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Evaristo Felice dall’ABACO (1675-1742)
Concerto in B minor, Op.2, No.8 (1712)
Concerto in G minor, Op.2, No.5 (1712)
Concerto a quattro da chiesa in D major, Op.2, No.6 (1712)
Concerto in B flat, Op.2, No.9 (1712)
Concerto in F, Op.6, No.3 (1735)
Concerto a quattro da chiesa, Op.2, No.10 (1712)
Concerto in E, Op.6, No.2 (1735)
Concerto in F, Op.6, No.6 (1735)
Cappella Coloniensis/Günter
Wich, György Fischer, Hanns-Martin Schneidt,
Wilfried Boettcher
rec. 27 April 1969, 17 April 1972, 21 February 1975, 2 April 1975, 8 August 1977,
9 August 1978, Oetkerhalle, Bielefeld
PHOENIX EDITION 190 [65:41]
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In that huge diaspora of Italian musicians which characterises
so much in the history of Baroque music, whereby instrumentalists
and composers spread across the courts and cities of transalpine
Europe, Evaristo dall’Abaco is a relatively unusual case.
For the most part the Italian musicians who relocated to Spain
or Sweden, London or Vienna, were primarily agents in the spreading
of Italian styles and musical aesthetics. In the case of dall’Abaco
we have, however, a musician who strikingly absorbed the non-Italian
models he encountered and accommodated himself to tastes that
were not merely Italianate.
Evaristo dall’Abaco was born in Verona - he died in Munich
- he was born on 12 July 1675 and died on 12 July sixty five
years later. His father was a prominent jurist, but also a player
of the guitar and encouraged the son’s musical abilities
and he studied both violin and cello. By 1696 he was working
in Modena. In the light of dall’Abaco’s later development
it is interesting to note that the conductor (Monsieur Ambreville)
of the court orchestra in Modena was French. The next record
of dall’Abaco seems to be in 1704, when he was working
as a cellist at the Bavarian court. Military defeats in the War
of the Spanish Succession forced dall’Abaco’s employer,
Maximilian II of Emmanuel, elector of Bavaria, into exile in
Brussels and later in Mons, before his eventual return to Munich
in 1715. Accompanying his employer, dall’Abaco was exposed
to the music of France, music that Maximilian clearly found very
much to his taste. Gradually dall’Abaco’s own compositions
showed increasing signs of French influence.
For all its responsiveness to French examples - responding both
to his employer’s tastes and to all the music he heard
during his years in the Netherlands and France - dall’Abaco’s
music was also firmly grounded in the tradition established by
Corelli, although always handled with a certain independence
of mind. Increasingly his concertos included French dance movements
and characteristic qualities that Benjamin Ivry’s too brief
booklet notes well describe as “light, fleet, self-contained,
and discreet”. Increasingly (as, for example, in the concertos
published in 1735) a manner one might sensibly describe as galant
becomes noticeable. The results are intriguingly individual and
should appeal to anyone who enjoys the tradition of the baroque
concerto.
These were originally broadcasts by Westdeutschen Rundfunks Köln,
with Cappella Coloniensis playing under various conductors. The
recorded sound is occasionally lacking in the highest degree
of clarity but is generally satisfactory. The playing of the
Cappella Coloniensis is idiomatic, though their reading of some
of the slower movements will seem rather on the lush side to
ears attuned to some contemporary baroque ensembles.
Glyn Pursglove
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