Tartini is one of 
                  those late Baroque composers who conventionally attract ‘second 
                  tier’ status and reputation. Yet, his music is consistently 
                  better than such a ranking suggests: more profound, more original, 
                  genuinely creative, more melodic and more skilfully orchestrated 
                  and arranged. This generous, two-CD re-issue from Hyperion/Dyad, 
                  ought to help listeners new to Tartini to arrive at a fairer 
                  assessment.
                
Not much is known 
                  about Tartini’s early life and musical influences. But we do 
                  know that he was brought up and became musically active in that 
                  part of north-eastern Italy which is called ‘The Sacristy of 
                  Italy’… puritan, conservative, unadventurous. Here, too, he 
                  fell foul of the Church. The city of Padua - livelier than some 
                  in the region – was Tartini’s home for years, although we know 
                  he visited Assisi and Prague.
                
It seems likely 
                  that innate wit, ability and drive coupled with real curiosity 
                  brought out in Tartini the qualities necessary to build a, subsequently 
                  renowned, violin school which attracted pupils from across Europe. 
                  It was the same determination that compelled Tartini to write 
                  extensively on acoustics and musical theory. It was also surely 
                  Tartini’s temperament - a sensitivity to criticism - that caused 
                  him to react in baffled, mildly combative and defensive ways 
                  when attacked by more progressive figures later in his life. 
                  Born just before the death of Purcell, Tartini died in Padua 
                  in the year Beethoven was born; he composed more than 130 violin 
                  concertos, the same number of violin sonatas, and a quarter 
                  that number of trio sonatas.
                
On the first of 
                  these two discs the music almost all comes from Sonate a 
                  violino e violincello o cimballo, Op. 1, originally published 
                  in 1732 in Amsterdam; that was a preferred location for Italian 
                  composers because Italian publishing houses were in decline. 
                  The set was reprinted in 1746 in London as XII Solos for 
                  a Violin with Thorough Bass for the Harpsicord or Violoncello. 
                  It must also be borne in mind that Tartini’s Op. numbers and 
                  publishing history and sequences are complex and confusing at 
                  best. In any case, this first group of sonatas comes from the 
                  earlier period in the composer’s life when his style was more 
                  intricate and difficult… double and triple stopping, ornate 
                  passagework and florid ornamentation, not to mention scordatura 
                  in the A Major Pastorale (tr.10), for example.
                
Of this Op. 1 set 
                  the first six (following Corelli) are in da chiesa style 
                  yet consist of three movements, slow-fast-fast, with the second 
                  a fugue. The rest are in the da camera style with (also 
                  three; also slow-fast-fast) binary dance movements. Another 
                  feature of Tartini’s striking melodic and harmonic language 
                  is their association with dramatic themes, and with dramatic 
                  titles… Didone abbandonata; Il trillo del Diavolo. 
                  This suggests the wish later expressed by Classical composers 
                  to allude to an almost operatic substance in their instrumental 
                  work. It’s a step in the direction of tone-painting, but in 
                  ways less overt than those of Vivaldi.
                
The Devil’s Trill 
                  is certainly the best known such programmatic violin sonata 
                  from the whole century … Tartini dreamt he had made a pact with 
                  the devil, handed him his violin and listened to his resulting 
                  playing: it’s the trill at the end of the allegro assai (tr.18) 
                  of the G Minor sonata. ‘Matter of Fact’ would be the wrong term 
                  for the style with which the Locatellis play this passage. As 
                  would ‘histrionic’. It’s at just the right place on the spectrum 
                  of styles between these two inappropriate extremes to excite 
                  and amaze without over-impressing the listener.
                
There are times 
                  in other of the works (the final allegro of the F Major, Op. 
                  1 Number 12, for example) when one might wish that a slightly 
                  more animated speed had been adopted. But at the same time, 
                  the players know the value of restraint and present every turn 
                  of Tartini’s sinuous writing unpretentiously. They also offer 
                  the music for what it is: sardonic in places and with a slight 
                  (feigned?) passivity; the tuning of the B Flat Major allegro 
                  (tr.14) is a good example.
                
For the music on 
                  CD 2 the plainer and less extravagant style inspired by Corelli’s 
                  Op. 5 solo chamber sonatas (of 1700) was the model. Of these 
                  four sonatas three remained in manuscript during Tartini’s lifetime. 
                  Only his Op. 5 (tr.s13,14,15) was published – in the late 1740s 
                  in Paris. This Op. 5, Number 6 in B Flat, is probably the earliest 
                  piece; it’s close in style to the 1732 Op. 1 on CD 1.
                
Here too there is 
                  painting in sound … the Sonata in A Major ‘Sopra lo stile 
                  che suona il Prette dalla Chitarra Portoghese’ (‘prete’ 
                  is misspelled) looks in the direction of Iberian (folk) music. 
                  The D Major sonata has fanfares; both it and the B Flat employ 
                  a variety of dance movements.
                
The task facing 
                  Wallfisch, Tunnicliffe and Nicholson, then, was to infuse their 
                  music-making with balance. To be effective the playing should 
                  mix plain exposition of this original, sweet, simple yet spectacular 
                  music on the one hand. And be forward-looking, colourful, expressive 
                  on the other. And all that without making the music sound overly 
                  demonstrative. Such a blend they achieve in three ways:
                
By meticulous, painstaking 
                  attention to detail, idiomatic ornamentation, an obvious belief 
                  in the nuances and force of the string writing in particular; 
                  it’s obvious that the trio is fully but quietly persuaded by 
                  the music.
                
By careful use of 
                  contrasting, rather than conflicting, tempi.
                
And by allowing 
                  the line of the melodic development to breathe and expand unhurriedly 
                  – the first allegro (tr.14) of Op. 1 Number 12 is an excellent 
                  example. Not quite ‘symphonic’ in scope. But certainly panoramic.
                
Since the virtuosity 
                  of the players was taken for granted in the way Tartini wrote 
                  his music, it must be made to express what it will - almost 
                  without the ‘intervention’ of brashness or bravado. Such qualities 
                  couldn’t be further from the Locatellis’ minds. The grace, elegance 
                  and mellow beauty of Tartini’s invention wins out every time. 
                  Movement after movement from these sonatas is made to sound 
                  dulcet, gentle, delicately-articulated and almost crystalline. 
                  It’s almost, at times, as though a precious piece of glassware 
                  is being passed from player to player – for example in the A 
                  Major’s minuet (tr.12) and the slow movements of the same sonata; 
                  and the B Flat’s first movement (tr.13); the marking of the 
                  latter is, after all, ‘affettuoso’!
                
The liner-notes 
                  are clear and to the point, if not always perfectly proofed; 
                  the recording crisp and produced with the right amount of presence 
                  to support the musical world of these varied and delightful 
                  sonatas. 
                
Mark Sealey