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Gruppo Instrumentale di Roma- Alto Cantatas (CD)

SKU: 5028421944401
Regular price ¥96.00
Unit price
per
the album cover for Gruppo Instrumentale di Roma - Alto Cantatas
the album cover for Gruppo Instrumentale di Roma - Alto Cantatas

Alessandro Scarlatti: Alto Cantatas / Martellacci, Sasso / Composer: Alessandro Scarlatti / Conductor: Giorgio Sasso / Orchestra/Ensemble: Insieme Strumentale di Roma / Number of Discs: 1 / Length: 1 Hours 7 Mins. The author of around 800 cantatas, Alessandro Scarlatti was the most prolific composer of this particular chamber genre during the Baroque period. In this engaging release we are introduced to two examples, both 'with instruments' and written for solo contralto, the voice type to which the Sicilian dedicated a mere 10 per cent of his cantata output. Perchè tacete, regolati concenti is the first, a work that corresponds to the typically 17th-century themes of unrequited or unhappy love, with both the character and the music expressing the feeling of grief that underpins the text. The prose is actually quite weak in comparison to the quality of the music, and it may be that Scarlatti wrote it himself: he was, after all, described in the wording of his admission to the Arcadia as a `professor or poetry'. It is in any case an early composition; the second cantata, Filen, mio caro bene, we know was written later, on account of its style as well as Arcadian subject matter (which by then was in vogue: the work is set in a natural context). Complementing these works are a couple of concertos and sonatas by the composer, each set in a minor key. An all-Italian cast are at hand to perform the program, with alto Gabriella Martellacci - who has appeared as a guest performer with such prestigious orchestras as the Royal Concertgebouw and Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia - taking the lead in the cantatas. Recorded: October 2012, Basilica dei Santi Bonifacio e Alessio, Rome, Italy. For a long time, Alessandro Scarlatti merely was "the father of" the more celebrated Domenico Scarlatti (the composer of 555 keyboard sonatas), but in recent years his genius as composer of an immense vocal oeuvre is widely recognized. Alessandro wrote some 800 cantatas for solo voice and instrumental ensemble, dramatic works on secular texts, dealing mainly with unrequited love, and the resulting grief and melancholy, exquisitely expressed in beautiful cantabile lines. The two Cantatas on this new recording (which also contains concertos and an instrumental sonata) are sung by the famous Italian alto Gabriella Martellacci, a household name in the Early Music scene, a regular guest with ensembles like Concerto Italiano (Rinaldo Alessandrini) and Modo Antiquo (Federico Maria Sardelli).

Tracklist:

  1. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: I. Moderato
  2. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: II. Fugue
  3. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: III. Largo
  4. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: IV. Andante
  5. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: V. Andante
  6. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: I. Sinfonia
  7. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: II. Recitative
  8. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: III. Aria
  9. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: IV. Recitative
  10. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: V. Ritornello And Aria
  11. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VI. Recitative
  12. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VII. Aria
  13. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VIII. Recitative
  14. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: IX. Aria
  15. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: I. Allegro Ma Non Troppo
  16. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: II. Grave
  17. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: III. Vivace
  18. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: I. Sinfonia
  19. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: II. Recitative
  20. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: III. Aria. Adagio
  21. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: IV. Recitative
  22. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: V. Aria. Andante Moderato
  23. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: I. Allegro
  24. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: II. Grave
  25. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: III. Allegro
  26. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: IV. Minuet
  27. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: I. Allegro
  28. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: II Largo
  29. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: III. Fugue
  30. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: IV. Largo
  31. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: V. Allegro

UPC > 5028421944401

Format > New CD

Label > Brilliant Classics

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Format: New CD/Classical

Gruppo Instrumentale di Roma- Alto Cantatas (CD)

SKU: 5028421944401
Regular price ¥96.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 06.24.2014

 
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> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to FOUR copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

Alessandro Scarlatti: Alto Cantatas / Martellacci, Sasso / Composer: Alessandro Scarlatti / Conductor: Giorgio Sasso / Orchestra/Ensemble: Insieme Strumentale di Roma / Number of Discs: 1 / Length: 1 Hours 7 Mins. The author of around 800 cantatas, Alessandro Scarlatti was the most prolific composer of this particular chamber genre during the Baroque period. In this engaging release we are introduced to two examples, both 'with instruments' and written for solo contralto, the voice type to which the Sicilian dedicated a mere 10 per cent of his cantata output. Perchè tacete, regolati concenti is the first, a work that corresponds to the typically 17th-century themes of unrequited or unhappy love, with both the character and the music expressing the feeling of grief that underpins the text. The prose is actually quite weak in comparison to the quality of the music, and it may be that Scarlatti wrote it himself: he was, after all, described in the wording of his admission to the Arcadia as a `professor or poetry'. It is in any case an early composition; the second cantata, Filen, mio caro bene, we know was written later, on account of its style as well as Arcadian subject matter (which by then was in vogue: the work is set in a natural context). Complementing these works are a couple of concertos and sonatas by the composer, each set in a minor key. An all-Italian cast are at hand to perform the program, with alto Gabriella Martellacci - who has appeared as a guest performer with such prestigious orchestras as the Royal Concertgebouw and Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia - taking the lead in the cantatas. Recorded: October 2012, Basilica dei Santi Bonifacio e Alessio, Rome, Italy. For a long time, Alessandro Scarlatti merely was "the father of" the more celebrated Domenico Scarlatti (the composer of 555 keyboard sonatas), but in recent years his genius as composer of an immense vocal oeuvre is widely recognized. Alessandro wrote some 800 cantatas for solo voice and instrumental ensemble, dramatic works on secular texts, dealing mainly with unrequited love, and the resulting grief and melancholy, exquisitely expressed in beautiful cantabile lines. The two Cantatas on this new recording (which also contains concertos and an instrumental sonata) are sung by the famous Italian alto Gabriella Martellacci, a household name in the Early Music scene, a regular guest with ensembles like Concerto Italiano (Rinaldo Alessandrini) and Modo Antiquo (Federico Maria Sardelli).

Tracklist:

  1. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: I. Moderato
  2. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: II. Fugue
  3. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: III. Largo
  4. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: IV. Andante
  5. Concerto In C Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: V. Andante
  6. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: I. Sinfonia
  7. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: II. Recitative
  8. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: III. Aria
  9. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: IV. Recitative
  10. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: V. Ritornello And Aria
  11. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VI. Recitative
  12. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VII. Aria
  13. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: VIII. Recitative
  14. Perchè Tacete, Regolati Concenti?: IX. Aria
  15. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: I. Allegro Ma Non Troppo
  16. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: II. Grave
  17. Sonata A Quattro In G Minor: III. Vivace
  18. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: I. Sinfonia
  19. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: II. Recitative
  20. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: III. Aria. Adagio
  21. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: IV. Recitative
  22. Filen, Mio Caro Bene: V. Aria. Andante Moderato
  23. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: I. Allegro
  24. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: II. Grave
  25. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: III. Allegro
  26. Sonata A Quattro In D Minor: IV. Minuet
  27. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: I. Allegro
  28. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: II Largo
  29. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: III. Fugue
  30. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: IV. Largo
  31. Concerto In A Minor For Flute, Two Violins And Continuo: V. Allegro

UPC > 5028421944401

Format > New CD

Label > Brilliant Classics

Shop online at Darkside Records.

Follow us on Instagram.