years bridging the 16th and 17th centuries (J. De Macque, Rodio, Stella), but also the composers from the following generation who absorbed and built on Frescobaldi’s example (Storace, Salvatore, L. Rossi), as well as contemporaries who adopted a parallel course (M. Rossi). This fertile musical exchange, which culminated in the profoundly distinctive innovations of Frescobaldi himself, fully exemplifies the spirit of experimentation and musical innovation typical of the early 17th century, a period that, like few others, sought out and celebrated aesthetic renewal.

Francesco Corti – Handel: Winged Hands. The Eight Great Suites & Overtures (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Francesco Corti – Handel: Winged Hands. The Eight Great Suites & Overtures (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

After the album Bach, Little Books , harpsichordist Francesco Corti continues his collaboration with Arcana with a 2-CD recording entirely dedicated to George Frideric Handel. At the center of the project are the eight “Great” suites. These masterpieces were the composer’s first published set, and are a clear testimony to his virtuosity at the keyboard. Their characteristically diversified styles reflect not only the mélange of national traditions assimilated by the young composer, but also his phenomenal improvisatory talent. Moreover, the attraction of these pieces lies in their melodic and rhythmic affinity to the world of singing and orchestral writing, Händel’s strongest interests.

Arrangements of Handel’s operatic overtures and arias started circulating early in his career in England, and in his later years he was known to perform his overtures on the keyboard himself. Corti designs a program showcasing the composer’s brilliant treatment of the instrument, choosing to complement the “Great” Suites with a selection of transcriptions from Händel’s own hand and from his close musical circle.

Francesco Cera – Frescobaldi: Toccate – Capricci – Fiori Musicali (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Francesco Cera – Frescobaldi: Toccate – Capricci – Fiori Musicali (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Girolamo Frescobaldi is one of the most extraordinary figures in the history of music for harpsichord and organ, and had an enormous influence on other composers up until Bach. His brilliant toccatas reveal an inner world that fascinates today’s listener. Frescobaldi’s inspiration was born at the court of Ferrara and reached maturity in Rome, where the composer found himself among the major artists of the time who were actively creating a new artistic language. The 7-CD box set includes the four collections by Frescobaldi which, due to their exceptional innovative strength, have left the greatest mark on the history of music for the keyboard. A pupil of Leonhardt and Tagliavini, Francesco Cera is today recognized as one of the leading specialists in Frescobaldi, whose music he has helped to disseminate through concerts and master classes in Europe and the United States. Part of the music was recorded in the excellent acoustics of the Sala della Vigna in the Delizia di Belriguardo, the summer residence of the Este dukes, where the very young Frescobaldi was often present. Cera has chosen nine priceless instruments, including the Guglielmi organ of 1615 in the church of Santa Maria in Vallicella in Rome, and a copy of the harpsichord by Nicolò Albana, Naples 1584. The art historian Denis Grenier has been entrusted with the task of illustrating seven works of art that testify to the link between the music of Frescobaldi and the art in Rome of his time.

Flora Papadopoulos – Unwritten. From Violin to Harp (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Flora Papadopoulos – Unwritten. From Violin to Harp (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Harpist Flora Papadopoulos has chosen a double harp with three ranks, a copy of the famous Barberini harp of the years 1625-1630, for these transcriptions of works adapted, not, as one might imagine, from clavier or lute, but from violin. Because in fact, in the baroque era, it seems that the harp served as a melodic instrument – solo, that is – as often as it did as a harmonic instrument – in continuo, no doubt. One of Biber’s Rosary Sonatas and one by Corelli make up the pillars of “works with basso continuo”, so Papadopoulos only needed to redistribute the melodic part on the one hand, the bassline on the other, with the continuo provided however she pleases. Things are a little different on Bach’s Sonata, as it was written for solo violin… Our virtuoso has to mix up period versions which include voices – some movements for the Sonata were transcribed for lute or organ at the time – or to “sell” the polyphony which is implied in the writing for violin solo by redistributing it around the harp’s various registers. Finally, for those who wonder how a double harp could have three ranks: two diatonic ranks in unison, for volume, and a central rank with the sharps and flats. The two diatonic ranks are thought of as a single rank.

Evangelina Mascardi – Milano Spagnola. Para tecla y vihuela (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Evangelina Mascardi – Milano Spagnola. Para tecla y vihuela (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Antonio de Cabezón travelled across Europe visiting Milan in 1548 and his music influenced the great European composers. Contrary to keyboard instruments, lute and vihuela already have a vast repertoire in print. The combination of a keyboard instrument (tecla) with the vihuela (called ‘viola da mano’ in Italy) is common in the sources of Spanish influence of this period, which often bear the indication ‘para tecla y vihuela’. Evangelina Mascardi and Maurizio Croci, established soloists on the international early music scene, explore the affinities, the contrasts and, in the words of an enthusiastic chronicler of the time, the ‘unheard of imitations’ that arise from the dialogue between the two instruments.

Ensemble Aurora – The Fiery Genius: Neapolitan Instrumental Music for 1, 2, 3, and 4 Violins (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Ensemble Aurora – The Fiery Genius: Neapolitan Instrumental Music for 1, 2, 3, and 4 Violins (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

The central role of Naples in the history of vocal music has so far overshadowed a rich tradition of instrumental music; only in recent years has musicological research begun bringing it to light once more, demonstrating that Naples also played a crucial role in the field of instrumental music, no less relevant than other centres more often associated with this repertory, such as Rome and Venice.

Zefiro Baroque Orchestra, Alfredo Bernardini – Telemann: Ouvertures à 8 (2013) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Zefiro Baroque Orchestra, Alfredo Bernardini – Telemann: Ouvertures à 8 (2013) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Recorded in the bright acoustics of the Teatro Bibiena in Mantua (“the most beautiful theatre in the world”, according to Leopold Mozart), Zefiro’s second release on the Arcana label is devoted to the colourful world of Telemann’s Overtures (i.e. Suites). The three masterworks presented here highlight the unique quality of this versatile ensemble – formed by the oboists Alfredo Bernardini and Paolo Grazzi, and the bassoonist Alberto Grazzi – specialising in eighteenth-century works that give particular prominence to wind instruments.

Ensemble Aurora – On the Shoulders of Giants: Tracing the Roots of Counterpoint (2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Ensemble Aurora – On the Shoulders of Giants: Tracing the Roots of Counterpoint (2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Enrico Gatti’s eighth recording for the Arcana label, and the debut album by his Ensemble Aurora in the role of string quartet, is without a doubt the most original of his discography. The result of years of research and discoveries, On The Shoulders of Giants is an exciting journey back to the roots of string quartet writing and counterpoint: from Renaissance tablatures to Mozart’s famous String Quartet in G major KV387, the first of the ‘Haydn’ Quartets, by way of Dario Castello, Johann Rosenmuller, Johann Sebastian Bach (the fourth counterpoint from The Art of Fugue) and the inevitable Corelli (Fuga a Quattro voci): a concentration of beautiful music, with a programme that encompasses different periods but with a clear main theme, which Enrico Gatti describes so well in his authoritative liner notes.

Estro Cromatico, Marco Scorticati – Corelli: Solos and Concertos Fitted for the Flutes (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Estro Cromatico, Marco Scorticati – Corelli: Solos and Concertos Fitted for the Flutes (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

In early 18th-century England, the recorder was a popular instrument among music lovers, therefore – since the eminent Italian composer Arcangelo Corelli’s works made an enormous impression in the country – it was only a matter of time before numerous virtuoso recorder arrangements of his string works began to appear. Estro Cromatico leader Marco Scorticati (recorder) and his longstanding partner Davide Pozzi (harpsichord and organ) join forces with Evangelina Mascardi (archlute), Sara Campobasso (recorder), Michela Gardini (cello) and Pietro Pasquini (organ), to deliver a new rendition of this well-loved music, including two premiere recordings. Improvised ornamentation, as well as the multifaceted texture provided by diversified combinations of the continuo instruments, play a central role in the present interpretation, thus bringing Corelli’s extraordinary music back to life; as Roger North wrote in 1710 «if music can be immortal, Corelli’s consorts will be so». Booklet notes include a short essay on Corelli and the recorder written by Dr. David Lasocki, recognized as one of the world’s leading scholars regarding woodwind instruments, particularly members of the flute family.

Ensemble Mare Nostrum, Andrea De Carlo – Stradella: Amare e fingere (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Ensemble Mare Nostrum, Andrea De Carlo – Stradella: Amare e fingere (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

The discovery of the inventory of an extraordinary collection of music from the late seventeenth century has made it possible to track down a previously unknown work by Stradella, Amare e fingere, performed in Siena in 1676. Love, jealousy, dissimulation, false identities, intrigue, festive celebrations and duels form the ingredients of this opera, whose libretto, probably attributable to Giovanni Filippo Apolloni, is inspired by a Spanish comedy of the time.

Ensemble Mare Nostrum, Andrea De Carlo – Stradella: Santa Editta (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Ensemble Mare Nostrum, Andrea De Carlo – Stradella: Santa Editta (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Our beautiful recording for Arcana of Alessandro Stradella’s oratorio ‘Santa Editta“. With this third installment of the Stradella Project, Andrea De Carlo and Ensemble Mare Nostrum continue the exploration of the oratorio output, following the recent rediscovery of San Giovanni Crisostomo.

An historical figure from the 10th century, Edith of Wilton was an English nun of noble birth, and legend has it that she refused the opportunity of taking the throne, causing the aversion of a faction of nobles.

Evangelina Mascardi – Bach: Complete Lute Works (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Evangelina Mascardi – Bach: Complete Lute Works (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

The seven compositions commonly called works for lute by Johann Sebastian Bach, despite more than a century of studies, do not seem to want to completely reveal the mystery of their birth, of their real instrumental destination and of Bach’s decidedly abstract concept of the instrument, the lute, which in its latest evolution continued after almost three centuries of glory to attract the attention of the highest musical lineage. The mystery did not distance the interpreters from these compositions, which Bach did not collect in a single cycle, as he did for the works for solo violin and cello, and indeed it has made them perhaps more stimulating, especially if we consider that in the turn of seventy years the lute was destined to disappear from the music scene. There are moments in which, to discover or define who we are, we must confront ourselves with the unknown.

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Swithun! (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Swithun! (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Open the door onto one of the best-kept secrets of medieval music… It is the music from the Winchester Troper, one of the earliest, and most stunning sources of medieval polyphonic music, written in the first decades of the eleventh century, more than two centuries before the manuscripts of Notre-Dame polyphony. Without the existence of this repertory, our vision of music history would have been entirely different, and much poorer.

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Barlaam & Josaphat: Buddha, a Christian Saint? (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Barlaam & Josaphat: Buddha, a Christian Saint? (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Could you ever imagine that one of the most popular saints in the Christian calendar of the Middle Ages was – Buddha? After ten years of research in a multitude of libraries worldwide, Katarina Livljanić and the ensemble Dialogos, faithful to their exploratory and fearless spirit, bring yet another surprise from the less known medieval lands, after its award-winning albums such as Dalmatica: Chants of the Adriatic (A395), Lombards & Barbares (A319), La vision de Tondal (A329), Judith: A Biblical Story from Renaissance Croatia (ALPHA702).

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Dalmatica: Chants of the Adriatic (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Dialogos, Katarina Livljanić – Dalmatica: Chants of the Adriatic (2016) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

The Croatian region of Dalmatia has many musical treasures that have long been overlooked. Resting on the boundary of Roman Catholic and Byzantine worlds, the music here features rare pieces recovered from Latin manuscripts, and polyphonic Glagolitic chants. Dialogos performs these works, conducted by Katarina Livljanic.

Chiara Zanisi, Giovanni Sollima – The Lady from the Sea: Duos for Violin and Cello from Vivaldi to Sollima (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Chiara Zanisi, Giovanni Sollima – The Lady from the Sea: Duos for Violin and Cello from Vivaldi to Sollima (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

After calling it ‘a wonderful album in all respects’, the magazine Diapason concluded its review of “Suite Case. Violin Duos from Vivaldi to Sollima” with the question, ‘When can we look forward to the second volume?’ In this new project, the violin of Stefano Barneschi gives way to the cello of Giovanni Sollima, the multi-talented musician from Palermo featured here not only as a composer. On this new journey, again beginning with Antonio Vivaldi, Giovanni Sollima and Chiara Zanisi travel between early and modern music, between classical and folk (the Old Scots Tunes of Francesco Barsanti), with two previously unrecorded gems by the Roman composer Giovanni Battista Costanzi. The entire recording is punctuated by tracks taken from Suite Case, a cycle composed especially by Sollima for this project.

Cecile Mansuy – La Spagnoletta: Selva di variazioni & diverse composizioni per il cimbalo (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Cecile Mansuy – La Spagnoletta: Selva di variazioni & diverse composizioni per il cimbalo (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

No, “La Spagnoletta” is not the name of a composer: it’s the first piece on this album, which probably dates back to the late 16th century, and which provided many musicians with the raw material for fantasias, partitas, caprices, arias and all the conceivable musical forms then in vogue. We start with Giovan Battista Ferrini (1601-1674) and his Tastata per cembalo La Spagnoletta, followed by one of the “clearer” pieces, which takes up the source, The Old Spagnoletta by Giles Farnaby (1563-1640). Frescobaldi himself gets involved with his Capriccio VI sopra la Spagnoletta, while Johann Speth (1664-1719) throws in his Partite divers sopra la Spagnioletta and finally Bernardo Storace (1637-1707) his Aria sopra la Spagnoletta.

Chiara Zanisi, Stefano Barneschi – Suite Case: Violin Duos from Vivaldi to Sollima (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Chiara Zanisi, Stefano Barneschi – Suite Case: Violin Duos from Vivaldi to Sollima (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

As not indicated by its title, this album offers duos for two violins, a very wide repertoire that is however rarely recorded. “Suite Case” is simply the name of the first piece, penned by Giovanni Solima and precisely dedicated to our two soloists, Chiara Zanisi and Stefano Barneschi, followed by an impressive range of works written between the middle of the Baroque era and the present times with Bartók and Berio. It is worth noting that these pieces for two violins, a formation rather ill-suited for public concerts, had two distinct vocations: a pedagogic use, as is the case for Bartók’s 44 Duos (with a very pronounced insistence on Magyar folklore) and Haydn with his Three easy and progressive duos for two violins, whose name says it all; and a family use, like Telemann’s Canons mélodieux ou sonates en duo à flûtes traverses, ou violons, ou basses de viole (melodious canons or six duo-sonatas for traversos, or violins, or viola da gambas)—the composer, an excellent businessman, aimed at any and every possible buyer who wished to have small domestic concerts with any combination of two instruments. Only Vivaldi’s duo—at least for the repertoire of that era—seems to have been meant for a pair of virtuoso, a bit intrinsically: the language is neither for students nor for enlightened amateurs, given its difficulty. Curiously, the partition notes that the bass is optional… Even if it is not written, any harpsichordist could have improvised it in continuo. Solima’s piece acts as a guide for the album, opening and closing it.

Concerto di Margherita – Il gioco della cieca. Madrigali, Canzoni & Villanelle per cantare, et sonare (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

Concerto di Margherita – Il gioco della cieca. Madrigali, Canzoni & Villanelle per cantare, et sonare (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

A young ensemble of instrumentalists and singers revives the precious historical practice of singers accompanying themselves (already brought back into currency by the soloist VivaBiancaLuna Biffi), thus producing a wholly new sound in music usually assigned to unaccompanied voices. With Concerto di Margherita, self-accompanied singing becomes ‘collective’ for the first time in our era, and is amplified in a shared gesture in which all the members of the group – playing and singing together with extraordinary coordination – produce a sonority unprecedented in this repertory. Created at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Switzerland, the group (which is named after the Duchess of Ferrara, Margherita Gonzaga) performs as a consort of five voices, theorbo, harp, viola da gamba, guitar and lutes, inspired by the Concerto delle dame of Ferrara.

Voces Suaves, Francesco Saverio Pedrini, Concerto Scirocco, Giulia Genini – Croce: Motetti & Sacrae Cantiones (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Voces Suaves, Francesco Saverio Pedrini, Concerto Scirocco, Giulia Genini – Croce: Motetti & Sacrae Cantiones (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Less famous—at least these days—than his colleague, “rival” and almost contemporary Giovanni Gabrieli, Giovanni Croce also worked in Venice, but wrote less in the sacred polychoral style and more in madrigals for four or five voices (often profane, carefree and happy) than Gabrieli. That being said, here’s some of his works for eight voices—often polychoral then—released in Venice in 1596 for the motets, and in 1605 for theSacrae Cantiones, testimonies of his consummate art of melody and harmony. By comparison, the ensembles Voces Suaves—vocal— and Concerto Scirocco—instrumental—have chosen to include some works from the two Gabrielis, Andrea and his nephew Giovanni, and also from Guami and Merulo, all tight contemporaries going from the middle of the XVIth century to the start of the next one. Cornets, sackbuts, viols, dulcians and organs (the one built in 1565 in the Church of Mantua, in which the album is recorded, for that matter) answer to the voices in the very rich and yet intimate acoustics of the place.