Skip to content
Home » Classical Downloads » Hi-Res Downloads » 24bit/176kHz » Resche-Caserta: Il Sud. Seicento Violin Music in Southern Italy (24/176 FLAC)

Resche-Caserta: Il Sud. Seicento Violin Music in Southern Italy (24/176 FLAC)

Resche-Caserta: Il Sud. Seicento Violin Music in Southern Italy (24/176 FLAC)
Resche-Caserta: Il Sud. Seicento Violin Music in Southern Italy (24/176 FLAC)

Performer: Exit, Emmanuel Resche-Caserta
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Passacaille
Release: 2020
Size: 2.39 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Andrea Falconieri:
01. Fantasia Echa para el muy reverendo Padre Falla

Bartolomeo Montalbano:
02. Sinfonia Marescotti a due violini
03. Sinfonia Sghemma a violino solo
04. Sinfonia Bargellini a due violini

Andrea Falconieri:
05. La Suave Melodia
06. La Preciosa
07. Su Gallarda

Bartolomeo Montalbano:
08. Sinfonia Geloso a violino solo

Giovanni Maria Trabaci:
09. Toccata seconda e ligature per arpa
10. Canzona francesa a 4 «per concerto di violini»

Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi:
11. Il Falvetti, Capriccetto Quarto à 3
12. Il Mauritio. Capriccetto à Violino Solo

Andrea Falconieri:
13. Canzona a 3

Giovanni Antonio Leoni:
14. Sonata No. 30, terzo tono

Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi:
15. Passacaglio ‘Il Marquetta’ a due Violini: Arietta Adagissimo – Brando

Bernardo Storace:
16. Balletto, per clavicembalo

Giovanni Antonio Leoni:
17. Sonata nona Secondo tono

Bartolomeo Montalbano:
18. Sinfonia Fiumicello a due violini

Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi:
19. Capriccetto Il Catalano

Anonymous:
20. Ballo a tre

Ascanio Mayone:
21. Toccata seconda 00:51

Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi:
22. Il Raimondo, Capriccetto à Violino Solo

We may wonder whether the violin was a northern Italian invention, for the instrument was also to be heard in the great cities of southern Italy at an early stage, from the beginning of the 17th century onwards. Certain southern Italian composers had clearly understood that the instrument was unequalled in its ability to express emotion allied to virtuosity, including Montalbano in Palermo, Pandolfi in Messina, Falconieri and Trabaci in Naples, and Leoni in Rome. They wasted no time in channelling the freedom and expressivity of the violin into rare, fascinating and original works, some of them recorded here for the first time.

Leave a Reply