Six sonatas for violin & viola

Six sonatas for violin & viola cover $25.00 Out of Stock
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LUIGI GATTI
Six sonatas for violin & viola
Paolo Ghidoni (violin) Alfredo Zamarra (viola)

[ Brilliant Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 1 April 2011

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

These sonatas have been played and recorded on two of the most beautiful instruments from the Violins Collection of the Municipality of Cremona: a Stradivari 1727 violin (the so-called Vesuvius") and an Amati 1615 viola ("La Stauffer").

Gatti lived both in Mantua and in Salzburg where he became friends with the Mozart family.

Performed and recorded on 2 most famous instruments: - Violin:Antonio tradivari:'Vesuvius' (Cremona, 1727). - Viola:Antonio and Gerolamo Amati: 'The Stauffer' (Cremona, 1615).

The sonatas presented in this recording, labelled as Sonate à Violino e Viola in the autograph score at the Biblioteca Musicale Greggiati in Ostiglia and as Sonate Per Violin solo con accompagnamento di Viola in the parts at the Salzburg Museum, are likely to date back to the very beginning of Gatti's stay in Salzburg. The autograph is written on paper whose watermarks suggest a date of about 1783. If so, the works were probably commissioned by archbishop Colloredo, for whom a similar cycle of six sonatas was composed in the same year by Michael Haydn, MH 335-38, and W. A. Mozart, K 423-24.

(Another set of six by Joseph Hafeneder in the Toggenburg Collection of Bolzano, minus the first sonata, may share the same origin). In which case, the violin part was probably intended for Colloredo himself, a "good performer on the violin" according to Charles Burney.The archbishop was also said to "enjoy performing on the violin, which he played very well" and to be in the habit of "mingling with the court musicians and playing the violin with them" before dinner.

Liner notes by Alessandro Lattanzi, the world's leading authority on Luigi Gatti.

These sonatas have been played and recorded on two of the most beautiful instruments from the Violins Collection of the Municipality of Cremona: a Stradivari 1727 violin (the so-called Vesuvius") and an Amati 1615 viola ("La Stauffer").