Wydawnictwo: Hyperion
Nr katalogowy: CDA 67621
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: lipiec 2008
EAN: 34571176215
Nr katalogowy: CDA 67621
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: lipiec 2008
EAN: 34571176215
Porpora: Cantatas for soprano
Hyperion - CDA 67621
Kompozytor
Nicola Porpora (1686-1768)
Nicola Porpora (1686-1768)
Wykonawcy
Elena Cecchi Fedi, soprano
Auser Musici / Carlo Ipata
Elena Cecchi Fedi, soprano
Auser Musici / Carlo Ipata
Utwory na płycie:
- Porpora: Or Sì M'Avveggio, Oh Amore - 1. Or Sì M'Avveggio, Oh Amore
- Porpora: Or Sì M'Avveggio, Oh Amore - 2. Dolce Pace, Lieta Calma
- Porpora: Or Sì M'Avveggio, Oh Amore - 3. Più Che Nel Ciel Tra' Numi
- Porpora: Or Sì M'Avveggio, Oh Amore - 4. S'Asconde Amor Nel Volto
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 1. Sinfonia: Presto
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 2. Sinfonia: Andante, E Spiritoso
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 3. Sinfonia: Allegro
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 4. Credimi Pur Che T'Amo
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 5. Sì, Sì, T'Adoro Ma
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 6. Sarò Pur Nell'Amarti
- Porpora: Credimi Pur Che T'Amo - 7. Amami E Non Languir
- Porpora: Già La Notte S'Avvicina, 'La Pesca' - 1. Già La Notte S'Avvicina
- Porpora: Già La Notte S'Avvicina, 'La Pesca' - 2. Lascia Una Volta, Oh Nice
- Porpora: Già La Notte S'Avvicina, 'La Pesca' - 3. Non Più Fra Sassi Algosi
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 1. Sinfonia
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 2. Sinfonia
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 3. Or Che D'Orrido Verno
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 4. Lungi Dal Ben Che S'Ama
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 5. Pur Fra Tanta Mia Pena
- Porpora: Or Che D'Orrido Verno - 6. Nocchier Che Mira
Or si m’avveggio, oh Amore - Cantatas for soprano:
Or si m’avveggio, oh Amore
Credimi pur che t’amo
Gia la notte s’avvicina (La pesca)
Or che d’orrido Verno
Or si m’avveggio, oh Amore
Credimi pur che t’amo
Gia la notte s’avvicina (La pesca)
Or che d’orrido Verno
Porpora is best known for his open rivalry with Handel on the London operatic scene, and is remembered more for the ferocious controversies that raged between the two men than for his music. But this dazzling new disc from Auser Musici shows the composer to be a profound musician with a rich and wide-ranging output, a mastery of compositional technique and a keen sense of theatre and dramatic pacing. Stylishly performed and recorded, this disc will surely force a reappraisal of Porpora’s artistry and reawaken interest in this great composer.
The cantatas recorded here clearly display the principal features of Porpora’s compositional style, notably his legendary melodic elegance, the remarkable fidelity of the music to the sentiments expressed in the text, and his skill in writing recitative, which was regarded as exemplary (more than one author described him as ‘the father of the recitative’). Stefano Aresi writes in his illuminating booklet notes: ‘Today, after centuries of neglect, all these characteristics surge from the pages of his scores with explosive force, showing how groundless are the widespread stereotypes which portray Porpora exclusively as a skilful purveyor of bravura arias for the use of his pupils. In the aesthetics of so profound and refined a musician, virtuosity was a means to an end: his requirement of an extremely high level of technique from performers was an instrument to enable him to obtain a seductive, spellbinding naturalness of style, necessary in its turn to create for the intellect and the senses a pleasure that would ‘move the passions’.’
This is Hyperion’s third disc from Auser Musici, a vocal and instrumental ensemble which, taking its name from a lost Etruscan river in the plain of Pisa, brings together instrumentalists and singers with an international reputation for historical performance practice. Auser Musici’s performances, in concert and on disc, are the result of a long-term commitment involving a positive collaboration with musicologists in the research of original sources.
'This outstanding disc not only displays unequivocal proof of Porpora's exceptional skill … but also provides some of the most genuinely enjoyable and captivating performances of eighteenth-century vocal music I have heard on disc for a very long time … These are brilliantly written recitatives, clearly, but with Fedi's clarity of diction and conviction of delivery, they are transformed into something truly exceptional. Yet to single out the recitatives, when the instrumental colouring of the arias and sinfonias is so magical, is to do a major disservice both to Porpora and to Auser Musici … Here is music-making of such infectious happiness that this disc is destined to be a constant companion for the foreseeable future' (International Record Review)
'Soprano Elena Cecchi Fedi's singing is both beautiful and vocally deft, and the playing of the Italian group Auser Musici is emotionally responsive and dramatically alert to match. The opening cantata, Or si m'aveggio, oh Amore, with its rocketing cello obligato, is particularly fine' (The Irish Times)
Recording details: October 2006; Oratorio di S Domenico, Pisa, Italy; Produced by Sigrid Lee; Engineered by Roberto Meo; Release date: September 2008;
The cantatas recorded here clearly display the principal features of Porpora’s compositional style, notably his legendary melodic elegance, the remarkable fidelity of the music to the sentiments expressed in the text, and his skill in writing recitative, which was regarded as exemplary (more than one author described him as ‘the father of the recitative’). Stefano Aresi writes in his illuminating booklet notes: ‘Today, after centuries of neglect, all these characteristics surge from the pages of his scores with explosive force, showing how groundless are the widespread stereotypes which portray Porpora exclusively as a skilful purveyor of bravura arias for the use of his pupils. In the aesthetics of so profound and refined a musician, virtuosity was a means to an end: his requirement of an extremely high level of technique from performers was an instrument to enable him to obtain a seductive, spellbinding naturalness of style, necessary in its turn to create for the intellect and the senses a pleasure that would ‘move the passions’.’
This is Hyperion’s third disc from Auser Musici, a vocal and instrumental ensemble which, taking its name from a lost Etruscan river in the plain of Pisa, brings together instrumentalists and singers with an international reputation for historical performance practice. Auser Musici’s performances, in concert and on disc, are the result of a long-term commitment involving a positive collaboration with musicologists in the research of original sources.
'This outstanding disc not only displays unequivocal proof of Porpora's exceptional skill … but also provides some of the most genuinely enjoyable and captivating performances of eighteenth-century vocal music I have heard on disc for a very long time … These are brilliantly written recitatives, clearly, but with Fedi's clarity of diction and conviction of delivery, they are transformed into something truly exceptional. Yet to single out the recitatives, when the instrumental colouring of the arias and sinfonias is so magical, is to do a major disservice both to Porpora and to Auser Musici … Here is music-making of such infectious happiness that this disc is destined to be a constant companion for the foreseeable future' (International Record Review)
'Soprano Elena Cecchi Fedi's singing is both beautiful and vocally deft, and the playing of the Italian group Auser Musici is emotionally responsive and dramatically alert to match. The opening cantata, Or si m'aveggio, oh Amore, with its rocketing cello obligato, is particularly fine' (The Irish Times)
Recording details: October 2006; Oratorio di S Domenico, Pisa, Italy; Produced by Sigrid Lee; Engineered by Roberto Meo; Release date: September 2008;