A. Vivaldi - Concerti for two harpsichords by G. Alibert and C. Geoffroy ECL1602E

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Free Shipment for European Union and Switzerland. Product details : Composer : Antonio Vivaldi Artists :Gwennaëlle Alibert and Clément Geoffroy harpsichords Program : Concerto for 2 violins RV 517, Sonata opus 1 n° 2, Concerti for recorder and oboe RV 99 et RV 100, Concerto for recorder, oboe, ...En savoir plus
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Free Shipment for European Union and Switzerland.

Product details :

Composer : Antonio Vivaldi

Artists :Gwennaëlle Alibert and Clément Geoffroy harpsichords

Program : Concerto for 2 violins RV 517, Sonata opus 1 n° 2, Concerti for recorder and oboe RV 99 et RV 100, Concerto for recorder, oboe, violin and bassoon RV 107, Concerto for violin and organ RV 766, Concerto for violin and organ RV 808, Concerto for recorder, violin and bassoon RV 96, Sonata opus 1 n° 6, Concerto for strings RV 134

Concerto for recorder, oboe, violin, bassoon and basso continuo RV 107 Allegro
Concerto for strings RV 13  Andante

Press round up:

"The results sound quite unlike anything else you are likely to hear on the harpsichord, wonderfully dense tinkling textures through which you follow the melodic lines like an inquisitive hobbit through Fangorn Forest. (...) Not everybody’s cup of tea but I love it!" D. James Ross - Early Music review

Overview :

« There is one essential question which immediately comes up if you want to play with two harpsichords and that is repertoire. Unfortunately there is little music written specifically for this configuration, compared to the enormous repertoire for solo harpsichord. Even so, there are a number of clues suggesting that this was a very widespread practice back in the 17th and 18th centuries.

As lovers of Vivaldi’s music - and frustrated that none of his works were written specifically for our instrument - we thus decided to perform them on two harpsichords. The addition of a second harpsichord is not a matter of merely doubling the instrument’s expressive possibilities, it actually increases them tenfold, providing the obvious alternation between Tutti and Soli, allowing us both to perform in stereo and to offer a much wider palette of nuances.

As we set to work, the first thing we had to do was to rewrite the left-hand parts. The bass parts which accompany the soli in Vivaldi’s music are often very simple, purely rhythmic devices with a crystal-clear harmony. They allow the continuo players to follow the soloist easily, and the latter can then express him or herself, giving his or her imagination free rein. The harpsichord, organ and theorbo can develop the harmony in their own ways and supplement the discourse with melodic performance. However, this simple bass part, usually played by two or three instrumentalists, seems rather dull if we just play it on the harpsichord alone, so we have altered it considerably, giving it a more melodic role (sometimes even that of a soloist) and expanding its range, in such a way as to fill out the harpsichord.

To end with, we must also mention one particular feature of the harpsichord. Although the virtuoso passages are perfectly-suited to the instrument, which gives them even more brilliance, the slow passages can be more difficult to reproduce. This is because the harpsichord does not have the ability to sustain sounds; once the note has been played, all that remains is to decide when to stop it, but the performer cannot either augment or diminish the sound as a bow or breath would do with a string or wind instrument. The only way of bringing long notes to life is to add trills to them or to ornament them with a melodic motif, which allows the vibration to be sustained. »

Clément Geoffroy & Gwennaëlle Alibert