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The Op. 5 collection consists of eleven sonatas; the twelfth, and most popular, work is a series of twenty three variations on the ‘Follia’ of which Corelli was especially proud. All twelve pieces contain a variety of difficult violin techniques and director Pavlo Beznosiuk takes centre stage; his polished playing thrilling in its virtuosity. Corelli’s contribution to the history of violin performance was immense. All six of his published collections of instrumental music demonstrate his exceptional skill as a violinist and composer, but it was in his Op. 5 Sonatas that Corelli had the most significant impact on violin technique. This marks the second recording in a series which will see Linn and The Avison Ensemble record Corelli’s complete chamber music. The Avison Ensemble will release two further recordings of Corelli in 2013 celebrating the 300th anniversary of the composer’s death. Formed in 1985, the Ensemble has attracted great critical acclaim. The Guardian commented: ‘I’d take the Avison Ensemble over Karajan…any day’. The Avison Ensemble comprises some of Europe's leading Baroque musicians, including artists from The Hague, Germany, France, Austria and London, with international soloists from all over the globe. Pavlo Beznosiuk, the UK's foremost baroque violin virtuoso, is in demand as a soloist and orchestral leader performing regularly with the Academy of Ancient Music and Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. “Beznosiuk offers lyrical, intuitively musical performances, imbued with a placid, unpretentious grace, while his spontaneous ornamentation adds a dash of Baroque bravura. Beznosiuk is well matched by the outstanding continuo players...the quartet conversing with the ease and familiarity of old friends... The Linn recording is luminous and sensitively balanced” BBC Music Magazine, May 2013 **** “Beznosiuk plays with enormous affinity and charm,his fluent and imaginative ornamentation always within the bounds of the pulse and good taste. Having chosen not to ornament the repeats slavishly, he retains the power to surprise and delight us even to the last sonata.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2013 “The small additions to the two gavottes are stylish and it’s nice to hear the variations in the performance of the bass line...I found the Avison Ensemble’s recording of Corelli’s Op.6 revelatory in several respects” MusicWeb International, April 2013 | 
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A dazzling version of arguably the finest set of violin sonatas ever assembled, with the fresh approach to the text and newly improvised ornaments which have become Andrew Manze’s and Richard Egarr’s hallmark. A dazzling version of arguably the finest set of violin sonatas ever assembled, with the fresh approach to the text and newly improvised ornaments which have become Andrew Manze’s and Richard Egarr’s hallmark. “Corelli's Sonatas have never felt more alive and less perfectly preserved than they do here, and if you care at all for the baroque repertoire or fine fiddle playing, you owe it to yourself to hear these exhilarating performances. Everything's come together for this one: repertoire, performers, recording, notes, even the perfect artwork for the cover.” Andrew McGregor, bbc.co.uk, 17th March 2003 “Considering the acknowledged status of Corelli's Op 5 violin sonatas, it's surprising how few of today's star Baroque violinists have recorded them. Published as a clear statement of intent on January 1, 1700, they're a benchmark not only in the history of the violin but of chamber music in general; yet despite being an accepted model of compositional purity and refinement which lasted throughout the 18th century and beyond, for many music-lovers – even Baroque musiclovers – they're still relatively little-known territory. Perhaps it's their finely honed perfection which has counted against them. Maybe they just seem too polite. Accounts of Corelli's violin- playing tell us that his eyes would glow 'red as fire' and his face contort, but evidence of this volatile character has not not always been easy to detect in the written notes of the violin sonatas. If anyone is going to find him, however, it's Andrew Manze, who has repeatedly demonstrated that the heart of Baroque music lies beyond what's on the printed page. At a time when improvisational flair and spontaneity have never been a more exciting part of Baroque music-making, Manze and his accompanist Richard Egarr are the masters of it, and here they have produced a Corelli recording which is nothing short of revelatory. Not that it's unthinkingly wild or bizarre. Manze may have adorned the music with his customarily liberal decoration of extra doublestops, flowery arabesques and emphatic gestures – and Egarr may have performed his usual extraordinary feats at the keyboard, devising an array of inventive keyboard textures which ranges from luxurious feather-bed arpeggios and swirls to daring, stabbing left-hand double octaves (no other continuo player manages to sound so much as if his fingers were a direct extension of his imagination) – but this is still Corelli with a measure of north Italian dignity. The resulting balance between restraint and urgency is compelling, because the performers, you feel, aren't out to shock but to search for something new and real. This really is Corelli as you haven't heard him before. The performances reach a high technical standard, as does the recording, though strangely long gaps are left between some of the movements. This vital, earopening disc is in a category of its own, classic music in a classic recording.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “This is baroque violin-playing without peer today” Sunday Times | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Trio Corelli: Elisabeth Zeuthen Schneider (violin), Viggo Mangor (archlute) & Ulrik Spang-Hanssen (organ continuo) This complete recording of Corelli's magnificent Op. 5 Violin Sonatas is performed by Trio Corelli of Denmark on period instruments. The Opus 5 Violin Sonatas contain six church sonatas and six chamber sonatas. No less than seven different versions of embellishments to the slow movements of the church sonatas are known, among which the Dubourg and Geminiani versions are the most famous. The embellishments of the church sonatas believed to originate from Corelli are used on this recording. The chamber sonatas were not adorned by Corelli’s own hand, but Trio Corelli adds embellishments in keeping with the tradition of the day. An exception is Sonata No. 9, where the group uses Geminiani’s version, a perfect example of how these sonatas continued to inspire future generations of Corelli’s students. “while this playing is stylistically consistent, it's probably not what most listeners would expect a historically informed Baroque fiddler to ideally sound like in this music. Instead, there's an agreeable freshness and lightness of touch about Zeuthen Schneider's paying that often delights in its vitality, fluency and clarity of execution, once, that is, the ear grows accustomed to the saccharine vibrato employed.” International Record Review, June 2012 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Corelli: Sonatas for Viola da Gamba & basso continuotranscriptions of Violin Sonatas, Op. 5
Guido Balestracci (viola da gamba), Eunice Brandão, Paolo Pandolfo (violas da gamba), Eduardo Egüez (theorbo), Luciano Còntini (archlute), Gaetano Nasillo (cello) & Massimiliano Raschietti (harpsichord, organ) As both composer and violin virtuoso, Corelli’s reputation and fame was immense. In this regard, there is no lack of important sources bearing witness to a genuine enthusiasm for his music, which was welcomed as a revelation, an illumination, a pure and refined distillation of the traditional language of the Baroque sonata and Italian style. It is not difficult to imagine how the compositions of Corelli would have circulated all over Europe, being performed, listened to, copied and also transcribed. Among musicians, there was a veritable legion of composers influenced by Corelli’s models. This phenomenon is one of the reasons for the existence of a transcription for bass viola da gamba and continuo of Corelli’s Opus 5, originally composed for violin and continuo. The manuscript used for the present recording contains all 12 sonatas and can be found in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. It is of anonymous authorship, most likely originating in the German-speaking world. The transcription was probably made on the basis of a copy of the original edition for violin printed in Rome in 1700, the only autograph edition. Guido Balestracci is considered to be “one of the finest exponents of the viola da gamba” (Diapason, 2002). As a soloist and as director of his ensemble L'Amoroso, founded in 1997, he plays throughout Europe, the USA, South America and Asia. On the present recording, he is accompanied by such known artists as Paolo Pandolfo, Eduardo Egüez, and Gaetano Nasillo. | | | (also available to download from $21.00) | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Corelli a la ModeCorelli - Sonatas
Stefan Temmingh (baroque flute) & Olga Watts (harpsichord) Historical ornamented versions. Stefan Temmingh and Olga Watts play Corelli’s charming Sonatas and re-introduce the historical practice of improvised ornamentation | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Corelli - Violin Sonatas, Op. 5 Nos. 7-12
François Fernandez (baroque violin) & Glen Wilson (harpsichord) The twelve Opus 5 Sonatas for violin and continuo are notable for their juxtaposition of slow movements of a lyrical, elegant beauty akin to the human voice, and brilliant, technically demanding fast movements. | | | (also available to download from $6.00) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Corelli & Co
Parnassus Avenue - Dan Laurin (recorders), Hanneke van Proosdij (harpsichord, organ, recorder), David Tayler (theorbo/baroque guitar), Tanya Tomkins (cello) “a truly inspirational disc for anyone who regards the baroque original as a starting point for individual expression” Early Music Review | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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