Francesco BARSANTI (1690 - 1772)
6 Concerti Grossi
Concerto I in G [8:43]
Concerto II in A [10:05]
Concerto III in E [10:34]
Concerto IV in G [15:38]
Concerto V in A [14:03]
Concerto VI in E [13:35]
Banchetto Musicale - Il Piacere
rec. 25 - 28 March 1997, Salvatorsaal, Vienna, Austria. DDD
DYNAMIC DM8023 [72:53]
Francesco Barsanti is not a household name. Now and then he turns up in concert
programmes and on disc, mostly with some Scottish tunes. This can be explained
from his biography. He was one of the many Italian performing musicians and
composers who moved to London to look for employment. He arrived there in 1714,
together with his friend Francesco Geminiani; both were from Lucca. For a number
of years he played the flute and the oboe in the orchestra of the Italian opera.
In 1735 he married a woman from Scotland. He developed a special liking for
Scottish tunes which he arranged or incorporated into his compositions. He found
aristocratic patrons in Scotland and composed some of his best music, his Concerti
grossi op. 3 and his Overtures op. 4. In 1743 he returned to London
where he started to work as a viola player. From that time he gave up writing
any original compositions. When he died in 1772 he was poor and almost completely
forgotten.
The concerti grossi which are the subject of this disc belong to a genre to
which various composers contributed. Italian music was very popular among the
musical societies of mostly amateurs which were active in many English towns.
They played not only original music such as the concerti grossi by Corelli but
also arrangements, for instance of violin sonatas. Francesco Geminiani took
profit from the demand for Italian music by arranging Corelli's violin sonatas
op. 5 as concerti grossi. His own violin sonatas were arranged as concerti grossi
by his English admirer Charles Avison, who also made arrangements of keyboard
sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti. Barsanti followed their example with his six
Concerti grossi after Giovanni Battista Sammartini and these were printed in
1757.
These were arrangements of Sammartini's Sonate Notturne op. 6, scored
for two violins and basso continuo. He was one of the most celebrated Italian
composers of his time and a representative of the modern galant idiom. For this
reason his compositions found wide appreciation. He also made quite an impression
with his symphonies which paved the way for the classical style and inspired
Haydn in his early symphonies. Sammartini's music was also known in England,
and therefore an arrangement of the sonatas op. 6 for a larger body of strings
was a good move by Barsanti.
Although they were printed as concerti grossi and contain a concertino
of two violins, viola and cello, they have little in common with the traditional
concerti grossi as written by the likes of Corelli and Handel. There are no
dotted rhythms, there is little counterpoint and the conventional fugal movements
are absent. These concerti grossi are in the same galant idiom as the original
sonatas by Sammartini. Even so, this is by no means all just easy-listening
stuff. Some slow movements, like the largo from the Concerto II in A
and the opening movements of the Concertos IV in G and V in A,
both with the indication 'affettuoso', are quite expressive. Another particularly
fine movement is the pastorale which opens the Concerto VI in E. All
that said, the difference between these concerti grossi and the earlier specimens
of the genre is evident.
The performances which were originally recorded in 1997 are lively and spirited,
albeit technically not always to the highest standard. In particular the intonation
is less than perfect now and then. I would also have liked a warmer and more
intimate acoustic. Yet this disc offers good entertainment and is well worth
listening to, because of the quality of the music and the performances. All
of which makes this reissue welcome. The liner-notes give good background information
and the booklet includes a list of the instruments used.
Johan van Veen
http://www.musica-dei-donum.org
https://twitter.com/johanvanveen
Good entertainment and well worth listening to.