Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Emőke Baráth. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Emőke Baráth. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 21 de enero de 2019

Emőke Baráth, Il Pomo d'Oro, Francesco Corti VOGLIO CANTAR

The Venetian singer and composer Barbara Strozzi (1619-1677) was probably the most remarkable, talented, famous and successful woman of her times in the field of music. In 2019 we will celebrate its 400th anniversary with a new program performed by soprano Emöke Baráth under the direction of Francesco Corti.
The album, Voglio Cantar, present some of her most beautiful compositions for soprano, some works by her teacher Francesco Cavalli, and a delightful variety of contemporary instrumental pieces.
Barbara Strozzi grew up in a household frequented by illustrious intellectuals. In the year 1637 her father founded an academy exclusively focused on music, the ‚accademia degli unisoni’ – which was not only hosted and presided over by Barbara, but also became her stage to perform her own music. She received her musical education from Francesco Cavalli, who then worked in various important musical positions in Venice and was about to launch his career as an opera composer.
Barbara Strozzi published a significant number of music: 8 volumes of madrigals, arias, ariettas, canzoni – including one volume of sacred music. Most of the compositions are focused on the soprano voice, displaying its pure beauty in lyrical melodies. The only painted (supposed) portrait of Barbara Strozzi shows her as a musician in quite a lascivious pose, presenting the then typical association of female musician and courtesan. Barbara Strozzi died in Padova in the year 1677 under unknown circumstances.

lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2018

I Barocchisti / Diego Fasolis GLUCK Orfeo ed Euridice

Gluck, Mozart opines in Peter Shaffer’s play Amadeus, created characters “so lofty they sound as though they shit marble”. Shaffer’s imagined Mozart is not only potty-mouthed but also harsh on his esteemed predecessor – something the countertenor Philippe Jaroussky confirms on this new recording, singing a very human Orpheus whose story can end only in rejoicing, as Amor obligingly restores Euridice to life in the then-traditional happy ending.
Jaroussky is joined by conductor Diego Fasolis and his ensemble I Barocchisti – almost exactly the same forces as for La Storia d’Orfeo, a lovely disc released last year that spliced together bits of Orpheus operas by Monteverdi, Rossi and Sartorio. Here, again, they are doing something slightly different: this is not the familiar version of Gluck’s work heard in Vienna at the 1762 premiere, but the one performed in Naples 12 years later. For Naples, the opera was tweaked to accommodate a higher-voiced Orfeo and to appeal to a fashionable Italian audience, who expected more contrast and more in the way of florid, yet mellifluous, vocal display. 
The most noticeable changes comes in the music for Euridice. Two of her numbers are new, attributed not to Gluck, but to Egidio Lasnel (pen name of the aristocrat Diego Naselli): the duet as Orfeo leads her towards the edge of the Underworld, in which the short exchanges give the music an almost Mozartian sense of bustle, and her ensuing aria, in which her passion now sounds a bit more marmoreal, for all the expressiveness Amanda Forsythe throws at it. Forsythe, her soprano bright yet soft-grained, contrasts well with Emöke Baráth, whose crisp, knowing Amor makes the prospect of a journey through the Underworld sound almost fun. Fasolis and his players wear the music lightly. As for Jaroussky, his sound isn’t always entirely beautiful, but it’s beguiling, and every syllable means something. (

miércoles, 2 de agosto de 2017

Philippe Jaroussky / Emöke Baráth MONTEVERDI - SARTORIO - ROSSI La Storia di Orfeo

With Philippe Jaroussky’s new album, Storia di Orfeo, the French countertenor realises a long-held dream: to portray the mythic Orpheus – divine musician who ventures into the underworld to retrieve his beloved wife Eurydice from the clutches of death – in his many guises, an inspiration for the very first opera and beyond.
“This project, which was inspired by three key 17th-century operas, was conceived as a kind of opera in miniature or as a cantata for two solo voices and chorus, and features just two characters: Orpheus and Eurydice,” explains Jaroussky. “The three operas focus on different aspects of the story: Sartorio and Rossi depict the happiness of the young lovers and the scene in which Eurydice is bitten by the snake; Monteverdi, on the other hand, concentrates more on Orpheus’ search for Eurydice in the underworld, and the highpoint of his work is an aria that has remained without parallel in the history of opera: the magical ‘Possente spirto’, which I have the temerity to perform here as a countertenor, for the first time on record.” 
He is joined by sublime soprano Emőke Baráth and period-instrument ensemble par excellence I Barocchisti with Diego Fasolis at the helm. A journey to the beginnings of opera, to the Italian Baroque, to the underworld and back. (Warner Classics)

Orpheus, with or without his lute, is one of the most resonant figures in musical history, the inspiration for dramas from Monteverdi to Birtwistle. This cleverly assembled disc limits itself to the 17th century, and ranges from the Mantuan Orfeo of 1607 through to Antonio Sartorio’s little-known successor of 1672. The presiding genius is countertenor Philippe Jaroussky who sings gloriously (though he is arguably not best suited to Monteverdi’s high tenor hero in his lavish Possente spirto). Jaroussky is well matched by Emöke Baráth’s crystal-clear soprano. Sartorio’s post-Cavalli idiom is sweetly melodic; I was much more taken by the strong, eloquent extracts from Luigi Rossi’s Orfeo of 1647. (The Guardian)