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- Souvenir de Bovio (mandolin & guitar) by E. Zerega
Souvenir de Bovio (mandolin & guitar) by E. Zerega
SKU:
am514-06
£8.50
£8.50
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Description
Composer: E. Zerega
Edited by: Alison Stephens
Instrumentation: mandolin & guitar
Mandolin Grading: Intermediate
Size: Pages : score 2 pages - 1 parts @ 2 pages each
Total Duration: 2’50 mins
Astute code: am514-06
ISMN: 979 57031 105 7
Edited by: Alison Stephens
Instrumentation: mandolin & guitar
Mandolin Grading: Intermediate
Size: Pages : score 2 pages - 1 parts @ 2 pages each
Total Duration: 2’50 mins
Astute code: am514-06
ISMN: 979 57031 105 7
Little is known about Zerega except that he was a Spaniard who spent some time in London between 1895 and 1897 conducting a mandolin and guitar ensemble.
Souvenir de Bovio is the only piece of his that I have any knowledge of. It appears to have been originally written for mandolin and piano but adapts so directly for mandolin and guitar that the suspicion must be that he had the guitar in mind when writing the piano part.
Although essentially simple, it is a beautifully lyrical but dramatic piece that in many ways sums up the typical style of both playing and writing for the mandolin across the turn of the 20th Century. It is one of a handful of pieces that helped to convince me of the instrument’s beauty when listening to a recording from 1960 of Hugo D’Alton playing it with Clifton Helliwell on piano. It was the first mandolin recording I ever owned.
Alison Stephens
The piece can be heard in this arrangement on the 2009 CD Souvenirs (CHAN10563) played by Alison Stephens (mandolin) and Craig Ogden (guitar).
Souvenir de Bovio is the only piece of his that I have any knowledge of. It appears to have been originally written for mandolin and piano but adapts so directly for mandolin and guitar that the suspicion must be that he had the guitar in mind when writing the piano part.
Although essentially simple, it is a beautifully lyrical but dramatic piece that in many ways sums up the typical style of both playing and writing for the mandolin across the turn of the 20th Century. It is one of a handful of pieces that helped to convince me of the instrument’s beauty when listening to a recording from 1960 of Hugo D’Alton playing it with Clifton Helliwell on piano. It was the first mandolin recording I ever owned.
Alison Stephens
The piece can be heard in this arrangement on the 2009 CD Souvenirs (CHAN10563) played by Alison Stephens (mandolin) and Craig Ogden (guitar).