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Physical Release: 30 January 2026
Digital Release: 6 February 2026
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The pairing of baroque violin and double bass might seem an encounter of opposites, yet in these works by Francesca Gemmo and Sergio Armaroli the two instruments meet on common ground where notation and freedom, history and experiment, trace a single arc. The violin gut strings and the luminous pliancy afforded by a baroque setup, invites a listening that is close to the wood; the bass, with its cavernous breath, folds time from within. Around that meeting point the programme turns and returns – like a compass drawing – so that solo and duo, page and improvisation, echo and silence become facets of a single enquiry into how sound is placed, remembered and renewed.
Francesca Gemmo conceived Towards the Circle in spring 2023 as a deliberate return to a closed form, to traditional notation and to a composer’s precise oversight of pacing, articulation and timbre. The work stands in two complementary versions: a self-sufficient page for solo violin, and a duo incarnation in which a monodic partner improvises in dialogue with the written line. The dedicatees are the baroque violinist Maya Homburger and the double bassist and composer Barry Guy, and their long-standing artistic partnership illuminates the score from within: the violin carries a nervous, quick-silver opening that settles upon a held note and then opens into calm lyric spans, before a final region of circular, almost hypnotic alternation where fragments rise and fall as if breathing. The duo version does not overwrite the page; it frames it, giving to the second voice a set of essential cues so that the improvisation moves as heterophony or shadow, never compromising the integrity of the written melody. In both forms, the narrative tends towards equilibrium – not stasis, but a poise in which gesture and repose are held in tension. That attention connects naturally with period performance practice. Tuned a little lower than modern pitch – one hears the warmth and elasticity of a violin around 432Hz – and balanced by a bow whose articulation favours speech-like attack and release, the instrument allows Gemmo’s slow tempos and hovering fermatas to acquire physical meaning. The tone may bloom at the bridge and retreat towards the fingerboard, the bow hair alternating with the wood in a delicate chiaroscuro; the result is not a stylised archaism but an acoustic ecology in which the piece breaths are audible. The performer’s restraint becomes structural: the held tone that steadies the second movement must be nursed rather than asserted, and the final circular motion of the third movement is less a device than a way of letting resonance speak. In the duo version the improvising partner joins as a listener first, answering in the register that keeps the line of the violin legible while colouring it from below or afar. The piece is neither cadenza nor étude; it is a study in sonorous duration, in the contour of a sustained note as it gathers harmonics and decay. Under the hand of an improviser-composer the instrument behaves like a small orchestra – a fact listeners may recognise from the solo bass tradition that reframed the instrument in the later twentieth century – yet here the theatricality is tempered by a chamber scale of attention. The circle invoked by the title becomes a metaphor of recurrence and of ethical listening: material is not expended, it is revisited.
Sergio Armaroli’s Bicinium plus x adopts a different angle on the same constellation of questions. The title reaches back to the Renaissance bicinium, the pedagogical duet for two equal voices, and adds an unknown. Here the violin part is fully notated in pitch and dynamics but leaves rhythm to the performer’s discretion; the double-bass part is open, stipulating islands of material within time brackets and inviting free improvisation as the variable X. The premise is simple and fertile: for every parameter x chosen, e.g. change of pitch, if the bass proposes B(arry)X then the violin replies M(A)yaX – not as mirror then, but as consequence. The violin page includes microtonal inflections and, at times, a deliberately lowered pitch standard appropriate to a baroque setup; its material can be elaborated, shaped and breathed, but not invented. By contrast, the bass is licensed to improvise within defined windows, sometimes silent, sometimes eruptive, as if the unknown were being solved in public. In this sense Bicinium plus x is both ancient and modern: a strict two-voice discipline that admits contingency not as accident but as method. Armaroli has long explored the structuring of improvisation in time. In a series devoted to structuring silence he adopted bracketed windows – durations within which sounds must occur – so that form emerges not from thematic development but from measured placement, from the relation between sounding and not-sounding. Bicinium plus x inherits that attention while reclaiming the old discipline of mutual accountability: each voice acts in awareness of the other. The score even contemplates echo and circular return, repeating at the end an earlier fragment so as to close the form with a bow to beginnings. The violin part hints at a scordatura designed to release particular harmonics and to push against equal temperament; harmonics may be used as an alternative tuning logic rather than as mere colour. The intention is not to imitate historical tuning systems, but to let resonance propose a possible intonation that the baroque instrument, with its light build and gut strings, can sustain without strain.
These pieces are also portraits of their dedicatees. Homburger’s artistry stands at the confluence of historically informed practice and a taste for new music that listens to the past; the grain of her instrument makes sense of Gemmo’s long, calm spans and of Armaroli’s refined constraints. Guy brings to the bass a composer’s imagination and an improviser’s alertness to situation; in Gemmo’s duo he becomes a second narrator who never obscures the page, and in Armaroli’s score he is the bearer of x, the living unknown that must remain responsive to another voice. The programme’s inner kinships invite wider reflections. The double-authored path – from a defined form that courts a second voice, to a solo response that re-hears the first, to a bicinium that grants improvisation a formal role – recalls the way a ground bass is elaborated across variations, or the way seventeenth-century diminutions reframed polyphony as ornamented line. In each case, a given becomes the condition for invention. The baroque bow, with its capacity for jeté and for quick chiaroscuro of attack, makes these relations tactile; the double bass, with its capacity to sustain and to blur, offers the counter-image of duration. Their combination suggests not contrast but complement. Armaroli’s earlier EWC51 Per due plus x already posed the calculated openness that Bicinium plus x refines, while his wider practice – rooted in composition, jazz and sound art – treats improvisation as a mode of enquiry rather than accident. The present score adds the classical severity of the bicinium to that enquiry, asking the improviser to remain answerable to another line. Gemmo’s return to traditional notation does not renounce experiment; it shifts the locus of risk to touch, to bow speed and contact point, to decisions about where to place sound in a field of silences. In both cases there is a quiet polemic against tired dichotomies: early versus new, written versus improvised. The supposed opposites turn out to be tools.
Giuliano Marco Mattioli © 2025
Barry Guy is an innovative bass player and composer whose creative diversity in the fields of jazz improvisation, chamber and orchestral performance and solo recitals is the outcome both of an unusually varied training and a zest for experimentation, underpinned by a dedication to the double bass and the ideal of musical communication.
He is founder and Artistic Director of the London Jazz Composers Orchestra and the BGNO (Barry Guy New Orchestra) for which he has written several extended works. In 2014 he founded the “Blue Shroud Band” to perform his composition “The Blue Shroud” based on Picasso’s painting “Guernica” with texts by the Irish poet Kerry Hardie.
His concert works for chamber orchestras, chamber groups and soloists have been widely performed and his skilful and inventive writing has resulted in an exceptional series of compositions.
In 2016 Barry Guy was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Middlesex , London and also appointed Visiting Professor to the Rhythmic Conservatory in Copenhagen.
Barry Guy continues to give solo recitals throughout Europe as well as continuing associations with colleagues involved in improvised, baroque and contemporary music. Among his current ensembles are the Homburger / Guy Duo, the "Acanthis" Trio with Lucas Niggli and Maya Homburger, the Duo with Jordina Milla (piano) , the Parker / Guy / Lytton trio, "Tarfala" with Mats Gustafsson and Raymond Strid, “Free Radicals” with Peter Evans (tpt) and Agusti Fernandez (piano), the trio with Torben Snekkestad (saxophone and Agusti Fernandez (piano) as well as various piano trios: The Izumi Kimura Trio with Gerry Hemingway, the trio with Agusti Fernandez and Zlatko Kaucic , the trio with Angelica Sanchez and Ramon Lopez and the longstanding trio with Marilyn Crispell and Paul Lytton.
“Folio” his work for strings, baroque violin, violin and improvising bass was released on ECM, “Time Passing…” with the Camerata Zürich and the vocal soloists Anja Pöche, Savina Yannatou and Matthew Brook on the Maya Recordings Label.
In 2019 he completed a commission for the KRONOS String Quartet as part of their series “50 for the Future”.
His solo works for violin, played by Maya Homburger, can be heard, framed by the Sonatas and Partitas by J.S. Bach, on three solo violin CDs released on the Maya Recordings Label.
Maya Homburger originally moved to England to join various ancient music ensembles and became one of the leaders of John Eliot Gardiner's "English Baroque Soloists".
Ever since meeting the composer and solo bassist Barry Guy - on the occasion of an extended concert tour with Christopher Hogwood’s Academy of Ancient Music in 1988 - she has devoted her time developing her own personal style on the baroque violin as well as managing Improvised and New Music projects and running her own CD label Maya Recordings.
The idea to perform baroque solo works in the context of free improvised music and newly commissioned pieces sparked off the Homburger/Guy Duo and together Maya Homburger and Barry Guy have given concerts in many major Jazz, New Music and Baroque Music Festivals all over Europe and in Canada.
Her specialities are performances of H.I.F. Biber's Mystery Sonatas as well as chamber music and cantatas by J.S.Bach.
After living in Ireland for nine years where they contributed both to the early as well as the contemporary music scene, they moved to Switzerland in 2006. The close connection to Ireland however remained : From 2011-2017 they organised their own music and art festival in Ireland : Barrow River Arts Festival (BRAF) and they perform regularly in various Irish festivals and concert series with the ensemble "Camerata Kilkenny".
Recordings include a. o. the Duo CDs “Ceremony” (ECM) and “Dakryon” (MAYA Recordings). The recording of the complete set of H. I. F. Biber's (1644-1704) famous Mystery Sonatas for violin and basso continuo has also been released on the MAYA label as well as a series of three solo violin CDs with J.S.Bach's Sonatas and Partitas BWV1001-1006 paired with Barry Guy's works for solo violin, called the "Butterfly Series" : “Inachis”, “Aglais” and “Lysandra”. Another ECM recording is “Folio” where she appears as violin soloist together with the Munich Chamber Orchestra. The latest Homburger/Guy Duo CD has appeared on the Intact Records Label and is called “Tales of Enchantment”. She also appears together with the Barry Guy New Orchestra (BGNO) as soloist on the Intakt CD "Amphi" and in various recordings with the Blue Shroud Band.
Maya Homburger plays on three baroque violins which are all in original, historic condition: Antonio dalla Costa, Treviso 1740, Samuel Thompson, London 1720, Thomas Perry, 1780 Dublin. She also plays - with the baroque bow of course - on a beautiful modern violin built in 2020 by the German luthier Stefan-Peter Greiner.
Barry Guy is an innovative bass player and composer whose creative diversity in the fields of jazz improvisation, chamber and orchestral performance and solo recitals is the outcome both of an unusually varied training and a zest for experimentation, underpinned by a dedication to the double bass and the ideal of musical communication.
He is founder and Artistic Director of the London Jazz Composers Orchestra and the BGNO (Barry Guy New Orchestra) for which he has written several extended works. In 2014 he founded the “Blue Shroud Band” to perform his composition “The Blue Shroud” based on Picasso’s painting “Guernica” with texts by the Irish poet Kerry Hardie.
His concert works for chamber orchestras, chamber groups and soloists have been widely performed and his skilful and inventive writing has resulted in an exceptional series of compositions.
In 2016 Barry Guy was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Middlesex , London and also appointed Visiting Professor to the Rhythmic Conservatory in Copenhagen.
Barry Guy continues to give solo recitals throughout Europe as well as continuing associations with colleagues involved in improvised, baroque and contemporary music. Among his current ensembles are the Homburger / Guy Duo, the "Acanthis" Trio with Lucas Niggli and Maya Homburger, the Duo with Jordina Milla (piano) , the Parker / Guy / Lytton trio, "Tarfala" with Mats Gustafsson and Raymond Strid, “Free Radicals” with Peter Evans (tpt) and Agusti Fernandez (piano), the trio with Torben Snekkestad (saxophone and Agusti Fernandez (piano) as well as various piano trios: The Izumi Kimura Trio with Gerry Hemingway, the trio with Agusti Fernandez and Zlatko Kaucic , the trio with Angelica Sanchez and Ramon Lopez and the longstanding trio with Marilyn Crispell and Paul Lytton.
“Folio” his work for strings, baroque violin, violin and improvising bass was released on ECM, “Time Passing…” with the Camerata Zürich and the vocal soloists Anja Pöche, Savina Yannatou and Matthew Brook on the Maya Recordings Label.
In 2019 he completed a commission for the KRONOS String Quartet as part of their series “50 for the Future”.
His solo works for violin, played by Maya Homburger, can be heard, framed by the Sonatas and Partitas by J.S. Bach, on three solo violin CDs released on the Maya Recordings Label.
Sergio Armaroli. He studied painting at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts (Milan) and electronic music, jazz and percussion instruments at G. Verdi Conservatory of Milan, graduating with full marks and honours. He also studied at the Accademia del Teatro alla Scala (Milan) and at the Istituto Superiore de Arte de Habana in Cuba with a major in popular percussions. He studied and collaborated with Giuseppe Giuliano, Alessandro Melchiorre and with Jonathan Harvey. He has held numerous performance practice and improvisation masterclasses at Civic School of Milan, Agon Informatica Musica (Milan), S. Cecilia Conservatory of Rome, and at G. Verdi Conservatory of Milan. Creator and curator of the afterNotations Exhibition, Armaroli is a founding member of the Città Sonora Association.
He has recorded a number of CDs both as a percussionist and a vibraphonist/marimbist, performing in numerous theatres, concert seasons, ensembles, and orchestras such as Teatro Alla Scala, La Società del Quartetto, Accademia Filarmonica Romana, Venice Biennale, Exit 09 International Music Festival, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (UK). Really important for his career was the encounter with the composer Sylvano Bussotti and with the music of Alvin Curran with whom he created two recording projects and curated two personal exhibitions: Sylvano Bussotti miniaturist and Signage. Likewise, it was crucial the meeting with Brunhild Ferrari Meyer and with the work and thought of Luc Ferrari, as well as the influence of the work and thought of John Cage and Marcel Duchamp.
Many of his works are realized for electronics and computer tape and as well as many are the multimedia and performative projects: Le souffle corporel for piano, computer tape and a dancer (Conservatory G. Verdi of Milan, 2006); AfterSilence work (Milan, 2007) for a drum and computer tape; Luc Ferrari Tautologos III (Arsenale Theater, Milan, 2018). Thanks to the work Magono-Te: mains des petits enfants (2019) his name was reported into the International Prize for the unconventional writing of musical scores (Lucca, 2016) and included in the bibliographic publication Experimental Improvisation Practice and Notation by Carl Bergstrom-Nielsen of the IIMA - International Improvised Music Archive (pag. 46/46). He is working in close cooperation with the trombonist and composer Giancarlo Schiaffini, with whom he shares an experimental and theoretical attitude in the practice of improvisation and "jazz", the latter being understood as "extension of the concept of art"; speaking of which, it was included by Flavio Caprera in the Dictionary of Italian jazz (Universale Economica Feltrinelli, Milan, 2014).
With the Swiss percussionist and composer Fritz Hauser, with whom he developed a compositional technique derived from John Cage's number pieces, he recorded Structuring The Silence. In Paris, in May 2006, he premiered at Giuseppe Giuliano's Citè de la Musique Miss Z with singer Ingrid Caven. From this concert, the director Bertrand Bonello filmed the documentary Ingrid Caven: Musique et voix (France, 2012). For Da Vinci Classics, he edited the aboutCAGE, a CDs series dedicated to the American composer and his compositions are published with Da Vinci Edition.
In the field of education, he published with Francesca Gemmo the book Percussion Instruments (Padus, Cremona). He is also a poet, painter and sound artist.
13.76€