Nuova Orchestra Ferruccio Busoni, Francesco de Angelis, Fransesco Siragusa, Massimo Belli - Bottesini: Music for Violin, Double-Bass & String Orchestra (2024) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Nuova Orchestra Ferruccio Busoni, Francesco de Angelis, Fransesco Siragusa, Massimo Belli
Title: Bottesini: Music for Violin, Double-Bass & String Orchestra
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Brilliant Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 44.1kHz
Total Time: 00:57:57
Total Size: 328 / 607 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Bottesini: Music for Violin, Double-Bass & String Orchestra
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Brilliant Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 44.1kHz
Total Time: 00:57:57
Total Size: 328 / 607 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Bottesini Andante sostenuto in B Minor (To his Friend Giulio Ricordi)
02. Bottesini Fantasia on 'la Sonnambula'
03. Bottesini Gran duo Concertante
04. Bottesini String Quintet in F Major (Revision of Massimo Belli) I. Moderato
05. Bottesini String Quintet in F Major (Revision of Massimo Belli) II. Scherzo. Piuttosto Vivace
06. Bottesini String Quintet in F Major (Revision of Massimo Belli) III. Adagio
07. Bottesini String Quintet in F Major (Revision of Massimo Belli) IV. Finale. Allegro non Tanto
08. Bottesini Piccola Preghiera (According to the Intentions of G. Bottesini)
Bottesini is of course familiar to many musicians and music lovers, particularly double bass players, since the composer–performer enjoyed an undisputed position as ‘the Paganini of the double bass’ throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. This recording is a collection of five important pieces with a virtuosic and concerto-like compositional style, where the violin and double bass often take the lead roles in dense, surprising dialogues. It gives fans of 19th-century music an opportunity to experience the technical and creative richness of a composer who was extraordinarily artistically courageous for his time and gives due credit to musicians who for various reasons have historically been undervalued by the prevailing musical hierarchy.
Bottesini’s creative boldness is evident in the way he dared to put forward the double bass as a virtuosic solo instrument, on a par with its noble cousins, the violin, viola and cello. Many of his pieces feature solo parts that showcase dialogues between the extreme registers of the string instruments, from the ‘demonic’ violin with its high notes at the limits of perception, to the abyss of the bottom notes of the double bass. No one before Bottesini had discovered the untapped expressive potential of the latter instrument, since it had always been considered essentially a reinforcement for the cello part, one octave down. Instead, he wanted to make the double bass ‘soar’.
The Andante for strings introduces the double bass as a deep soul often in unison with the orchestral strings. The piece is imbued with an aching intimacy and refined with a rocking, undulating rhythmic motion. His Fantasia on Bellini’s ‘La Sonnambula’ introduces the always cantabile double bass as a voice from the outset, and it is easy to imagine how astounded the audience must have been to hear the melodious sound of this ‘back-row’ instrument poignantly reimagining Bellini’s lyric opera. In the Gran duo concertante for violin, double bass & orchestra Bottesini brings together lyrical sensitivity and expressive power. Here, the violin conveys the greatest possible tensions, frequently leading then giving way to a double bass that performs with cello-like poetry. The String Quintet in F, reimagined as an orchestral piece by Massimo Belli with the backbone of a great symphony immersed in a romantic setting full of energy and drama. The Piccola preghiera (as Bottesini intended) reveals a sensibility quite similar to the Andante that begins this album. The style here is even more sober, with strings layering over each other in an all-encompassing world of sound, rich in harmonic progressions and peaceful resolutions.