Musica medievale e rinascimentale ritus orphaeos il nuovo disco di simone sorini
The “Cantore al liuto” - typical Italian definition for musicians and composers at the end of 1400 - is the singing lutist whose description and historical representation are deeply rooted in the past going back to the myth of Orpheus.
Contents
- Musica medievale e rinascimentale ritus orphaeos il nuovo disco di simone sorini
- Musica antica simone sorini conferenza il cantore al liuto nella storia estratto 3 parte
- Interpreters in history
- Videos
- References
Musica antica simone sorini conferenza il cantore al liuto nella storia estratto 3 parte
Interpreters in history
After Petrarca, in the Renaissance age, the most famous singers at the lute certainly were Bartolomeo Tromboncino, Ippolito Tromboncino and Marchetto Cara - whose gift as interpreters are highlighted in The Book of the Courtier by Baldassarre Castiglione.
Later on, in the early 1600s we find Bartolomeo Barbarino called “the pesarino”.
The expressive characteristics of this particular figure of musician, of whom today we have almost lost memory, are currently revisited by M° Simone Sorini, tenor and multi-instrumentalist that over the years has gained and refined a deep knowledge of the Medieval and Renaissance plectrum instruments; a versatile interpreter of lute repertoires from the Middle Ages to the early Renaissance, he plays professionally his numerous instruments - each one made according to the ancient iconography - accompanying himself while singing, bringing back to light the ancient profession of the “Cantore al liuto”.