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Digital Release Only: 7 July 2024
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Whilst the idea of a “history of music” took shape only in relatively recent times, the same cannot be said of literature. Music was conceived of as something perishable, something written and composed for an occasion, or determined by a trend of taste and interests; something destined to last just in memory, and not to be transmitted, preserved, re-presented. A properly historical concept of music arose only in the late eighteenth century. Instead, the study of works of ancient poets, dramatists, or narrators, had always be a fundamental component of education. The principle of imitation was pivotal. Literates should imitate first and foremost nature, but also the models of their forefathers and predecessors. Originality was not as valued as the adherence to sanctioned models, which constituted a tradition in whose framework originality itself should find its place.
In Italy, Torquato Tasso was one of the epoch-making authors whose “authority” (in the fullest sense of the word) was constantly referred to. In turn, his works did not grow up in isolation, but explicitly made references to the tradition of the ancients, with their epic poems and their Arcadian settings. Tasso’s Gerusalemme liberata (completed in 1575) represented, in the views of both his contemporaries and those coming later, a “modern” (or rather early-modern) reinterpretation of the grand style of epic poetry. It was a quintessentially Christian kind of epic poetry, and the Parnassus of the gods of old was radically reinterpreted and transformed. The incipient Baroque era was already imagined and suggested by the taste for the wonderful and wondrous which marked the early modern examples of epic poetry.
These traits united epic poetry with other artistic genres, including the visual arts and music (with special emphasis on opera). Visual art created awe-inspiring and amazing buildings with trompe-l’oeil frescoes, such as those found in some basilicas whose ceiling seems to have been removed in order to let human beings glimpse the life of heaven. Indeed, such frescoes have much in common with theatrical scenery, and the guiding principles of both are virtually the same. The whole world becomes a theatrical stage, on which the emotions, feelings, affections, and situations are extremized and polarized.
Opera brings that dimension of theatre to its full, since music contributes importantly to the creation, or re-creation, of that “theatre of life”. But opera was by no means the only field of vocal music in which the art of sounds embraced late-Renaissance and early Baroque poetry. Songs, madrigals, and the likes, were also an extraordinary repository of creativity; here, lyrics by contemporary poets, but also by authors of much earlier epochs, continued to be set to music with constantly renewed formulas. Poetry which might have two or more centuries of history kept challenging composers of the Renaissance, Baroque and Classical era, and, even when new lyrics were written, frequently they referenced (at times very openly) the topoi, the gestures, the style, the content, the rhymes, and the overall atmosphere of their models.
For instance, poet Paolo Rolli (1687-1765) was a leading figure of Arcadian poetry: the serene and tranquil pace of “pastoral” poetry was a field in which he excelled, and works such as his famous Solitario bosco ombroso seemed to be written with the specific purpose of being set to music. The rhythm of his verses, the pleasant choice of the sounds, the idyllic settings, all concur to creating the perfect background for an elegant musical setting. And musical settings it did earn, by the dozen; among the others, Giuseppe Tartini was one who allowed the fascination of this “lonely shadowy wood” to fascinate him.
Tartini had set some stanzas of this poem to music, whilst to others he gave a musico-symbolical representation, by depicting its atmospheres by means of his music.
And the influence of these settings, in turn, went far beyond the boundaries of vocal music, inspiring, and in part determining, also the creation of purely instrumental, and therefore non-texted, works. Tartini was no newcomer in his field; in his output, we find several works provided with a (more or less hidden) “program”: one need simply recall one of Tartini’s most famous Sonatas, i.e. the one dedicated to the forsaken Dido (Didone abbandonata).
This Istrian-born composer, and Venetian citizen at the time of the Serenissima’s greatest splendour, was one of the greatest violin virtuosi of his time, and probably of all times. Born in Piran, he received his first education there, but was soon sent to Capodistria (now Koper) to where he studied at a prestigious college, learning to play the violin, but also excelling in the art of fencing. He kept practising this skill also during the time of his university studies in Law in Padua, and he even considered becoming a professional master of fencing. His projects were overturned, however, by incidents following an adventurous love story. The low profile he had to keep during the following two years, which he spent in the Sacro Convento of Assisi, was beneficial to the history of music. In the secluded atmosphere of the religious house, he devoted time and energy to the violin and to the study of composition with a Bohemian-born musician (a friar of the convent). When the turmoil following his sentimental adventures had subsumed, he was allowed to resume his musical activity in Ancona and elsewhere. He was deeply inspired by Francesco Maria Veracini, one of the greatest violinists of his time, whose technique he took as his example. Since 1721, Tartini worked in the musical Chapel of the famous Basilica del Santo in Padua, where he found an excellent milieu. He spent three years in Prague, where he earned the appreciation of such musicians as Quantz; back to Italy, he toured many cities in the northern-central part of the Peninsula. He became a reference figure for his teaching, which was sought for by violinists coming from all over Europe (France, England, Germany). He was also appreciated for his teaching of composition (Salieri studied with him), and as a valued interlocutor of aristocratic and cultivated personalities. He was also highly interested in theoretical matters (he is credited with the discovery of the so-called “third sound” on the violin), and left a conspicuous number of speculative works.
He was profoundly interested in extra-musical matters, such as literature. For instance, it is said that he used to read a sonnet by Petrarch before setting to work in his compositional activity; allegedly, he had a particular fondness for that poem, and he stated that this reading gave him an “object”, a “content” whose expression he sought to find in his musical works.
Another poet whose works were particularly congenial to Tartini was Metastasio, the great librettist and dramatist whose fluent verses support so many of the most memorable arias of the Classical era.
Tartini’s literary inspiration is particularly evident in the case of Torquato Tasso: the label “Aria del Tasso” is found in his works, along with references to “Canzone veneziana” (“Venetian Song”) or “Furlana” (“Forlane”). These suggestions highlight Tartini’s constant search for inspiration in the realm of literature and of poetry.
In four out of the six Sonatas recorded in this Da Vinci Classics CD we find different variants of the so-called “Aria del Tasso”, a well-known theme at the time: the composer leans towards the concept of “musica naturalis” and “music of the people”, hence “popular”; that which could bring him back to simplicity. This aspect automatically leads to the main characteristic of Nature as opposed to artifice and everything that is not spontaneous. Another poem cited earlier in these liner notes, Solitario bosco ombroso, is almost certainly the source of Tartini’s Sonata D3, also recorded here.
As the recording artist of this Da Vinci Classics album writes, “I find this union with poetry significant and extremely important, an image of a choice that surely aimed to go beyond the purely instrumental, technical, and virtuosic sphere reserved for the violin, almost aiming to achieve an idea of authenticity, that essentiality that could bring it closer to a more linear and pure conception, all concepts prioritized and well represented in Tartini’s last productive phase.
Music and poetry thus make the instrument a very important vehicle capable of reaching a very high level of communication, fully autonomous in its support and never devoid of a specific guiding line”.
This recording encompasses works from a collection of 26 small Sonatas, in autograph manuscripts; they are true gems depicting an invaluable treasure, both for technical completeness and compositional beauty.
In reality, the collection comprises 31 Sonatas (the five rediscovered ones belong to the second part of the manuscript, undoubtedly the most complex to reconstruct): 14 of these have bass accompaniment, 17 without; in a letter addressed to his friend Algarotti, Tartini writes: “My small Sonatas for Solo Violin sent here have the bass for ceremony: a particularity that I did not write. I play them without the bassetto, and this is my true intention.” These few lines leave no doubts about the nature of these Sonatas, hence the desire to fully respect this precise indication of the composer.
In this form, they bear witness to Tartini’s standing as a great virtuoso, a profound connoisseur, and an innovator, above all. His heritage remains as a valuable witness of his compositional intelligence, of his sensitivity, of his creative powers and of the indelible mark he left on the music of his century and of the following eras. Now that we passed the 250th anniversary of his death (commemorated in 2020), it becomes increasingly clear that his influence went well beyond what has been observed until now, and that it needs to be fully re-evaluated in order to be more deeply appreciated.and general audience, granting to all a touching and deeply involving listening experience.
Chiara Bertoglio © 2023
Lavinia Soncini
Born in Ferrara in 1994, she graduated at the age of 18 “cum laude and the highest mention” at the “A. Buzzolla” Conservatory of Music.
She studied later with Pavel Vernikov in Vienna, Alessandro Ferrari and Klaidi Sahatci with whom he completed the Master of Advanced Studies (MAS) at the Conservatorio della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano.
In 2019 she completed her studies in Baroque violin under the guidance of Luca Giardini at "B. Maderna" music Conservatory in Cesena with 110 “cum laude and the highest mention”.
She has collaborated with the "Luigi Cherubini" Youth Orchestra, Filarmonica del Teatro Comunale di Bologna, "Hulencourt Soloists Chamber Orchestra" in Brussels, Orchestra Città di Ferrara and Soloists, Orchestra of the Brescia and Bergamo Piano Festival, National Orchestra of Italian Conservatories, Orchestra Classica Italiana, also as first part.
She also devoted a large part of her activity to the chamber music repertoire in duo and trio with piano.
As part of the summer courses of early music "ILMAestate" she won the ILMA Award as best student of M° Federico Guglielmo, an award that will include the recording of Antonio Vivaldi's Sonatas Op. 2 to be released in spring 2020.
She played also in chamber and orchestral projects within the "Akademie für Kammermusik Villa Musica " in Engers (Germany), having the opportunity to work with Fabio Bonizzoni, Werner Erhardt, einhard Goebel.
In 2020 she was chosen, as Konzertmeister, to participate in the advanced baroque music workshop "Cremona Residenza Barocca” within the Monteverdi Festival, in collaboration with Accademia Bizantina.
She regularly collaborates with renowned groups such Accademia Bizantina, Il Pomo d’Oro, Theresia
(TYBO).
She has played under the direction of important conductors such as Riccardo Muti, Kent Nagano, Donato Renzetti, Roberto Abbado, Jonathan Webb, James Conlon, Guy Braunstein, Niklas Willen, Dennis Russell Davies and others.
She was invited to play in many important festivals (Ravenna Festival, Festival dei Due Mondi di Spoleto, Festival Anima Mundi of Pisa, Tokyo Harusai Spring Festival, Abu Dhabi Classical Festival, Schwetzingen Festspiele, Haendel Festspiele, Innsbrucker Festwochen der Alten Musik, Salzburg estspiele, Rostropovich Festival, Izmir Festival, Savonlinna Opera Festival, etc) and performed in famous theaters in Italy and abroad (Teatro La Fenice and Malibran in Venice, Teatro Comunale di Bologna,Teatro Petruzzelli in Bari, Teatro Ponchielli in Cremona, Teatro Grande in Brescia, Teatro Donizetti and Teatro Sociale in Bergamo, Teatro dell’Opera di Firenze, Teatro Réal in Madrid, Palau de la Musica in Barcelona, Muscat Royal Opera House, Brussels Auditorium Flagey, Auditorium del Lingotto in Turin, Philharmonie de Paris, Philharmonie de Luxembourg, Geneva Opera, Auditorium of the Emirates Palace in Abu Dhabi, LAC in Lugano, Metropolitan Theater and Bunka Kaikan in Tokyo,etc).
Her first violin solo debut cd will be release in 2024 by DaVinci publishing, contains Tartini’s violin solo Sonatas.
The city of Ferrara awarded her the recognition as ambassador of music in the world in May 2014.
She plays a Giulio Degani from 1897 given to her by a collector and a baroque violin from the mid-18th
century Tyrolean school.
Giuseppe Tartini: (b Pirano, Istria [now Piran, Istra, Slovenia], 8 April 1692; d Padua, 26 Feb 1770). Italian composer, violinist, teacher and theorist.
Tartini’s father Giovanni Antonio, of Florentine origin, was general manager of the salt mills in Pirano. Giuseppe, destined for the church by his pious parents, was to have been first a minore conventuale, a branch of the Franciscan order, and subsequently a full priest. To this end he was educated in his native town and then in nearby Capodistria (now Koper, Slovenia) at the scuole pie; as well as the humanities and rhetoric, he studied the rudiments of music. In 1708 he left his native region, never to live there again, but carrying in his memory the peculiarities of the local musical folklore. He enrolled as a law student at Padua University, where he devoted most of his time, always dressed as a priest, to improving his fencing, a practice in which, according to contemporary accounts, few could compete with him. This account of Tartini’s youth has been questioned (see, for instance, Capri), but it is supported by contemporary evidence and is consistent with the later development of his personality, characterized by a fiery and stubborn temperament with a strong tendency towards mysticism. These qualities are equally evident in his writings – both letters and theoretical works – and in his compositions.
A few months after his father’s death, Tartini openly rebelled against his parents’ intentions, and on 29 July 1710 he married Elisabetta Premazore, a girl of lower social standing and two years his elder. He was then compelled to leave Padua and took refuge in the convent of S Francesco in Assisi, where he was sheltered by the superior, Padre G.B. Torre, from Pirano. There Tartini remained for at least three years, devoting himself determinedly to practising the violin, always without tuition. Although direct evidence is lacking, he probably studied composition during this period with Padre Bohuslav Černohorský, then organist of the basilica in Assisi.
With the death of Father Torre, Tartini lost his protector and was obliged to support himself as a violinist. We learn from his Trattato di musica that in 1714 he was in the orchestra of the Ancona opera house, and he claimed that it was then that he discovered the ‘terzo suono’ (combination tone), the acoustical phenomenon that was to play a fundamental role in his theoretical system as well as in his composing and playing techniques. In July 1716 he heard Veracini play at a musical academy in the Mocenigo palace in Venice, and was so impressed by his style, especially by his bow technique, that he decided to return to the Marches in order to perfect his own playing; in Carnival 1717–18 he was first violin in the opera house orchestra in Fano. His activities during the next two years are not known, but presumably involved commuting between the Veneto and the Marches in order to play in academies, church services and opera performances, as well as teaching. He was in Venice early in 1721, when he had as a pupil the young Gerolamo Ascanio Giustiniani, the future translator of the Psalms for Benedetto Marcello and the dedicatee of Tartini’s own violin sonatas published as op.1 in 1734 by Le Cène in Amsterdam.
Thanks to the intervention of Gerolamo Ascanio’s father, Tartini was appointed primo violino e capo di concerto at the basilica of S Antonio in Padua (known as ‘Il Santo’) on 16 April 1721; the proceedings of the appointments board expressly stated that Tartini was exempt from the usual examination because of his acknowledged perfection in the profession, and he was at the same time granted complete freedom to play in opera and musical academies whenever he so wished. The document is in itself proof of the high reputation Tartini had by then acquired. Taking advantage of the permission he was granted, he took part in occasional performances in Parma (1728), Bologna (1730), Camerino (1735), Ferrara (1739) and, most frequently, Venice.
In 1723 Tartini was invited by his lifelong friend and colleague, the cellist Antonio Vandini (the source of the earliest biographical information about Tartini), to join him in Prague in performances connected with the coronation of Emperor Charles VI as king of Bohemia. Tartini’s ready acceptance resulted partly from a wish to avoid a scandal about to erupt in Padua, provoked by a Venetian innkeeper who accused him of fathering her recently born child. Tartini remained for three years in Prague in the service of the Kinsky family, and enjoyed contacts there with Prince Lobkowitz’s household as well as with the musicians Fux, Caldara and S.L. Weiss. The bad climate and resulting health problems obliged him – ‘against his will’, as he said in a family letter – to return in 1726 to S Antonio in Padua, where he remained for the rest of his life.
The following year Tartini began his violin school, which soon became famous and was labelled ‘the school of the nations’ because students came to it from all over Europe. It was probably about this time that he began his relationship, mainly epistolary, with Padre Martini in Bologna, which lasted for the rest of his life. Also about this time (c1730) Le Cène of Amsterdam brought out Tartini’s first published works, 12 concertos op.1, books 1 and 3. In spite of repeated invitations from France, Germany and especially England, Tartini firmly refused to leave Padua, just as he always declined to write for the stage. Several travellers visited him: in 1739 De Brosses reported at length in his Lettres familières on the excellent impression the violinist made on him, but there is no evidence of a supposed journey to Rome in 1740. About this time Tartini suffered a stroke which partly paralysed his left arm and affected his playing. Frequent contacts with the cultural milieu in Padua, and especially with his countryman Gianrinaldo Carli, professor of astronomy at Padua University, fostered the change in Tartini’s conception of music from that of a purely abstract construction of sounds to that of an expressive language capable of moving the listeners’ affections. The discussions concerned also theoretical subjects, dealing with the physical and mathematical principles behind musical phenomena; but Tartini’s interest in – or indeed his passion for – these matters dates from much earlier, and was promoted also by the presence in Padua of two Franciscans who were maestri di cappella of the institution in which he served and also deeply involved in the same theoretical matters: Francesco Calegari, who held the office from 1703 to 1727, and his successor Francesco Antonio Vallotti.
As time went by, Tartini devoted himself less to playing and composing, concentrating his energies (apart from those used for teaching) almost exclusively on theoretical speculation. By 1750, as can be inferred from his correspondence, the text of what was to become the Trattato di musica secondo la vera scienza dell’armonia was complete, and it was circulated to the ‘learned world’ (as Tartini himself called it) to be evaluated and discussed. Padre Martini and the mathematician Lodovico Balbi, both in Bologna, were rather sceptical of the hypotheses expounded in the treatise, which was eventually published in 1754 with the financial support of Count Decio Agostino Trento, its dedicatee. Criticism continued after publication, emphasizing that it was written in a deliberately obscure style. Tartini decided therefore on a plainer and more comprehensible presentation of his ideas in his next printed treatise, De’ principi dell’armonia musicale contenuta nel diatonico genere, completed in 1764 and published in 1767. In between these publications, and even after, he wrote several shorter theoretical texts, principally to defend his convictions against attacks coming mainly from Italian mathematicians and foreign music theorists. Not all judgments were unfavourable, however; D’Alembert, in his Elémens de musique, expressed support for Tartini’s ideas, and J.-J. Rousseau took the trouble of including an extensive and thorough résumé of them in the article ‘Système’ in his Dictionnaire de musique (1768). But Rousseau’s concept of harmony was too close to Rameau’s to be acceptable to Tartini, who attacked him in what turned out to be his last published work. Another large theoretical text, Dell’armonia musicale fondata sul cerchio, remained unpublished until modern times.
Throughout his life Tartini was harassed by requests for financial help from his family in Pirano, which obliged him to devote his last years more than ever to teaching; but he was also obsessed by the incomprehension with which his theories and ideas were met. After the death of his wife, Vandini joined him to spend their last years together. Tartini died on 26 February 1770; he bequeathed his musical and theoretical manuscripts to his nephew Pietro.
PIERLUIGI PETROBELLI from The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
Physical and Release: 17 July 2026
Physical and Release: 17 July 2026
Physical Release: 17 July 2026 Digital Release: 14 July 2026