As the eighteenth century progressed, Trondheim experienced strong economic growth. The Great Nordic War was over, and merchants set about exporting timber, stockfish, and copper from the mines of Trøndelag. They maintained close contact with their networks in the main cities of Northern Europe, and Trondheim's luxury and extravagance characterised its social milieu. Thus, the latest fashions, literature and music from the Continent found their way to Trondheim.
Recording sessions Photo Gallery
This recording portrays a selection of contemporaneous music that is preserved in Trondheim. The manuscripts may be found in the Gunnerus Library's special collections and probably belonged to the town musician and polymath Johan Daniel Berlin (1714–87) and his circle of musicians. They provide a unique insight into how European instrumental music found fertile ground in one of Denmark–Norway's largest provincial towns in the decades preceding the union's dissolution in 1814.
Joseph Meck (1690—1758)
Violin Concerto in G Major, Op. 1 No. 9, XM 141
Anonymous, ‘Sigr. Opfermand’
Violin Concerto in C minor, XM 49
Johan Henrich Berlin (1741—1807)
Sonata a Cembalo, Violino è Violoncello, XM 3
Antonio Vivaldi (1678—1741)
Violin Concerto in A major, RV 335 ‘The Cuckoo’, XM 140
Listen in streaming services
Album title
|
The Trondheim Concertos |
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Performer
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Sigurd Imsen, solo violin |
Catalogue #
|
2L-172-SABD |
EAN13
|
7041888526629 |
ISRC-code
|
NOMPP2301010-130 |
Disc 1
|
Hybrid SACD MCH 5.1 DSD Stereo DSD RedBook PCM: MQA CD |
Disc 2 |
Pure Audio Blu-ray 2.0 LPCM 192/24 5.1 DTS HD-MA 192/24 7.1.4 Auro-3D 96kHz 7.1.4 Dolby Atmos 48kHz mShuttle: MQA + FLAC + MP3 Region: ABC - worldwide |
Release date
|
June 2023 |
Recording date
|
June 2021 |
Location
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Lademoen Church, Norway |
Original source
|
DXD (352.8kHz/24bit) |