The music on this recording demonstrates
how composers in Germany, Italy, Austria and England responded to the
challenges of writing for violin senza basso. Music for violin senza
basso had a distinguished history before Bach and was widely cultivated
by his contemporaries.
Violinistic virtuosity was extraordinarily
experimental in the late seventeenth century, with novelties in the
tuning of the strings (scordaura), bowing techniques, chordal playing
and contrapuntal textures (with the development of sophisticated
double-, triple- and quadruple-stopping techniques) and playing in high
positions. This disc of solo violin music is a real mixture of some of
Rachel's favourite pieces.
Rachel Podger is one of the most
creative talents to emerge in the field of period performance. Over the
last two decades she has established herself as a leading interpreter of
the music of the Baroque and Classical periods. After beginnings with
The Palladian Ensemble and Florilegium, she was leader of The English
Concert from 1997 to 2002 and in 2004 began a guest directorship with
The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment with whom she appeared in a
televised BBC Prom in 2007. As a guest director and soloist she has
collaborated with numerous orchestras including Arte dei Suonatori
(Poland), Musica Angelica and Santa Fe Pro Musica (USA), The Academy of
Ancient Music, The European Union Baroque Orchestra, Holland Baroque
Society and the Handel and Haydn Society (USA).
Rachel directs
her own ensemble, Brecon Baroque and is Artistic Director of her own
festival: the Brecon Baroque Festival. Rachel is an honorary member of
both the Royal Academy of Music (where she holds the Michaela Comberti
Chair for Baroque Violin) and the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama
(where she holds the Jane Hodge Foundation International Chair in
Baroque Violin) and teaches at institutions throughout the world. (Gramophone Magazine: Editor's Choice - November 2013)
Oh, God, I need this disc, but I could not download it!
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