Come visit us ★ 32 Cannon Street, Poughkeepsie NY

Language

Currency

Your cart

Your cart is empty

Check out these collections

Rosenberger / Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart- Tempi Agitati (CD)

SKU: 764593033424
Regular price ¥145.00
Unit price
per
the album cover for Rosenberger / Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart - Tempi Agitati
the album cover for Rosenberger / Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart - Tempi Agitati

On April 6, 1327, a 22-year-old Italian poet named Francesco Petrarca caught a glimpse of a young woman, Laura, in a church in Avignon. He later reported that "living sparks issued from two lovely eyes". Those sparks enflamed Petrarch such that he spent the rest of his illustrious career coming to terms with them. In the 16th century, madrigals were developed by Adrian Willaert and Cipriano de Rore, which took Petrarch's agonized images as justification for violating the rules that had guided musicians since before the beginnings of notated music. Those living sparks have leapt ahead seven more centuries to inspire Katharina Rosenberger. Her tempi agitati embeds Petrarch's texts (especially fragments from his "Ascent of Mount Ventoso") and settings of sonnets by Willaert and Rore within her own responses to those materials. In live performance, Rosenberger works together with stage-director Ludger Engels to distribute members of the ensemble, Neue Vocalsolisten, around the sound space; they dart around throughout the site, thereby embodying Petrarch's "vive faville." While a sound recording lacks the visual dimension crucial to Rosenberger's concept, it allows the listener to attend much more closely to her rich tapestry of sonorities as she puts Petrarch's 14th-century poetry and 16th-century madrigals into dialogue with her extended vocal techniques. Sometimes the singers coalesce into whole polyphonic samples before returning to the extended vocal techniques from which they had emerged. Sometimes, finally, the madrigal itself appears, now intact. Rosenberger thereby simulates Petrarch's struggle to put into coherent form his reactions to Laura's glance. Those living sparks have indeed inflamed thousands: Laura's glance goaded Petrarch to the heights of formal perfection in his sonnets, and it led the madrigalists to imagine tonal worlds far beyond the stylistic precepts they had inherited.

Format: New CD/Classical

Rosenberger / Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart- Tempi Agitati (CD)

SKU: 764593033424
Regular price ¥145.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 04.22.2022

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

> 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.

On April 6, 1327, a 22-year-old Italian poet named Francesco Petrarca caught a glimpse of a young woman, Laura, in a church in Avignon. He later reported that "living sparks issued from two lovely eyes". Those sparks enflamed Petrarch such that he spent the rest of his illustrious career coming to terms with them. In the 16th century, madrigals were developed by Adrian Willaert and Cipriano de Rore, which took Petrarch's agonized images as justification for violating the rules that had guided musicians since before the beginnings of notated music. Those living sparks have leapt ahead seven more centuries to inspire Katharina Rosenberger. Her tempi agitati embeds Petrarch's texts (especially fragments from his "Ascent of Mount Ventoso") and settings of sonnets by Willaert and Rore within her own responses to those materials. In live performance, Rosenberger works together with stage-director Ludger Engels to distribute members of the ensemble, Neue Vocalsolisten, around the sound space; they dart around throughout the site, thereby embodying Petrarch's "vive faville." While a sound recording lacks the visual dimension crucial to Rosenberger's concept, it allows the listener to attend much more closely to her rich tapestry of sonorities as she puts Petrarch's 14th-century poetry and 16th-century madrigals into dialogue with her extended vocal techniques. Sometimes the singers coalesce into whole polyphonic samples before returning to the extended vocal techniques from which they had emerged. Sometimes, finally, the madrigal itself appears, now intact. Rosenberger thereby simulates Petrarch's struggle to put into coherent form his reactions to Laura's glance. Those living sparks have indeed inflamed thousands: Laura's glance goaded Petrarch to the heights of formal perfection in his sonnets, and it led the madrigalists to imagine tonal worlds far beyond the stylistic precepts they had inherited.