Teodoro Anzellotti is not your run-of-the-mill accordion player -- you won't find him playing at wedding receptions or polka parties. In fact, if
Anzellotti plays anything remotely resembling traditional accordion music, it must be exclusively in the privacy of his own home, because you won't find it on any of his numerous recordings, his extensive performance history, or his repertoire list. Instead, he specializes in new music, and occasionally branches out, creating transcriptions of Baroque keyboard works and classics of early modernism, such as music by Satie. He has had numerous works written for him, most notably
Berio's Sequenza XIII, the final installment in the composer's historic series of solos for virtuosi.
This CD includes music both very old and very new. It's organized around
Anzellotti's arrangements of four pieces by Johann Jacob Froberger, written in the middle of the seventeenth century. Froberger's works frame three new pieces written for
Anzellotti, including the
Berio, Toshio Hosokawa's Slow Motion (2002), and Salvatore Sciarrino's Vagabonde blu (1998). The arrangements are very skillfully done; three of the pieces have the character of laments and are well suited to the accordion's organ-like ability to sustain long notes. The fourth piece is full of fugal counterpoint, and while its difficulty on the accordion must be staggering,
Anzellotti plays it with easy elegance.
Berio's atonal Sequenza exploits a broad range of the instrument's technical and expressive capabilities, and is notable for the composer's disciplined and economical development of a simple melodic cell.
Anzellotti's brilliance as a performer and his adroit programming on this CD make it easy for the listener to hear the accordion as an instrument with expressive possibilities far more diverse than that of the traditional music with which it's usually associated.