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             Baldassare GALUPPI (1706-1785) 
              Keyboard Sonatas - Volume 1  
              Sonata in F, Illy 28 [11:55]  
              Sonata in F minor, Illy 9 [6:44]  
              Sonata in C minor, Illy 18 [1st movement] & Illy 4 [2nd movement] 
              [6:33]  
              Sonata in C, Illy 57 [10:03]  
              Sonata in B flat, Illy 32 [7:20]  
              Sonata in G, Illy 53 [6:38]  
              Sonata in D ('E flat'), Illy 45 [9:57]  
              Sonata in C, Illy 98 [2:31]  
                
              Matteo Napoli (piano)  
              rec. Waikato University, Hamilton, New Zealand, March 2009. DDD 
               
                
              NAXOS 8.572263 [62:19]   
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                Though Baldassare Galuppi is rightly famed for his huge contribution 
                  to opera buffa, he was also a prolific and popular composer 
                  of keyboard music, particularly sonatas. When British pianist 
                  Peter Seivewright released on the Divine Art label a 
                  programme of Galuppi's keyboard sonatas in 1999 - reviewed 
                  here - it was the first volume in a projected complete set 
                  running to ten discs and 90 sonatas. So far, and possibly because 
                  of ill health (see footnote), Seivewright appears to have got 
                  no further than volume 3 - see review 
                  - but in the last decade more sonatas have been unearthed, and 
                  there are now known to be over 130. This is the first Naxos 
                  CD devoted to Galuppi's music, and volume 1 of his keyboard 
                  sonatas. Volume 2 has not yet been released on CD, but is available 
                  as a download. 
                   
                   
                  One immediate question about this recording - major or minor, 
                  depending on individual sensitivities - is the choice of a modern 
                  pianoforte (Steinway D). There will doubtless be many who feel 
                  that Galuppi's sonatas belong on a period instrument - whether 
                  harpsichord or fortepiano. The sonorities, slender textures 
                  and delicate ornamentations of his alternately late-Baroque 
                  and forward-looking pre-Galant music are sometimes partially 
                  lost in the lush, deep sound of Napoli's piano. Nevertheless, 
                  within these self-imposed limitations, Napoli's performance 
                  here is creditable - plenty of sensitivity, no misplaced showmanship. 
                   
                   
                  There is no question, however, about Galuppi's masterly, mellifluous 
                  musicianship. Sonata after sonata is packed with beautiful melody 
                  and fluent invention, and it comes as no surprise that it was 
                  not only his opera music that was in great demand. But though 
                  Galuppi was himself a keyboard virtuoso, this is idiomatic music 
                  written with an eye on, or an ear to, the amateur player - it 
                  is varied, beautiful and rewarding, without being technically 
                  overwhelming.  
                   
                  Often the music is quite reminiscent of Domenico Scarlatti - 
                  the outer movements of the superbly imaginative Sonata in 
                  D, for example (incidentally incorrectly catalogued by Hedda 
                  Illy in E), or the ebullient two-and-a-half minute, one-movement 
                  Sonata in C, Illy 98. There are also reverberations of 
                  C.P.E. Bach, as in the refined Sonata in F and the thoughtful 
                  Sonata in F minor, and even of J.S. Bach, as in the Sonata 
                  in G.  
                   
                  But Galuppi is an original, without doubt, and Napoli's performance 
                  makes this altogether a good choice for connoisseurs of 18th 
                  century keyboard music, particularly those for whom the idiosyncratic 
                  colour of the harpsichord or fortepiano holds little attraction. 
                   
                   
                  Sound quality is generally high, although the Sonata in C, 
                  Illy 57 does have a couple of minor imperfections that sound 
                  suspiciously like edit joins.  
                   
                  Byzantion 
                Footnote 
                The reviewer refers to Peter Seivewright’s ongoing series 
                  having halted at volume 3 ‘possibly due to ill health’. 
                  I want to point out for the benefit of potential customers (and 
                  the music industry) that Peter is very well indeed – he 
                  did in fact undergo surgery not too long ago but is doing very 
                  well; his projects (which include several CDs of Bach, a Reger 
                  disc and a series of American Piano Sonatas, have also been 
                  held up due to his work commitments – he moved from Scotland 
                  to help set up and manage the new Department of Music at the 
                  University of Trinidad and Tobago. His fourth volume of Galuppi 
                  has been recorded and will appear in due course, hopefully with 
                  the other projected volumes to follow a little more quickly 
                  than heretofore. 
                  Stephen Sutton (Divine Art) 
                 
               
             
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