Early Neapolitan Cello Music Schola Gregoriana Scivias Ensemble, Malagoli Matteo, Ruvo Irene De & Fullin Milli
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
10.06.2021
Label: Brilliant Classics
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Schola Gregoriana Scivias Ensemble, Malagoli Matteo, Ruvo Irene De & Fullin Milli
Composer: Rocco Greco (1650-1718), Gaetano Francone (1650-1717)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- Rocco Greco (b. 1936): Viri galilaei:
- 1 Greco: Viri galilaei: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:33
- 2 Greco: Viri galilaei: II. Cello diminution 03:30
- Loquebantur:
- 3 Greco: Loquebantur: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:51
- 4 Greco: Loquebantur: II. Cello diminution 02:13
- Miserator dominus:
- 5 Greco: Miserator dominus: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:44
- 6 Greco: Miserator dominus: II. Cello diminution 03:34
- Dum esset rex:
- 7 Greco: Dum esset rex: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:33
- 8 Greco: Dum esset rex: II. Cello diminution 03:02
- Veni sponsa:
- 9 Greco: Veni sponsa: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:27
- 10 Greco: Veni sponsa: II. Cello dimiunution 02:54
- Ecce sacerdos magnus:
- 11 Greco: Ecce sacerdos magnus: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:29
- 12 Greco: Ecce sacerdos magnus: II. Cello diminution 04:28
- Non est inventus:
- 13 Greco: Non est inventus: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:27
- 14 Greco: Non est inventus: II. Cello diminution 04:21
- Sacerdos dei:
- 15 Greco: Sacerdos dei: I. Gregorian Responsorium 02:17
- 16 Greco: Sacerdos dei: II. Cello diminution 05:15
- Domus mea:
- 17 Greco: Domus mea: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:25
- 18 Greco: Domus mea: II. Cello diminution 03:44
- Fidelis servus:
- 19 Greco: Fidelis servus: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:28
- 20 Greco: Fidelis servus: II. Cello diminution 03:48
- Veni electa mea:
- 21 Greco: Veni electa mea: I. Gregorian antiphon 00:22
- 22 Greco: Veni electa mea: II. Cello dimiunution 03:50
- Gaetano Francone (1650 - 1717): Passagagli:
- 23 Francone: Passagagli No. 1 in G Minor/Major 01:53
- 24 Francone: Passagagli No. 2 in A Major 01:41
- 25 Francone: Passagagli No. 3 in B Minor 01:51
- 26 Francone: Passagagli No. 4 in C Major 01:45
- 27 Francone: Passagagli No. 5 in D Minor 01:40
- 28 Francone: Passagagli No. 6 in E Minor 01:29
- 29 Francone: Passagagli No. 7 in F Major 01:57
- 30 Francone: Passagagli No. 8 in G Major 01:35
- 31 Francone: Passagagli No. 9 in B Major 01:21
- 32 Francone: Passagagli No. 10 in F Major 01:29
Info for Early Neapolitan Cello Music
World-premiere recordings of some of the oldest surviving cello repertoire.
The cello was a beneficiary of the remarkable flowering of high culture sponsored by both ecclesiastical and aristocratic patrons in early 18th-century Naples. In 1717, Rocco Greco (1650-1718) became the last appointed player of the viola da gamba in the Royal Chapel dedicated to the treasure of St Januarius, the patron saint of Naples. Both Greco and his colleague Gaetano Francone (c.1650-1717) produced new music for the cello which was suitable for performance within the liturgy of the chapel.
Rather as composers of alternatim organ masses wrote elaborations of chant for the organ to be played between the chanted verses of the liturgy, so Greco composed 11 virtuosic ‘diminutions’ which were elaborated from the bass part of vocal motets setting Vespers texts. In performing the diminutions, Malagoli prefaces them with a chanted version of the Gregorian antiphon on which the motets were based.
The resulting sound is an Italian-accented equivalent to the viol ‘divisions’ which English composers such as Locke and Simpson were producing at this point. Both lively and melancholic in mood according to the key signature, these brief Diminutions and Passagagli both demand a virtuoso technique from the performer and a degree of imaginative flair in the interpretation of the manuscripts. Matteo Malagoli’s world-premiere recordings satisfy both criteria.
As a gambist and cellist, Malagoli has explored the history of bass string instruments for several decades, both in solo recitals and as a chamber musician and a continuo accompanist to several renowned Italian early-music groups. He is ideally placed to bring unrivalled authenticity and style to these new discoveries, which place the cello in an unusual context of sacred music and brings two significant Neapolitan composers to light: an essential album for all early-music enthusiasts.
Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, hundreds of churches and religious houses across Naples employed musicians, singers and instrument makers. They competed with one another to present the most stylish or lavish music for liturgical use. One of the new instruments introduced in the Church was the Violoncello.
Rocco Greco and his colleague Gaetano Francone produced new music for the cello which was suitable for performance within the liturgy of the chapel. Rather as composers of alternatim organ masses wrote elaborations of chant for the organ to be played between the chanted verses of the liturgy, so Greco composed 11 virtuosic ‘diminutions’ which were elaborated from the bass part of vocal motets setting Vespers texts. In the present recording the diminutions are prefaced with a chanted version of the Gregorian antiphon on which the motets were based. Francone, meanwhile, composed a collection of 10 short Passagagli. The ten pieces, based on the passacaglia bass pattern, are written for cello and basso continuo.
Italian cellist and musicologist Matteo Malagoli specializes in little-known 19th-century repertoire, having also published research on British and Italian organs and the era of Italian Baroque music between the gamba and the cello.
Matteo Malagoli, cello
Irene De Ruvo, organ, harpsichord
Schola Gregoriana Scivias Ensemble
Milli Fullin, conductor
No biography found.
Booklet for Early Neapolitan Cello Music