In this inspiring album – his first solo disc for ECM – Norwegian early
music performer Rolf Lislevand turns his attention to the music of two
composers from the court of Louis XIV: Robert de Visée (c. 1655-1732)
and the Italian-born Francesco Corbetta (c. 1615-1681), and plays their
masterpieces with historical awareness and an inventiveness which
belongs to the tradition. De Visée wrote about playing what the
instruments themselves called for, advice Lislevand takes to heart here,
adding improvised introductions to passacaglias from both composers.
On La Mascarade, Lislevand uses two contrasting instruments. He
plays the theorbo, the dark-toned and earthy king of the lutes, and the
Baroque guitar, with its sparkling, crystal-clear sonorities. The 17th
guitar, smaller than its modern counterpart, had five pairs of strings,
tuned in unisons and octaves. “Musicians of four centuries ago had
already developed the instrument’s playing style to explore all the
possibilities of surprising strummed rhythms and harmonies, often very
modern-sounding to our ears. Moreover the instrument’s many different
tunings prefigure the experimental tunings used by improvising musicians
today… It seems that guitar players of the seventeenth century did
exactly what guitar players have done ever since: compose music with the
guitar on their knees by listening to the exciting new sounds that
unexpectedly occurred when they put their fingers on new and unusual
places on the fingerboard.”
Where the Baroque guitar had no bass register, the theorbo was
effectively a bass lute: “Together these instruments create a
chiaroscuro in music, an image in sound of the Baroque theory of that
magic tension that exists between light and darkness.”
Francesco Corbetta’s virtuosity was first celebrated outside his native
Italy. In his fascinating liner notes, Lislevand reports that Corbetta
charmed Charles II in London, “and left a whole court strumming on small
Baroque guitars.” Robert de Visée was Corbetta’s student In Versailles,
and went on to become one of the Sun King’s composers, as well as his
guitarist and theorbo player. “De Visée played his own music at court,”
writes Lislevand, “occasionally in the king’s bedroom, while the monarch
was taking supper. On request he would play his guitar walking two
steps behind the king during the daily royal promenade of the gardens of
Versailles – the first Walkman in musical history.”
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