Venezia 1625 by Maurice Steger: CD Cover
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Venezia 1625 Maurice Steger

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/14/2009
  • Sales Rank: 54,934
  • Label: HARMONIA MUNDI FR.
  • UPC: 794881910625

Listener Rating: (1 ratings)

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Venezia 1625

1. Sonata for solo violin No. 2 (Sonata seconda) 6:35
Composed by Giovanni Battista Fontana
Performed by Maurice Steger, Péter Barczi and Éva Borhi
2. Symphonia No. 20 ("La Virmingarda") 2:05
Composed by Marco Uccellini
Performed by Christian Beuse, Naoki Kitaya, Naoki Kitaya, Hille Perl, Lee Santana, Maurice Steger, Sergio Ciomei, Sergio Ciomei, Mauro Valli, Margret Köll, Thomas C. Boysen, Thomas C. Boysen, Thor Harald Johnsen, Stefan Temmingh, Sabrina Frey, Péter Barczi and Éva Borhi
3. Sonata sopra La Prosperina, for 3 violins & continuo, Op. 4/26 4:13
Composed by Marco Uccellini
Performed by Christian Beuse, Naoki Kitaya, Naoki Kitaya, Hille Perl, Lee Santana, Maurice Steger, Sergio Ciomei, Sergio Ciomei, Mauro Valli, Margret Köll, Thomas C. Boysen, Thomas C. Boysen, Thor Harald Johnsen, Stefan Temmingh, Sabrina Frey, Péter Barczi and Éva Borhi
4. Aria sopra la Bergamasca, for 2 violins & continuo 3:32
Composed by Marco Uccellini
Performed by Christian Beuse, Naoki Kitaya, Naoki Kitaya, Hille Perl, Lee Santana, Maurice Steger, Sergio Ciomei, Sergio Ciomei, Mauro Valli, Margret Köll, Thomas C. Boysen, Thomas C. Boysen, Thor Harald Johnsen, Stefan Temmingh, Sabrina Frey, Péter Barczi and Éva Borhi
5. Sonata for solo violin No. 3 4:56
Composed by Giovanni Battista Fontana
Performed by Maurice Steger, Péter Barczi and Éva Borhi
6. Improvisation on la Ciaccona Intavolatura, for harpsichord 1:29
Composed by Bernardo Storace
Performed by Naoki Kitaya, Maurice Steger and Sergio Ciomei

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Editorial Reviews

Swiss recorder virtuoso Maurice Steger is one of the most exciting specialists on his instrument to come along since the late and lamented David Munrow, and he was already becoming an established touring artist in Europe while still a student. Having previously delivered two fine discs of Telemann and Giuseppe Sammartini chamber works, Harmonia Mundi's Venezia 1625 finds Steger as leader and coordinator of a large group of instrumentalists, though not all play at the same time; larger configurations of the ensemble dominate the first half of the program. What ties it all together is the concept, which centers on the early Baroque chamber sonata (or sinfonia) as practiced in Venice around 1625, a time and place that nearly signify the declaration of independence for Western instrumental music. Publications of that era tend to be so vague in terms of instrumentation that nearly any combination is conceivable to realize a given piece, and Steger takes full advantage of this in making his ensemble choices and taking them apart again, not to mention the observing convention that anything written for violin then could also pass for the recorder. The backdrop supporting Steger is different literally from track to track, and this helps provide variety, though the latter half of the disc is geared more toward pieces of modest of dimensions.

Steger certainly knows how to pick players; some of these folks are the cręme de la cręme of the early music movement in Europe; the quality of their playing and inherent ensemble blend would have caused Venetian jaws in 1625 to drop. Hille Perl, whose gamba can be heard on most of the tracks, makes a big difference in the Tarquinio Merula "Ciaccona," rolling continuo lines around on her viol in passagework worthy of what's in the solo parts. When Christian Beuse's dulcian comes in on Fontana's "Sonata IV," you take notice, for it's a new instrument and picks up ones ears in the wake of the lively Merula "Ciaccona." The first half of the disc is great; its balance of pacing and material makes for a terrific spring-summery mix that keeps on moving forward. After about midpoint, however, Venezia 1625 begins to drag, owing to a concentration of slow pieces and small forces; it's rather like the wind got knocked out of it.

Nevertheless, Steger is a dazzling player, in every way able to match the violin as to flexibility and speed, and for passages requiring double stops he has a couple of additional recorder players to pitch in a little assistance. Venezia 1625 will be a wonderful disc for the car, and for the kids, who respond well to the sweet piping sound of the recorder; if you are looking to take a summer outing and want something other than the Beach Boys to listen to, then at least the first half of Harmonia Mundi's Venezia 1625 will be perfect for that; perhaps the second half is for the drive home. Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Maurice Steger and Venezia: dazzling virtuosityby Anonymous

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November 03, 2009: The brilliant Swiss recorder player Maurice Steger draws on his dazzling virtuosity, his zephyr-like timbre and his range of expression to vivify a corpus of music that has so far remained relatively unexplored.

A full century before Vivaldi stole the show in Venice, the city enjoyed a golden High Renaissance thanks to the presence of Giovanni Gabrieli and other composers who exploited new potential in sonority, endowing the repertoire with choral and instrumental works of startling originality and richness. Steger has investigated the legacy of his cultural blossoming to devise a program with 1625 as its focal point. Here we are in post-Renaissance realms of the early Baroque, where ancient and modern styles continued to coexist, but fantasy, fun and flamboyance were very much to the fore.

These are qualities that Steger exemplifies in his choice of pieces and in his delightful way of performing them. Nor is he alone. He is complemented by a group of first-rate exponents who add a kaleidoscope of colours etched in by chitarrone, theorbo, harp, dulcian, guitar and a range of other Baroque instruments that help illuminate and animate the vim and vigour of this music. This was a period in which the violin was coming into its own, and much of this music was written for it. But Steger takes his cue from the fact that instrumental forces were frequently unspecified or interchangeable to give a recital of unalloyed joy.

Rating ***** (highest rating) Geoffrey Norris