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2018. 10. 14.

Pellegrini & Padovano: Complete Organ Music - Brilliant Classics

About this release


Italian organ music from the 16th-century on a 16th-century Italian organ: a unique
compilation on record.

The composer we know as Annibale Padovano (1527-1575) was named after his native city of
Padua, but in 1552 he became organist at St Mark’s Venice while the Dutch composer Adrian
Willaert was master of music there. Padovano probably joined Willaert’s group of pupils, and
he would have encountered the likes of Andrea Gabrieli and Cipriano de Rore. Nonetheless, his
reputation rests on the slender book of organ music published in 1604, which reveals him as a
master contrapuntalist of his age in the Ricercars, and no less innovative or inventive in his
use of the Toccata form, clearly Venetian in spirit yet individual in expression.

Vincenzo Pellegrini was born in Pesaro around 1562. Following his studies at the seminary, he
became a canon regular of the cathedral in 1589 and appears to have been a popular teacher
as well as a composer of church music. His work for organ likely dates from the end of his life,
when he had become a canon in Milan Cathedral where there was a stronger tradition of
instrumental composition. The Canzoni that have come down to us betray an evident debt to
the French chanson tradition: simpler in form than Pellegrini, their melodic freshness and
charm offers more than ample compensation in works such as ‘La Serpentina’ which has
become a popular work of the period in its own right.

This is Luca Scandali’s sixth album for Brilliant Classics, after imaginative collections of
repertoire such as ‘Balli, battaglie e canzoni’ (BC95384) and 17th-century Italian organ music
by Galuppi (BC95140) and Pasquini (BC94347). For this album he has contributed a valuable
booklet essay and selected the historically significant organ in the Basilica of Santa Barbara in
Mantova, which is tuned to the mean-tone temperament used in the era of Padovano and
Pellegrini.

This collection of Toccatas, Ricercars and Canzones by Annibale Padovano and Vincenzo
Pellegrini comprises examples of all the main forms of Italian organ music of the Renaissance,
the Golden Age in which keyboard music flourished and huge leaps of development were
made.
Padovano was an organist at the famous San Marco in Venice, while Pellegrini was Maestro di
Cappella at the Milan Cathedral, both composers made valuable contributions to the
development of the keyboard style, in which imitative elements and a healthy dose of
ornamentation and virtuosity found their place.
Played on the 1565 historic organ of Graziadio Antegnati organ in the Basilica of Santa
Barbara in Mantua, Italy. Luca Scandali is one of the foremost organists of Italy, artist and
scholar, who already made several successful recordings for Brilliant Classics, a.o. by Galuppi,
of which Fanfare Classical Magazine wrote: “the performance themselves are superb. Organist
Luca Scandali understand this repertoire perfectly and renders it with grace, vitality and
imaginative use of varying registrations, all captured in clear, warm recorded sound”.
Luca Scandali also wrote the extensive, scholarly liner notes in the booklet, which also
contains all the specifications and photo of the organ.

https://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/p/pellegrini-padovano-complete-organ-music/ 1/1

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