Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Johann Adolf Hasse. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Johann Adolf Hasse. Mostrar todas las entradas
miércoles, 10 de marzo de 2021
martes, 16 de junio de 2020
Vivica Genaux / Lawrence Zazzo / Lautten Compagney / Wolfgang Katschner ...BAROQUE GENDER STORIES
domingo, 31 de mayo de 2020
martes, 28 de abril de 2020
Jakub Józef Orliński / Il Pomo D'Oro / Maxim Emelyanychev FACCE D'AMORE
miércoles, 17 de julio de 2019
Lucy Crowe / Mary Bevan / London Early Opera / Bridget Cunningham HANDEL'S QUEENS
Handel’s Queens features some of the most exquisite pieces of
music written by G.F. Handel and his contemporaries for the two finest
singers of the eighteenth century, Faustina Bordoni and Francesca
Cuzzoni. Often wrongfully framed as rivals, these dazzling new
recordings with Mary Bevan and Lucy Crowe reveal the distinctive yet
versatile talent of the Italian vocalists.
Conductor Bridget Cunningham continues her research and created Handel’s Queens and directs London Early Opera from the harpsichord. Handel’s Queens – as part of this important series serves
as a further example of Cunningham’s dedication to imaginative
programming and outstanding period performance on this double CD placing
her at the forefront of baroque research and recording.
sábado, 24 de noviembre de 2018
Lea Desandre / Natalie Pérez / Chantal Santon-Jeffery / Opera Fuoco / David Stern BERENICE, CHE FAI?
Berenice, que fai… Or frantic
Berenice. Metastasio’s heroin, facing a dilemma of love versus duty,
inspired the great operatic composers such as Hasse, Haydn, Mozart such
as one of their female peers, still unknown today, Marianna Martinez,
contemporary and even neighboring some of them.
To interpret this colorful
character, three singers and an orchestra: the mezzo Léa Desandre,
rewarded at the Victoires de la Musique in 2017, the sopranos Natalie
Perez and Chantal Santon-Jeffery, and the impetuous conductor David Stern at the head of his period instruments-ensemble, Opera Fuoco.
True actors, these musicians restore
the theatrical dimension of these scores without sacrificing the
sensitive and fragile aspect of the character. An emotional complexity,
between exhilarating madness and more tragic pages, that we find in
Hasse’s Sinfonia, from his opera Antigono and of which Opera Fuoco gives
us a full version of panache.
viernes, 22 de junio de 2018
Anna Torge / Mayumi Hirasaki / Il cantino MANDOLINO E VIOLINO IN ITALIA
The Italian composers of the Baroque, led by Antonio Vivaldi, often
honoured the small instruments of the lute family in their rich
compositional oeuvres. At the time these instruments with a fourth-third
tuning were known by various names, for example, as the leuto, leutino,
mandola, or mandolla. Today the small lute is uniformly termed the
'Baroque mandolin' and more rarely the 'soprano lute'. The number of
composers who wrote attractive works for the mandolin documents the fact
that it was then a much-played instrument that musical audiences liked
to hear. Accordingly, this new recording brings together concertos,
trios, and sonatas by Carlo Arrigoni, Johann Adolf Hasse, Ranieri
Capponi, and – of course – Vivaldi. What is particularly surprising here
is the homogeneous sound of the dialogue between the Baroque mandolin
and the Baroque violin – since they are two very different instruments
in the field of tonal production. The tonal beauty of both solo parts,
with one duo partner supporting the other with accompanying broken
chords, produces a captivating effect in the second movement of
Vivaldi's Concerto RV 548. Anna Torge is one of the leading virtuosos of
the Baroque mandolin.
miércoles, 22 de marzo de 2017
Nuria Rial / Artemandoline SOSPIRI D'AMANTI

Searching for early mandolins, working on the manuscripts, hunting down early treatises, exploring the iconography: these are the means by which, for more than ten years now, the musicians of Artemandoline have sought to do fuller justice to the works of Scarlatti, Vivaldi, Weiss, and their contemporaries. The success of this approach based on a return to the sources, which constitutes the most important development in the history of the interpretation of ‘serious’ music in the course of the twentieth century, has been made possible by the cooperation of many protagonists – musicians, but also concert organisers, recording producers, publishers, musicologists, and instrument makers.
To ensure that music composed in the past does not sound like mere ‘early music’ in the present, the performers must manage to be sufficiently free, spontaneous, anticipative and astonished in their intimate act of creation and the newness it engenders. Juan Carlos Muñoz and Mari Fe Pavón spend their lives searching out and reviving forgotten masterpieces of the mandolin repertory. They are not content with simply presenting their finds like ‘musical archaeologists’, but endeavour to transmit them to the wider public by means of the essential act of communication between interpreters, composers, and listeners.
martes, 5 de julio de 2016
Anna Prohaska / Il Giardino Armonico / Giovanni Antonini SERPENT & FIRE

A top star in Germany, Anna Prohaska also sings on the world's leading opratic stages, from La Scala to Covent Garden by way of Aix-en-Provence and Salzburg.
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