Autori:
Federigo Fiorillo
Interpreti:
Marco Misciagna
Vydavateľ:
BRILLIANT CLASSICS
36 Caprices, Op. 3 for Violin (Transcribed for Viola by Marco Misciagna)
1 I. Largo/Allegro
2 II. Maestoso
3 III. Allegro
4 IV. Moderato
5 V. Allegro
6 VI. Andante sciolto
7 VII. Poco adagio/Allegretto
8 VIII. Largo
9 IX. Allegro
10 X. Allegro
11 XI. Moderato
12 XII. Moderato
13 XIII. Andante/Presto
14 XIV. Adagio
15 XV. Allegro
16 XVI. Allegro
17 XVII. Adagio
18 XVIII. Allegretto
19 XIX. Allegretto
20 XX. Moderato
21 XXI. Moderato
22 XXII. Adagio
23 XXIII. Allegro
24 XXIV. Allegro
25 XXV. Andante
26 XXVI. Allegro
27 XXVII. Allegretto
28 XVIII. Allegro assai
29 XXIX. Grave/Moderato
30 XXX. Allegro
31 XXXI. Moderato
32 XXXII. Adagio espressivo
33 XXXIII. Allegro
34 XXXIV. Moderato
35 XXXV. Adagio/Moderato assai
36 XXXVI. Tempo moderato
Despite his name, Federigo Fiorillo (1755-1823) was German by birth, the third son of a violinist who had studied in Naples with Francesco Durante and Leonardo Leo. Federigo followed in his father’s footsteps as an instrumental virtuoso, both on violin and mandolin; the 19th-century musicologist Fétis praised him as ‘one of the most remarkable violinists of his time’ in the Biographie universelle des musiciens.
Having toured Europe, Fiorillo moved by 1788 to London, where he played for the impresario Salomon (who went on to bring Haydn to the English capital), notably as the violist in Salomon’s quartet. He is principally remembered now as a composer, and in particular the author of a set of solo Caprices which formed a method of which formed a method of instruction for every advanced violinist. Until now, however, they have never been recorded on Fiorillo’s ‘second’ instrument of the viola; and indeed complete recordings of the set, even on violin, are very few.
With this new recording, Marco Misciagna demonstrates that these 36 pieces have much more than pedagogic interest to them. While they systematically address technical issues in the bow arm and fingering, testing the player’s technique for playing octaves, multiple stopping, passagework, chromatic scales and so on, Fiorillo was a Italianate melodist who naturally wrote and thought in long, cantabile lines which are as grateful to hear as they are to play.