Opis
Girolamo Frescobaldi (1583-1643) is the most significant figure in Italian keyboard music before Domenico Scarlatti. He was born in the northern city of Ferrara which, under the Este family had become a major centre for the musical avant-garde. Frescobaldi thrived in this heady environment, and this together with the influences he had picked up from his travels to Rome and Flanders gave his music its distinctive style. He became organist at St Peter's in Rome, and when the new St Peter's was completed in 1615 it was equipped with two superb organs which Frescobaldi performed on during official services and state events.
The ten Recercari on this CD were published in 1615. The word 'recercare' means to search, or tease out. Musically it describes a work in which a short abstract theme, or motif is manipulated through imitation, inversion and so on. In this recording each recercare is preceded by a toccata taken from a manuscript copied for the wealthy Fugger family of Augsberg. Whilst not from Frescobaldi's 1615 set of Toccatas, they do show many of his fingerprints.
Frescobaldi's keyboard music provides a link between the music of Palestrina and Victoria and that of J.S Bach.
Other information:
- Recording made in 2009
- Booklet notes by renowned Frescobaldi scholar Noel O'Regan
- Organ of Chiesa di S. Caterina, Treviso