FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £35!

Gambarini - Complete Works for Keyboard | Piano Classics PCL10286

Gambarini - Complete Works for Keyboard

£14.67

In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day

New Item

Label: Piano Classics

Cat No: PCL10286

Barcode: 5029365102865

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Instrumental

Release Date: 15th November 2024

Contents

Works

Gambarini, Elisabetta de

Lessons and Songs (14), op.2
» no.2 Allegro moderato in B flat major (Lesson no.1)
» no.3 Andante in G minor (Lesson no.2)
» no.5 Minuet and Variations in A major (Lesson no.3)
» no.7 Tambourin (Lesson no.4)
» no.8 Cariglion (Lesson no.5)
» no.11 Lesson in G major (Lesson no.6)
» no.13 Variations on 'Lover Go and Calm Thy Sighs' (Lesson no.7)
» no.14 Giga in D major (Lesson no.8)
Sets of Lessons (Sonatas) (6), op.1

Artists

Margherita Torretta (piano)

Works

Gambarini, Elisabetta de

Lessons and Songs (14), op.2
» no.2 Allegro moderato in B flat major (Lesson no.1)
» no.3 Andante in G minor (Lesson no.2)
» no.5 Minuet and Variations in A major (Lesson no.3)
» no.7 Tambourin (Lesson no.4)
» no.8 Cariglion (Lesson no.5)
» no.11 Lesson in G major (Lesson no.6)
» no.13 Variations on 'Lover Go and Calm Thy Sighs' (Lesson no.7)
» no.14 Giga in D major (Lesson no.8)
Sets of Lessons (Sonatas) (6), op.1

Artists

Margherita Torretta (piano)

About

A first-time piano recording for the surviving music by a neglected female composer of 18th-century London.

Despite her Italian name, Elisabetta de Gambarini (1731-1765) was born and lived in London, as the daughter of a well-connected Italian couple: her father a diplomat, her mother a singer. Elisabetta evidently inherited her mother’s musicianship, and made a name as a pianist, singer and later impresario and even conductor, at a time when such leadership and management roles in creative life were almost exclusively taken by men.

Her two printed collections of music were published in 1748, and therefore count as the work of a prodigiously talented teenager.

Opus 1 is a set of six sonatas, Opus 2 a collection of dances and independent pieces. In both cases, Elisabetta seems to have composed them with a pedagogical purpose in mind, or at least the profitable publishing industry for teaching pieces, catering to the affluent market of amateur musicians.

Gambarini must have been familiar with the sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti, but her music sings with a voice of its own. Her modulations add novelty, colour and pleasing texture; they are never arbitrary, fussy or predictably chromatic as in Paradisi’s sonatas. She avoids repetitive sequences and brings more harmonic precision and economy to her sonatas than Pescetti or Geminiani did in theirs.

Gambarini’s music has attracted little attention on record beyond a collection played on the harpsichord, now 30 years old.

Margherita Torretta makes a persuasive case for it on the modern piano (a Steinway D in this case). In her booklet essay, she remarks that: ‘When performed on a modern piano, distinctive stylistic elements characterizing Gambarini’s music may be illuminated by the piano’s dynamic and tonal ranges and contrasts, offering its own nuanced balance between melody and accompaniment.’

Margherita Torretta has made well-received recordings of music from Gambarini’s time, including sonatas by Scarlatti and Galuppi, and she demonstrates her idiomatic feeling for this repertoire in performances recorded in 2024 under studio conditions at the conservatoire in Piacenza where she began her piano studies.

Error on this page? Let us know here

Need more information on this product? Click here