eight ricercate after giovanni bassano
performed by otto hashmi
eight ricercare after giovanni bassano is scheduled for release weds 15th july 2026, in physical format only.
the work will be premiered in a live performance at the crypt gallery, st pancras, london on weds 15th july 2026.
eight ricercate after giovanni bassano explores these groundbreaking works by the eponymous 16th century composer through an exploration of the temporal, the practice, and the narrative of the decaying cold christmas church in hertfordshire.
with the assistance of contributing producers and performers, new context for these works is forged, breathing life into the over 400 year old collection which at once is so deeply connected to modern woodwind performance and yet so far away from the musical world in which we live today.
recorded at st mary’s church, finchley
and on location at cold christmas church, hertfordshire.
In 1585, Giovanni Bassano first published his eight ricercate for treble instrument under the extremely catchy title of “Ricercars, passages and cadences to facilitate practicing accomplished diminutions on all kinds of instruments; and also various passages for just the voice”.
This is a landmark work which gives us a remarkable window into the understanding and treatment of solo melodic line in late renaissance. Historically informed performance as a practice teaches us so much about the roots of our contemporary cultural context, yet frustratingly little room for ownership of our performance. Every detail is scrutinised with a demand for historical justification, leading to its performance sounding like a controlled academic experiment, rather than music which continues to live and breathe.
As I grew to know these remarkable works by Bassano, I found myself thinking about:
the temporal - what connections can we find through the performance of Bassano’s work today? And what links, knowledge, and experience has been irrevocably severed from our current era?
the practice - the idea of subverting and reclaiming historical repertoire through a contemporary narrative focused lens. Going against the grain of our conservative historical performance practice, expectations, and performance practice.
the church - I found myself coming back to cold christmas church, hertfordshire, as an allegory for this connection to the historical work. Abandoned and partially demolished in 1853, with the most ancient parts of the structure being founded in the 12th century, the image of this structure simultaneously reclaimed by nature whilst barricaded off by safety fence seemed to me a fascinating parallel to our treatment of historical music and its relevance in modern culture and music making.