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About this concert
In 2018, recorder player Inês d’Avena and harpsichordist Claudio Ribeiro spent 40 days exploring various musical archives in Venice. Their new findings are beautiful examples of 18th-century Venetian chamber music, displaying the melodic freshness and rhythmic vivacity that is so appreciated in this repertoire. On the programme are anonymous sonatas for flute as well as two harpsichord works by Francesco Gasparini and a sonata by Diogenio Bigaglia. This concert was recorded during the Utrecht Early Music Festival 2020.
Programme
-
Diogenio Bigaglia
Sonate V in E minor
Cantabile
Allegro
Andante
Presto
(from: XII sonate a violino solo o sia flauto e violoncello o basso continuo … opera prima, Amsterdam ca. 1722)ca. 1676-ca. 1745 -
?Francesco Gasparini
Suonata per spinetta divetta per S. I. in A minor
(from: manuscript van Biblioteca della Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice)1661-1727 -
Anonymous
Sonate in B-flat major for recorder
Largo
Presto
Adagio
Allegro
(from: manuscript in Biblioteca del Conservatorio B. Marcello, Venice) -
Francesco Gasparini
Toccata di spinetta Per Sig.ra Isabella del Sig.or F.co G.ni in D major
(from: manuscript in Biblioteca della Fondazione Querini Stampalia) -
?Antonio Vivaldi
Sonate in F major for recorder
Andante
Allegro
Largo
Allegro
(from: manuscript in Biblioteca del Conservatorio B. Marcello)1678-1741
Musicians
- Inês d’Avena recorder
- Claudio Ribeiro harpsichord
About the performers
Born in 1983 in Rio de Janeiro, recorder player Inês d'Avena specialises in the research and performance of Neapolitan Baroque music. She has also been working passionately on the revival of forgotten Italian Baroque recorders, commissioning copies and premiering the instruments in concerts and recordings. Inês is praised for her refinement, virtuosity and unique timbre, and is known for blending these qualities as a performer with her engaging work as a researcher and teacher. Inês is the artistic director of La Cicala and co-founder of the duo Inês d'Avena & Claudio Ribeiro, New Collegium, and Schifanoia.
Claudio Ribeiro was born in São Paulo in 1976. Based in The Netherlands since 2000, he is a sought after harpsichordist and conductor in a variety of orchestras and ensembles. Having specialised in Early Music, his focus lies in the performance of Late Renaissance, Baroque and Early Classical repertoires on the harpsichord, organ and as a conductor. He is also active as a harpsichord and early music teacher. Claudio is a regular guest at the major concert venues and festivals in Europe, such as the Utrecht Early Music Festival, MAfestival Brugge, Itinéraire Baroque, Monteverdi Festival, Antiqua Bolzano, Festival d'Ambronay and Opus Amadeus Istanbul. He performs often in his native Brazil and has also been a guest at concert venues in South Korea.