Ariosti: 6 Lessons for Viola d'Amore and Continuo

Ariosti: 6 Lessons for Viola d'Amore and Continuo
Composer Attilio Ariosti
Artist Mauro Righini viola d'amore
Elena Bertuzzi soprano
Ugo Nastrucci theorbo
Danilo Costantini organ & Harpsichord
Format 1 CD
Cat. number 95620
EAN code 5028421956206
Release March 2022

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About this release

The violinist, organist, composer and librettist Attilio Malachia Ariosti was born in Bologna in 1666. His career took him to Mantua and Venice, the most enlightened musical and artistic centers of northern Italy at the time, then to Berlin and finally Vienna in 1703. Expelled from the Papal State for moral reasons, by 1716 he was living in London where, together with Bononcini and Handel, he became a permanent composer of the Royal Academy.

His Six Lessons for Viola d’Amore, published in London in 1724 and dedicated to King George, were as the name implies composed expressly to teach violinists to play the viola d’amore. They are written in scordatura with a system of movable keys to indicate the different positions and fingerings of the left hand up to the fourth position.

Ariosti’s Cantata for solo voice with the Viola d’amore Pur al fin gentil Viola was probably composed around 1690.

The viola d’amore has six or seven strings and (almost always) the same number of resonance strings placed under the bridge, which strongly characterize its timbre. Tunings were variable and, although from the second half of the 18th century the tuning in D became standard, it is not always straightforward to know which to use. For this reason, viola d’amore parts are written in scordatura, a sort of tablature in which the written note indicates the finger position according to standard tuning, but not the sounding pitch on a ‘detuned’
string. This fascinating and somewhat mysterious instrument is played by both violinists and violists; for violists in particular it offers access to a new, though unfortunately not very vast, repertoire, with works by Biber, Bach, Ariosti and Vivaldi, and more recently Hindemith, Martin, Ghedini and many others.
Attilio Malachia Ariosti (1666-1730) was born in Bologna, Italy. Violinist, organist, composer and librettist. He took vows at the order of the Serviti as Frate Ottavio in 1688 and was appointed organist in the church of S. Maria dei Servi in Bologna in 1693. He travelled to Mantua and Venice, the most enlightened musical and artistic centers of northern Italy and then moved to Berlin and lately to Vienna in 1703.
Expelled from the Papal State for moral reasons, in 1716 he lived in London where, together with Bononcini and Handel, he became a permanent composer of the Royal Academy. At the King's Theater he played with the viola d'amore in the intervals between the acts, "... a new symphony composed by the famous Mr. Attilio Ariosti in which he will play a new instrument called viola d'amore".
The Six Lessons for Viola d'Amore, published in London in 1724 and dedicated to King George, are harmonically and melodically very appealing and were composed expressly to teach violinists to play the viola d'amore. The viola d’amore has six or seven strings and the same number of resonance strings placed under the bridge, that strongly characterize its timbre.
Beautifully performed by Mauro Righini (viola d’amore), Ugo Nastrucci (theorbo), Danilo Costantini (organ & harpsichord) and Elena Bertuzzi (soprano), who sings in a Cantata for solo voice, viola d’amore and b.c.

Bilingual booklet in English and Italian contains notes on the composer and his works, as well as biographies of the artists
Mauro Righini plays an 18th-century anonymous Bohemian viola d’amore with a bow by Nicolas Léonard Tourte.

Listening

Track list

Disk 1

  1. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson I in E-Flat Major: I. Allegro
  2. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson I in E-Flat Major: II. Largo
  3. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson I in E-Flat Major: III. Andante
  4. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson II in A Major: I. Cantabile
  5. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson II in A Major: II. Vivace
  6. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson II in A Major: III. Adagio
  7. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson II in A Major: IV. Minuet
  8. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson III in E Minor: I. Adagio
  9. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson III in E Minor: II. Alemanda
  10. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson III in E Minor: III. Adagio
  11. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson III in E Minor: IV. Giga
  12. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson IV in F Major: I. Adagio
  13. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson IV in F Major: II. Andante
  14. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson IV in F Major: III. Corente
  15. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson IV in F Major: IV. Giga
  16. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson V in E Minor: I. Vivace
  17. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson V in E Minor: II. Largo
  18. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson V in E Minor: III. Giga
  19. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson VI in D Major: I. A tempo giusto
  20. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson VI in D Major: II. Corrente
  21. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson VI in D Major: III. Giga
  22. Attilio Ariosti: Lesson VI in D Major: IV. Rondeaux
  23. Attilio Ariosti: Pur alfin gentil viola Cantata for solo Voice and Viola d’amore: I. Pur alfin gentil viola aria
  24. Attilio Ariosti: Pur alfin gentil viola Cantata for solo Voice and Viola d’amore: II. Non fu saggio il consiglio recitativo
  25. Attilio Ariosti: Pur alfin gentil viola Cantata for solo Voice and Viola d’amore: III. Beltà che col rigor aria