Salieri - Piano Concertos
£9.45
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 97268
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 14th February 2025
Contents
Works
Keyboard Concerto in B flat majorKeyboard Concerto in C major
Keyboard Sonata in C major
Sinfonia in D major 'La Veneziana'
Artists
Costantino Catena (piano)Accademia d’Archi Arrigoni
Conductor
Giulio ArnofiWorks
Keyboard Concerto in B flat majorKeyboard Concerto in C major
Keyboard Sonata in C major
Sinfonia in D major 'La Veneziana'
Artists
Costantino Catena (piano)Accademia d’Archi Arrigoni
Conductor
Giulio ArnofiAbout
An esteemed teacher and founder of the Vienna Conservatory, he had among his pupils Beethoven, Hummel, Schubert, Liszt, Meyerbeer and Czerny, and in the course of a long compositional career he created more than 40 works for musical theatre, numerous sacred and vocal compositions, as well as a smaller number of symphonic and chamber works. The best-known section of Salieri’s instrumental production consists of the six concertos for one or more soloists, among them the two for keyboard included here; these are works that the composer did not see fit to print, and the manuscripts are preserved in the Austrian National Library.
The Concertos in C and B flat were written by the 23-year-old composer in 1773 for solo ‘cembalo’ and an orchestra consisting of two oboes, two horns, strings and basso continuo. As Danilo Prefumo, author of valuable writings on Salieri’s instrumental works, warns, ‘for Italian musicians, the term cembalo could at the time indifferently indicate harpsichord and fortepiano’. Listening to and analysing these two works reveals a balance pursued and achieved between a typically Viennese sense of measure and attention to structure, and bursts of whimsy, ornamentality and gallantry akin to the expressivity of the London (Johann Christian) Bach. The solo writing never makes truly virtuosic demands, although it does require agility and a crisp, pronounced timbre.
The Sonata in C for harpsichord is the only composition of its kind, as far as we know, in Salieri’s legacy, and it is given here in its first recording. It is unusually subdivided into six concise movements, all set in the same key and characterised by an elementary harmonic progression. The linearity of the language, the transparency of the melodic line and the ease of execution indicate a score that might have been a keyboard sketch of the embryo of a Serenata or Cassazione, two genres that are often attested in the composer’s catalogue.
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