Dario Castello, Giovanni Battista Fontana: Sonate concertate in stil moderno John Holloway, Lars Ulrik Mortensen, Jane Gower

Cover Dario Castello, Giovanni Battista Fontana: Sonate concertate in stil moderno

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2012

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
02.04.2012

Label: ECM

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Baroque

Interpret: John Holloway, Lars Ulrik Mortensen, Jane Gower

Komponist: Dario Castello

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  • 1Sonata Settima I (à Due. Sopran E Fagotto)05:18
  • 2Sonata Prima II (à Sopran Solo)04:44
  • 3Sonata Ottava I (à Due. Sopran E Fagotto)05:00
  • 4Sonata Seconda (Violino Solo)06:17
  • 5Sonata Nona (Fagotto E Violino)06:01
  • 6Sonata Terza (Violino Solo)04:41
  • 7Sonata Decima (Fagotto E Violino)06:17
  • 8Sonata Quinta (Violino Solo)05:13
  • 9Sonata Duodecima (Fagotto E Violino)05:35
  • 10Sonata Sesta (Violino Solo)06:12
  • 11Sonata Settima II (à Due. Sopran E Fagotto)06:18
  • 12Sonata Seconda II (à Sopran Solo)04:53
  • 13Sonata Ottava II (à Due. Sopran E Fagotto)04:46
  • Total Runtime01:11:15

Info zu Dario Castello, Giovanni Battista Fontana: Sonate concertate in stil moderno

Über Dario Castello und Giovanni Battista Fontana, zwei Komponisten aus dem Übergang von 16. zu 17. Jahrhundert, weiß die Musikforschung wenig. Von Castello, der um 1629 Konzertmeister an der Markuskirche in Venedig war, kennt man ebenso wenig die genauen Lebensdaten wie von dem aus Brescia stammenden Giovanni Batista Fontana, der wohl 1630 in Padua beim Ausbruch der Pest gestorben ist. Immerhin sind von beiden Werke erhalten, die sie als bemerkenswerte Komponisten für die Violine ausweisen. Von Castello wurden zu seinen Lebzeiten zwei Bücher mit ein- bis vierstimmigen Sonate concertate in stil moderno mit Basso continuo gedruckt. Daraus hat der Geiger John Holloway einige für seine neue Aufnahme mit entsprechenden Werken Fontanas kombiniert. Neben Solo-Sonaten für die Violine wählte Holloway sechs Sonaten für Violine und Basso continuo aus, die als Vorläufer der späteren Trio-Sonaten angesehen werden können und zeigen, dass auf der Landkarte alter Musik immer noch Terrain unentdeckt geblieben ist.

'John Holloway ... ist dank grandioser Alben zu Biber, Buxtehude, Bach weltweit eine Autorität. Seine Aufnahmen klingen klar und offen, atmen bisweilen kosmische Schönheit.' (Sächsische Zeitung)

John Holloway, Violine
Lars Ulrik Mortensen, Harpsichord
Jane Gower, Dulzian


John Holloway
was 8 years old when he played his first public concert, in 1956. From age 9 till 21 he studied with Yfrah Neaman, initially privately, then at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. Here he gained his first experiences as concertmaster (of the Guildhall Orchestra, coached by Paul Beard), and enjoyed 3 years of regular string quartet lessons with William Pleeth. There followed participation in various international competitions, interspersed with projects with the Menuhin Festival Orchestra, including tours to the USA, Australia and New Zealand. Thus were established the three strands which dominated his subsequent performing career: chamber music, chamber orchestras, and concertmastering. There followed his first and only (brief) period as a full-time contracted player, as leader of the 2nd violins in the Bournemouth Sinfonietta. With the other principal string players he founded the Silvestri String Quartet.

Through much of the rest of the 1970s John Holloway was concertmaster and orchestra manager of Kent Opera, Music Director Roger Norrington. Here he experienced the joys of performing repertoire ranging from Monteverdi via Handel, Mozart, Verdi and Tchaikovsky to Benjamin Britten, all performed in relatively small theatres, and played by small orchestras as a kind of expanded chamber music. This being very much a part-time activity, he combined it with appearances with all the prominent chamber orchestras in London, with contemporary music and string quartet projects, and, after encountering Sigiswald Kuijken in 1972, baroque violin. In retrospect this last was a serendipitous moment, as the Early Music movement in England was expanding at high speed from its previous territories in Medieval and Renaissance music into the 17th and 18th centuries. With the support of the BBC and of many record companies, ensembles such as the English Concert and the Academy of Ancient Music emerged, creating a demand for interested and competent players of baroque (subsequently, classical and 19th century) instruments.

John Holloway became a pioneer of this modern Early Music movement in England. In 1975 he founded the baroque ensemble L’Ecole d’Orphée, with whom he presented three seasons of concerts at London’s Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, and went on to make the first complete recording on baroque instruments of Handel’s instrumental chamber music. How his chamber music activities developed can be followed, at least in part, via the discography below. As it shows, he performed and recorded with such distinguished colleagues as Emma Kirkby, Marion Verbruggen and Paul Goodwin, Stanley Ritchie and Andrew Manze, Davitt Moroney, Lars Ulrik Mortensen and John Toll, Jaap ter Linden and David Watkin.

His activities as concertmaster/soloist developed in particular with Andrew Parrott’s Taverner Players whose concertmaster he was 1977-1991, and with Roger Norrington’s London Classical Players 1978-1992. As well as leading groundbreaking performances and recordings by both ensembles of repertoire from the Florentine Intermedii to Brahms 1st Symphony, John Holloway features prominently as soloist on the Taverner Players’ recording of Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos. He also made one of his two recordings of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons with Andrew Parrott. Through these and other projects with such prominent directors as Ivor Bolton, Frans Bruggen, William Christie, Simon Halsey, Christopher Hogwood, Ton Koopman, Gustav Leonhardt, Rudolf Lutz, Jean-Claude Malgoire and Nicholas McGegan he became one of the most experienced concertmasters in the international Early Music scene. In 2001 he became Musical Director of the Indianapolis Baroque Orchestra, directing from the violin repertoire including Bach Motets and Handel’s Messiah.

Parallel to all this John Holloway developed a growing international experience and reputation as a teacher. He has been Professor of Baroque Violin at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, Guest Professor at the Schola Cantorum in Basel and at the Early Music Institute of Indiana University in Bloomington USA, and has taught masterclasses for violinists and chamber music groups throughout Europe and North America, and as far afield as Colombia, South Korea and New Zealand. 1999-2014 he was Professor of (modern) Violin and Chamber Music at the University of Music in Dresden, Germany. Here he was invited to set up a chamber orchestra program, conducting concerts for the Dresden Music Festival as well as performances of Britten’s “Albert Herring”. 2006-2012 he directed “Violin in Dresden”, an international violin competition alternating annually with masterclasses taught by distinguished guests who also served on the competition jury. For these juries Holloway introduced the then innovative idea of having equal numbers of violinists and such important personalities as radio producers, festival directors, artist managers, culture journalists.

John Holloway is an enthusiastic and experienced speaker about music. He has given conference speeches to the European String Teachers’ Association in Germany (in German) and England, has given countless lecture-recitals, introduced concerts both live and online, and been the lecturer for culture travel groups visiting such events as the Dresden Music Festival. In 2004 he was Regents Lecturer at UC Berkeley, USA. Since retiring from the concert platform and recording studio some 60 years after his first public performances he has continued to teach and conduct, and has been developing a website devoted to the Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin by Bach.



Booklet für Dario Castello, Giovanni Battista Fontana: Sonate concertate in stil moderno

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