The Trondheim Concertos Sigurd Imsen, Baroque Ensemble of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra & Christina Kobb
Album info
Album-Release:
2023
HRA-Release:
30.06.2023
Label: 2L
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Sigurd Imsen, Baroque Ensemble of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra & Christina Kobb
Composer: Joseph Meck (1690-1758), Johan Henrich Berlin (1741-1807), Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
Formats & Prices
Format | Price | In Cart | Buy |
FLAC 88.2 | $ 15.40 |
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FLAC 176.4 | $ 18.50 |
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FLAC 96 / MCH | $ 22.00 |
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MQA | $ 19.40 |
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DSD 128 | $ 21.10 |
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- Joseph Meck (1690 - 1758): Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1:
- 1 Meck: Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1 No. 9, XM 141: I. Largo 02:22
- 2 Meck:: Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1 No. 9, XM 141: II. Allegro 00:00
- 3 Meck: Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1 No. 9, XM 141: III. Adagio 02:51
- 4 Meck: Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1 No. 9, XM 141: IV. Allegro 03:34
- Anonymous (Sigr. Opfermand): Violin Concerto in C minor, XM 49:
- 5 Anonymous: Violin Concerto in C minor, XM 49: I. Allegro 04:50
- 6 Anonymous: Violin Concerto in C minor, XM 49: II. Grave 04:16
- 7 Anonymous: Violin Concerto in C minor, XM 49: III. Allegro 02:26
- Johan Henrich Berlin (1741 - 1807): Sonata a Cembalo, Violino e Violoncello, XM 3:
- 8 J. H. Berlin: Sonata a Cembalo, Violino e Violoncello, XM 3: I. Allegro moderato 06:08
- 9 J. H. Berlin: Sonata a Cembalo, Violino e Violoncello, XM 3: II. Andante 05:32
- 10 J. H. Berlin: Sonata a Cembalo, Violino e Violoncello, XM 3: III. Allegro 04:57
- Antonio Vivaldi (1678 - 1741): Violin Concerto in A Major, RV 335 "The Cuckoo", XM 140:
- 11 Vivaldi: Violin Concerto in A Major, RV 335 "The Cuckoo", XM 140: I. Allegro 04:30
- 12 Vivaldi: Violin Concerto in A Major, RV 335 "The Cuckoo", XM 140: II. Largo 03:00
- 13 Vivaldi: Violin Concerto in A Major, RV 335 "The Cuckoo", XM 140: III. Allegro 04:12
Info for The Trondheim Concertos
As the eighteenth century progressed, Trondheim experienced strong economic growth. The Great Nordic War was over, and merchants set about exporting timber, stockfish, and copper from the mines of Trøndelag. They maintained close contact with their networks in the main cities of Northern Europe, and Trondheim's luxury and extravagance characterised its social milieu. Thus, the latest fashions, literature and music from the Continent found their way to Trondheim.
This recording portrays a selection of contemporaneous music that is preserved in Trondheim. The manuscripts may be found in the Gunnerus Library's special collections and probably belonged to the town musician and polymath Johan Daniel Berlin (1714–87) and his circle of musicians. They provide a unique insight into how European instrumental music found fertile ground in one of Denmark–Norway's largest provincial towns in the decades preceding the union's dissolution in 1814.
Sigurd Imsen, solo violin
Baroque Ensemble of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra
Renata Kubala, violin
Cecilia Wåhlberg, violin
Verona Rapp, viola
Torleif Holm, cello
Fredrik Blikeng, violin
Thomas C. Boysen, lute, theorbo
Gunnhild Tønder, cembalo, organ
Christina Kobb, fortepiano
Sigurd Imsen
Since 2002, I have been a member of the first violin section of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra. I frequently appear as soloist and chamber musician on the baroque violin, and I am a member of the Norwegian Baroque Orchestra. My primary concern as a performer is the possibilities within the performance of historical music, and my ambition is to be a versatile violinist.
I am educated at the Norwegian Academy of Music, where I finished my Master’s degree in chamber music in 1998. From 2006 to 2009, I was employed as a research fellow under the supervision of Gottfried von der Goltz, leader of the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra.
Christina Kobb
Head of Theory at Barratt Due Institute of Music (BDM) in Oslo, is a Norway-based pianist, composer, and music historian. The New York Times recently featured the research of Christina Kobb last summer, based on her soon-to-be finished doctoral work on early piano technique at the Norwegian Academy of Music. This opened the door for a three weeks “Introduction Tour” in the US on November 2015, where she visited the radio station All Classical Portland, OR, and lectured at the renowned Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies in California, in addition to smaller events. In May 2016, she will lecture at Harvard University, Quincy House. Christina holds degrees (Cand. Mag. in piano teaching, BA fortepiano performance) and MA from the Norwegian Academy of Music (NAM), Royal Conservatoire of The Hague (BA, MA (cum laude) of fortepiano performance, with teachers Bart van Oort and Stanley Hoogland) and was honoured to receive a one-year studentship to the renowned Cornell University to study with prof. Malcolm Bilson (2009/10).
Christina has appeared in concerts and conferences in Europe and the US. In 2006, she won the accompanist prize of ‘The John Kerr Award for English song’ at Finchcocks Musical Museum in Kent, England, and in 2008 she received the ‘Muzio Clementi Award’. In 2007, she was awarded the coveted TICON scholarship. Christina is the proud recipient of the Nils Larsen grant 2016, which helps to fund her Carnegie debut recital.
In 2013, editor-in-chief Erlend Hovland, together with editors Arnulf Mattes and Christina Kobb, founded the international web based journal Music + Practice. In the pursuit of playing piano accessible everywhere there’s people: in schools, churches, working places, retirement homes, private homes, Christina has prospect for a new project called PianoShelters.
Booklet for The Trondheim Concertos