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Tasini: Merulo – Organ Music Il Primo Libro de Ricercari da Cantare a Quattro Voci (FLAC)

Tasini: Merulo - Organ Music Il Primo Libro de Ricercari da Cantare a Quattro Voci (FLAC)
Tasini: Merulo – Organ Music Il Primo Libro de Ricercari da Cantare a Quattro Voci (FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Claudio Merulo
Performer: Francesco Tasini
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Brilliant Classics
Catalogue: 96204
Release: 2021
Size: 1.14 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

01. Ricercar Primo
02. Ricercar Secondo
03. Ricercar Terzo
04. Ricercar Quinto
05. Ricercar Sesto
06. Ricercar Septimo
07. Ricercar Octavo
08. Ricercar Nono
09. Ricercar Decimo
10. Ricercar Undecimo
11. Ricercar Duodecimo
12. Ricercar Terzodecimo
13. Ricercar Quartodecimo
14. Ricercar Quintodecimo
15. Ricercar Sestodecimo
16. Ricercar Septimodecimo
17. Ricercar Octavodecimo
18. Ricercar Nonodecimo
19. Ricercar Vigesimo

Claudio Merulo was an important composer, organist and publisher in Late-Renaissance Italy. He obtained the prestigious post of organist of the famous San Marco in Venice. His keyboard style is highly innovative, and was the basis of further development by composers like Frescobaldi and Sweelinck. According to fellow organist and composer Costanzo Antegnati (1549–1624), Claudio Merulo (1533–1604) was famous for “the sweet way he played”. In the 16th century the term “sweetness” was mainly related to the practice of “diminution”, or ornamentation, with skilfully executed passeggiando and a “judicious breaking up of the figures”, so that the application of the coloratura might confer a personal and lively chiaroscuro effect.


In 1574 Merulo published Il primo libro de ricercari da cantare, a qvattro voci in four separate vocal part-books (soprano, alto, tenor, bass), and for this album Francesco Tasini has aptly scored, intabulated, adapted and diminished the Ricercari for performance on the organ. Out of respect for Merulo’s original, Tasini’s diminution of the 19 Ricercari of the Libro primo always retains each part as it appeared, deliberately abstaining from any temporary suspension of a line which could be brought about in order to give space to the coloratura of another part.


The process of diminution is not limited to the “filling in” of long note durations with passages of short notes; it also includes a rhetorical game enacted between the parts through syncopes, delayed entrances, changes of register, slurs and various echo and other effects to achieve an underlying lively discourse, as well as arpeggio effects typical of organ practice which Tasini has modelled on numerous passages found in Merulo’s two books of Toccate. The addition of coloratura highlights and brings out the formal division within each Ricercare and, in addition to the cadences, establishes a different application for each new subject, so as to enhance its distinctive features.


Francesco Tasini – here at the organ (1565) by Graziadio Antegnati in the Palatine basilica of Santa Barbara in Mantua – has published numerous publications and critical reviews of Italian keyboard works from the 17th and 18th centuries. He is the author of numerous essays on performance practice and organology and is the winner of a number of composition competitions. His discography includes a great number of recordings and will feature the cycle of complete works for organ by Merulo, of which this album is the latest instalment.

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