ÍøÆغÚÁÏ

Ensemble Kinari, Azusa Onishi, Gianluca Pirisi, Mizuho Ueyama, Flavia Salemme & Giovanni Sollima

Sollima: Chamber Music

Ensemble Kinari, Azusa Onishi, Gianluca Pirisi, Mizuho Ueyama, Flavia Salemme & Giovanni Sollima

12 SONGS • 56 MINUTES • MAY 28 2021

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Sonata for Cello and Piano: I. Lento - Allegro viva
07:20
2
Sonata: II. Andante molto espressivo
03:55
3
Sonata: III. Perpetuum mobile - Allegro con spirito
01:57
4
Studi for Violin and Clarinet: I. Allegro ritmico
01:27
5
Studi for Violin and Clarinet: II. Lento
02:42
6
Studi for Violin and Clarinet: III. Presto
01:02
7
Tre movimenti for Piano, Violin and Cello: I. Allegro
03:19
8
Tre movimenti for Piano, Violin and Cello: II. Andante sostenuto
05:23
9
Tre movimenti for Piano, Violin and Cello: III. Vivace
02:26
10
Evoluziona No. 5
09:03
11
Quartetto No. 3 "la leggenda di San Damiano
14:09
12
Aria for Piano, Violin, Viola and 2 Cellos
03:18
℗© Brilliant Classics

Artist bios

Giovanni Sollima is an Italian cellist and composer known for his eclectic post-minimalist style and collaborations with diverse artists from several genres. Also a scholar and educator, he teaches at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia.

Sollima was born in Palermo, Sicily, in 1962, to a musical family. His siblings are musicians, and his father, Eliodoro Sollima, was a pianist and composer. Sollima started studying the cello with Giovanni Perriera when he was ten years old, and he also began exploring composition with his father. After graduating from the Conservatory of Palermo, he continued his education with cellist Antonio Janigro at the Universität Mozarteum Salzburg, followed by composition lessons with Milko Kelemen at the Musikhochschule Stuttgart. Although he was active as a composer since the late '70s, his first work to be recorded was Violoncelles, Vibrez! in 1998, and he also released his debut album, Aquilarco, that same year. In 1999, he appeared on the album Concertos for the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies with Eivind Aadland and the European Union Chamber Orchestra as the soloist on Porpora's Cello Concerto in G Major. Sollima returned as a composer and performer in 2000 with the albums Spasimo and Viaggio in Italia, and he also made his debut at Carnegie Hall, where he performed Viaggio in Italia with the Lark Quartet. Additionally, his music was used in the score to the film I Cento Passi. Sollima's opera Ellis Island was premiered in Palermo at the Teatro Massimo in 2002, and in 2005 he released Works, which showcased several commissions including Caravaggio, J. Beuys Song, and Songs from the Divine Comedy. Sollima's Terra Aria and Concerto Rotondo were used in Lasse Gjertsen's video Daydream in 2007, and in 2008 he released We Were Trees with cellist Monika Leskovar, and the improvisation-laden Astrolabioanima with Alessandro Gandola on saxophone.

By this time, Sollima was teaching at the Romanino Foundation Brescia, and he was appointed the title of Academic at the Accademia Nazional di Santa Cecilia in 2010. Two years later, Sollima co-founded the 100 Cellos ensemble with Enrico Melozzi, and he appeared on the album Neapolitan Cello Concertos with Antonio Florio and I Turchini. He appeared on several other albums in the 2010s, including Offenbach: Cello Duets with Andrea Noferini, Giovanni Battista Costanzi: Sonate per violoncello, and the 100 Cellos' crossover debut 100 Cellos Live. Three years after the release of Elgar: Cello Concerto; Enigma Variations in 2021, Sollima's Concerto for violin, lute, percussion & strings ("Tyche") was presented on Suite italienne: Vivaldi, Sollima, Stravinsky, and he also released Giovanni Sollima: Al-Bunduqiyya - The Lost Concerto, which featured his artistry as a performer, composer, and improviser. ~ RJ Lambert

Read more
Language of performance
Italian
Customer reviews
5 star
33%
4 star
33%
3 star
33%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

How are ratings calculated?