Description
A live recording of van Wassenaer's Concerti Armonici by the well established Dutch ensemble La Sfera Armoniosa. This is the third instalment in La Sfera Armoniosa survey of most important Baroque orchestral works from the Netherlands.
Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer (1692-1766) is one of the most remarkable personalities in Dutch music history. Until 1980, his music - the six 'Concerti armonici' - was well known to every lover of early music, but not his name. These works were universally understood to be by Giovanni Battista Pergolesi or by Carlo Ricciotti, who published them in 1740 but did not compose them. Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer was well known to Dutch historians as a descendant of the renowned noble Van Wassenaer family, but nobody knew that he was also a composer. Thanks to a lucky find by the Dutch musicologist Albert Dunning in 1980, man and music could be connected with one another. In 1740, a collection of six concertos for strings and basso continuo, was published in The Hague under the title VI Concerti armonici. The Concerti armonici can be associated with musical performances that took place in the 1720s in The Hague.
Fentross places different accents than predecessors Jan Willem de Vriend and Ton Koopman: less sharp and pointed, more warmth and intimacy. Nevertheless, the sound remains agile, lively and full of tension. You feel the close bond between musicians and audience and you feel included in that atmosphere. In that respect, the ensemble lives up to its name." NRC, ****