Piatti - 12 Capricci for Solo Cello
£9.45
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 96471
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Instrumental
Release Date: 14th January 2022
Contents
Artists
Luciano Tarantino (cello)About
After enjoying an illustrious half-century among the upper echelons of London’s musical elite, he returned to Italy in 1898 and spent his final years living with his daughter and editing his body of compositions. On his death in 1901, he bequeathed the Fondo Piatti-Lochis to the city of Bergamo, a precious collection of manuscript and print editions of his entire oeuvre, containing around 60 instrumental pieces, a similar number of short vocal compositions and around 40 transcriptions and reworkings of music by major composers of the past. It includes the first edition (produced by Piatti himself) and two autograph manuscripts of his 12 Caprices, op.25. Both manuscripts bear the same date: ‘London, 26 June 1865’.
The Caprices became Piatti’s best-known compositions, and they have been recorded and performed by cellists all over the world, who find them difficult to master but also undoubtedly an extremely interesting challenge. Within them, Piatti explores the full technical and expressive potential of his instrument. The left hand is forced into possible and seemingly impossible positions, often giving the impression of flying rapidly and lightly over the strings, while the right hand adroitly manages the bow, testing out all the various ways of generating sounds and traversing all pitches and tonal colours. Mastering the Caprices can therefore be seen as a way of achieving the playing technique described in a first-hand account of one of Piatti’s last concerts: ‘He diligently interprets the thinking hidden in the music, liberating it with his divine instrument; in his expert, awe-inspiring hands it speaks and sings sometimes sweetly, sometimes loudly, sometimes trembling, but always disciplined and convincing’.
Luciano Tarantino (b. 1977) began studying the cello at 10 years, in the conservatory of Bari. He followed master courses with David Geringas, Ivan Monighetti, Truls Mørk and Mstslav Rostropovich.
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