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Pietro & Prospero Castrucci - Sonatas for Violin and Basso Continuo | Brilliant Classics 96945

Pietro & Prospero Castrucci - Sonatas for Violin and Basso Continuo

£9.05

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Label: Brilliant Classics

Cat No: 96945

Barcode: 5028421969459

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Chamber

Release Date: 28th July 2023

Contents

Works

Castrucci, Pietro

Violin Sonatas (11) and Ciaccona, op.2
» no.1 Sonata in D minor
» no.12 Ciaccona in G major
Violin Sonatas (12), op.1
» no.3 in G minor
» no.4 in C major
» no.7 in D minor
» no.9 in D minor

Castrucci, Prospero

Violin Sonatas (6)
» no.2 in D minor
» no.4 in G minor
» no.5 in E minor

Artists

Marco Pedrona (violin)
Davide Merello (organ)

Works

Castrucci, Pietro

Violin Sonatas (11) and Ciaccona, op.2
» no.1 Sonata in D minor
» no.12 Ciaccona in G major
Violin Sonatas (12), op.1
» no.3 in G minor
» no.4 in C major
» no.7 in D minor
» no.9 in D minor

Castrucci, Prospero

Violin Sonatas (6)
» no.2 in D minor
» no.4 in G minor
» no.5 in E minor

Artists

Marco Pedrona (violin)
Davide Merello (organ)

About

Elegant Baroque sonatas for violin and basso continuo by a pair of little-known brothers, Pietro and Prospero, who belonged to Handel’s circle of talents in 18th-century London.

Pietro (1679-1752) and Prospero (1690-1760) Castrucci belong to the generation of virtuosos who connected the development of violin playing from Corelli to Tartini, and took the Italian style abroad, combining it with the latest musical fashions of the time. Born in Rome, they studied with Corelli, but moved to London in 1715, which had become a European capital for music primarily thanks to the patronage of the English aristocracy and the celebrity figure of Handel.

The Castrucci brothers played in Handel’s orchestra at the Royal Academy for the next 20 years, and Handel wrote obbligato parts for them in his operas. Prospero published only one collection, of six sonatas, in 1739; he seems to have been the more conservative of the two brothers, writing in a style reminiscent of his teacher Corelli, albeit decorated with bold flourishes characteristic of Veracini and Locatelli.

The more innovative of the two was Pietro, who became more famous, wrote more prolifically and was published well beyond London. His violin writing is a crucible of invention, featuring bold strokes such as multi-tempo movements, arpeggiated chords on three strings, unisons with basso continuo, inverted mordents, and the kind of ‘arco battuto’ writing that Beethoven would later emulate.

A pupil of Giuliano Carmignola, Marco Pedrona founded Ensemble Guidantus in 1995, specialising in music of the Italian Baroque. With them he has performed across Italy and further afield, giving highly praised performances of the canonic repertoire from Corelli to Pergolesi but also reviving many figures such as the Castrucci brothers.

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