Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Mendelssohn: Christus & Cantates Chorales
Award-winning choral group Accentus and its musical director Laurence Equilbey are joined on this new recording of some of Felix Mendelssohn’s sacred choral works by one of the most acclaimed sopranos of recent years, Sandrine Piau. The disc also features tenor Robert Getchell, baritone Markus Butter, and the Ensemble Orchestral de Paris. The main works are the unfinished oratorio Christus, and the cantatas O Haupt Voll Blut und Wunden and Vom Himmel Hoch. Founded by its current director Laurence Equilbey, Accentus is a professional chamber choir which regularly appears in leading concert halls and festivals around the world. The group collaborates regularly with prestigious conductors and orchestras, notably Pierre Boulez, Christoph Eschenbach, the Orchestre de Paris, Ensemble Intercontemporain, Concerto Köln, and Akademie für Alte Musik. The group’s recordings which include the best seller ‘Transcriptions’, Haydn’s Seven Last Words of Christ on the Cross, Fauré’s Requiem, and ‘Strauss a cappella’ have received many awards from the international press. Accentus records exclusively for Naïve, and the group’s most recent recording for the label features Rachmaninov’s two great sacred works, the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom, and Vespers. Christus is the title given by the Mendelssohn’s brother Paul to fragments of an unfinished oratorio by Felix that was first published posthumously as his Op. 97. The completed portions include a tenor recitative relating Christ's birth, two choruses, ‘Where is the newborn’, and ‘There Shall a Star from Jacob Shine Forth’, and a passion section ending with another chorale, ‘O Welt, sieh' hier dein Leben’. “Salvaged from an unfinished three-part oratorio originally titled "Earth, Heaven & Hell", the two sections of Mendelssohn's "Christus" deal with the Nativity and the Passion, jumping abruptly from birth to betrayal with no intervening exposition. The sense of hollowness is tempered, however, by a series of finesses, the first being the delightful trio of tenor, baritone and soprano representing the Three Kings” The Independent, 1st December 2011 “Some of the focus [in Christus] is soft in this performance, but doesn't deter from the pleasure. Three cantatas complete the disc, including "Verleih uns frieden gnädiglich", much loved by Schumann, and the joyful Christmas work "Vom Himmel hoch".” The Observer, 4th December 2011 “Mendelssohn’s veneration of Bach...and the Lutheran tradition shines through this chorale-rich music. [Vom Himmel Hoch ] is a little post-Bachian masterpiece, with a jubilant opening number and fine soprano and baritone solos, beautifully sung here by Sandrine Piau and Markus Butter. The French conductor’s choir and orchestra do Mendelssohn proud.” Sunday Times, 18th December 2011 “Accentus's many fans have further reason to celebrate. All their hallmarks are in evidence here: springy rhythms, fine choral balance, clean, bright tone, splendid diction. And what marvellous music this is!... The three soloists are all first class, alive to the drama in each of the works but never over-responding. A disc to treasure.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2012 ***** “The soloists sing with great beauty and feeling, and the choir and orchestra - the former rather backwardly recorded - are equally fine.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Vivica Genaux: Bel Canto Arias
Rossini, Bellini, Donizetti: these three men alone sufficed to popularise the art of Italian opera during the first half of the nineteenth century, a century so propitious to the spread of romanticism in all its manifestations. If we set aside Bellini, who flashed across the sky like a meteor, this leaves Rossini and Donizetti, and the differences between them are patent. Rossini was born in Pesaro in 1792 and died in Paris in 1868. His stage career began in 1810 in Venice with a ‘farsa’, Il cambiale di matrimonio, establishing immediately the high standard which he maintained without faltering until he suddenly stopped writing operas in 1839. His last opera was Guillaume Tell which failed to convince the regular audience at the Paris Opéra, unresponsive as they were to its ground-breaking aspects. Rossini’s decision to stop has given rise to endless speculation, but the most likely explanation is that he had grown weary of seeing audiences’ tastes changing and forsaking the ideal of vocal beauty for which he always strove. Donizetti’s life was shorter, and more full of drama – though we should no longer see Rossini, who suffered from depression, as a jovial fun-lover, a popular but misleading view. Donizetti was born in Bergamo in 1797 and died there in April 1848. A pupil of Giovanni Simone Mayr, he had a very full professional life which was nevertheless marred by sorrow and illness. He produced over seventy-five operas of all kinds from comic to tragic and, like Rossini, his career took him to Paris. Surprisingly, much of Rossini’s output is not well known. The image of him which mainly springs to mind is linked to the comedies La Cenerentola, L’italiana in Algeri and above all Il barbiere di Siviglia, an undisputed masterpiece and in a way his emblematic work. But this is to leave out a large number of significant works, his opere serie, which are rarely performed today despite their outstanding qualities. The type of female voice Rossini preferred was the contralto (a term to be understood in the context of its time, when vocal nomenclature was far less precise than today), with a sumptuous, opulent low register, tawny amber colours and a full, rich sound. Although the contralto’s high register was at first only rarely called upon, she was not confined to viragos or trouser roles; for certain parts she had to be capable of moderating and lightening her naturally full-bodied instrument. When the writing moves into the upper range it takes on similarities with the mezzo-soprano, as well as slightly more femininity. The disappearance of the castrati at the start of the nineteenth century encouraged the fashion for the contralto. Rossini was probably harking back to the golden age of the castrato when he wrote some of his finest serious roles, such as Arsace in Semiramide. This was written for Rosa Mariani, who performed it for the first time in Venice in 1823 opposite the composer’s wife Isabella Colbran as the Queen of Babylon. It is a magnificent role, that of a courageous young man of whom the queen is enamoured and who, by the most unhappy mischance, turns out to be her son, and, even more unfortunately, the involuntary cause of her death. ‘Eccomi alfine in Babilonia… Ah! quel giorno’ is his entrance aria, classically structured in three parts, recitative, slow section, quick section: certainly a bravura piece, but one in which the singer has to give expression to feelings as varied as ardent love and fear of the future. Even finer, and more intensely poetic, is Malcolm’s ‘Mura felici’ from La donna del lago, a Scottish tale over which hovers the shade of Sir Walter Scott, so dear to nineteenth-century opera. In 1819, at the San Carlo in Naples, Rosmunda Pisaroni captured the dream-like essence of this aria so perfectly that the smallpox blemishing her face was entirely forgotten. But the contralto can also play the woman – especially of the strong-willed, courageous type, like Isabella in L’italiana in Algeri, a difficult part which, in Venice in 1813, gave Marietta Marcolini the chance to shine. The role exhibits throughout a blend of charm and virtuosity, unabated energy and unshakable good humour, whether at Isabella’s entrance in Act I, cursing her fate before sharpening her weapons of seduction (‘Cruda sorte’) or exhorting her beloved, before the finale, to behave like a true Italian (‘Pensa alla patria’). For the final rondo of La Cenerentola, the voice lightens, using less of its lower register; Angelina’s goodness and joie de vivre shine through. At the world premiere in Rome in 1817, Geltrude Giorgi-Righetti took the part. A year earlier, also in Rome, she lent her personality to the exuberant Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, who displays her determination to marry Lindoro in ‘Una voce poco fa’. Donizetti followed a different path both musically and theatrically. The idea of opera as simply a feast of singing begins to fade before dramatic urgency; the power of song alone is no longer enough, and words come into their own. Can we still speak of ‘bel canto’? The same devices are used, the same ornamentation, the role of colour, nuance, dynamics and contrast, but they are regarded more as a means than as an end in themselves. At the Teatro Carcano in Milan in 1830, Anna Bolena was enthusiastically received. This time the contralto (Amalia Laroche) again had a trouser role, the page Smeton; we can perhaps see something of Cherubino in this adolescent boy who is far from indifferent to Anna’s charms (‘È sgombro il loco’, from Act I, Scene 1). The Victor Hugo-inspired Lucrezia Borgia was not to the liking of either the poet or the censor. Its hero Orsini is yet again a trouser role (one of Marietta Brambilla’s parts at La Scala, Milan, in 1833); he launches the plot in the prologue by telling his friend Gennaro that they will both be killed by Lucrezia Borgia – ‘Nella fatal di Rimini’. Later, during the fateful banquet of the final act he sings a brindisi, a drinking-song with a catchy rhythm which was immensely popular at the time (‘Il segreto per esser felici’); its second verse lends itself to brilliant ornamentation. Alahor in Granata was first staged by the Teatro Carolino in Palermo in January 1826, but the work was forgotten throughout the twentieth century until the Teatro de la Maestranza in Seville revived it for the opening of its 1998 season. It is a youthful work, though it came after some remarkably accomplished efforts such as the delightful L’ajo nell’imbarazzo (1824), itself preceded, in 1822, by Zoraide di Granata, another picturesque piece drawn from Spanish history. The trouser role here is that of King Muley-Hassem (first performed by Marietta Gioia-Tamburini), who is in love with Zobeida, a member of an enemy tribe, the Abencerrages. Here, the king appears in the role of peace-maker; his efforts put an end to the war and win him his beloved. There could be no better way to round off this gallery of portraits devoted to a voice distinguished, among other qualities, by its rarity. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn: Le Songe d'une nuit d'été
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“Marc Minkowski rescues Boieldieu from the history books in a stylish recording of a minor French Romantic masterpiece. Rockwell Blake and Annick Massis lead a strong cast from the front.” BBC Music Magazine, September 2009 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Handel - Un'opera immaginaria
Operas & Oratorios by courtesy of Georg Frideric Handel: Arminio, Teseo, Il Trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno, Fernando, Amadigi, Alcina, La Resurrezione, Serse, Ariodante, Orlando, Giulio Cesare & Deidamia PART I 1 I Overture 2 II Arioso: Dolce riposo 3-4 III Recitativo e Aria: Della vita mortale… Un pensiero nemico di pace 5-6 IV Recitativo e Aria: A deluder le frodi io mi preparo… Sincero affetto 7 V Aria: Destero dall’empia dite PART II 8 VI Sarabande 9 VII Aria: Cosi la tortorella 10-11 VIII Recitativo e Aria: Aspide sono…Di tacere 12 IX Aria: Scherza infida 13 X Scena: Ah! Stigie larve! 14-15 XI Recitativo & Duetto: Madre! Mia Vita… Son nata a lagrimar PART III 16-17 XII Recitativo e Scena: Ah! Ruggiero crudel…Ombre pallide 18-19 XIII Recitativo e Duettino: Ti stringo, o illustre acciaro… Quando più minaccia il cielo 20-21 XIV Recitativo e Aria: Verso il gran fine… Come all’urto aggressor 22 XV Aria: Venti, turbine 23 XVI Tamburino e coro: Doppo tante amare pene
Joyce DiDonato, Natalie Dessay, Max Emanuel Cencic, Ian Bostridge, Anne Sofie von Otter, Philippe Jaroussky, Vivica Genaux, Stephanie Blythe, David Daniels, Arleen Augér, Geraldine McGreevy, Manuela Custer & Anna Bonitatibus Il Complesso Barocco, Les Talens Lyriques, Le Concert d'Astrée, City of London Baroque Sinfonia, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Les Arts Florissants, Les Violons du Roy & Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, Alan Curtis, Christophe Rousset, Emmanuelle Haïm, Richard Hickox, William Christie, Bernard Labadie, John Nelson, Harry Bicket & Sir Roger Norrington “It seems that, in the years around 1720, when people went to the opera to hear a castrato idol or an adored soprano, they would play cards, pay court to their neighbours and savour sorbets during the recitatives – even during the so-called arias of action, which they enjoyed less than the ornamented reprises of the showpiece arias. With this intractable and hedonistic audience in mind (so different from people like us, of course), thirteen star singers came together to concoct this festive piece, constructed and presented in three acts like a true dramma per musica, but with no explicit story and no concrete characters: in other words, an imaginary opera formed of passion and music.” Ivan A. Alexandre This album marks the 250th anniversary of Handel’s death with creativity, erudition and maybe a touch of audacity. Far more than a compilation album, it selects individual numbers from 11 operas and two oratorios by Handel and reassembles them in a sequence that respects the potent formula elaborated in the composer’s 38 works for the operatic stage. While there is no specific narrative, the listener will be drawn in by the dramatic logic of a balanced succession of numbers, including some ‘greatest hits. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Handel: Arias & Duets (The Anniversary Edition 1759-2009)
Handel: | Frondi tenere e belle ... Ombra mai fù (from Serse) David Daniels (countertenor) Orchestra of the Age Enlightenment, Roger Norrington Dove sei, amato bene? (from Rodelinda) David Daniels (countertenor) Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Roger Norrington Pompe vane di morte! (from Rodelinda) David Daniels (countertenor) Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Roger Norrington Armida abbandonata: Ma che parlo, che dico Véronique Gens (soprano) Les Basses Réunies Armida abbandonata: In tanti affanni miei Véronique Gens (soprano) Les Basses Réunies Scherzano sul tuo volto (from Rinaldo) Patrizia Ciofi (soprano) & Joyce DiDonato (mezzo-soprano) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis E vivo ancore?...Scherza, infida (from Ariodante) Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor) Le Concert d'Astrée, Emmanuelle Haïm Fra l’ombre e gl’orrori (from Aci, Galatea e Polifemo) Laurent Naouri baritone (Polifemo), Sandrine Piau soprano (Aci) & Sara Mingardo alto (Galatea) Le Concert d’Astrée, Emmanuelle Haïm Duetto: Sorge il di Aci/Galatea from Aci, Galatea e Polifemo Laurent Naouri baritone (Polifemo), Sandrine Piau soprano (Aci) & Sara Mingardo alto (Galatea) Le Concert d’Astrée, Emmanuelle Haïm Amor, qual nuova fiamma mi risvegli nel core (from Admeto) René Jacobs alto (Admeto) & Rachel Yakar soprano (Antigona) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis La tigre arde di sdegno (from Admeto) René Jacobs alto (Admeto) & Rachel Yakar soprano (Antigona) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Per me si strugge (from Admeto) René Jacobs alto (Admeto) & Rachel Yakar soprano (Antigona) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis E per monti, e per piani, et per selve Antigona (from Admeto, re di Tessaglia) René Jacobs alto (Admeto) & Rachel Yakar soprano (Antigona) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Hercules: Where shall I fly? Stephanie Blythe (contralto) Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, John Nelson Splenda l’alba in oriente, cantata, HWV 166 Gérard Lesne (alto) Il Seminario Musicale As steals the morn (from L'Allegro, il Penseroso, ed il Moderato) Ian Bostridge (tenor) & Lynne Dawson (soprano) Bach Choir & Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, John Nelson Un pensiero nemico di pace (from Il Trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno) Natalie Dessay (soprano) Le Concert d'Astrée, Emmanuelle Haïm Fatto scorta al sentier della Gloria (from Arminio) Vivica Genaux mezzo-soprano (Arminio) & Riccardo Ristori bass (Segeste) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Fiaccherò quel fiero orgoglio (from Arminio) Vivica Genaux mezzo-soprano (Arminio) & Riccardo Ristori bass (Segeste) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Verdi prati (from Alcina) Della Jones mezzo-soprano (Ruggiero) & Arleen Auger soprano (Alcina) City of London Baroque Sinfonia, Richard Hickox Ombre pallide (from Alcina) Della Jones mezzo-soprano (Ruggiero) & Arleen Auger soprano (Alcina) City of London Baroque Sinfonia, Richard Hickox Duetto: Prendi l’alma e prendi il core Rodrigo/Esilena from Rodrigo Gloria Banditelli mezzo-soprano (Rodrigo) & Sandrine Piau soprano (Esilena) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Nasconde l’usignol (from Deidamia) Suzie LeBlanc (soprano) & Derek Lee Ragin (countertenor) Teatro Lirico, Stephen Stubbs Nel riposo e nel contento (from Deidamia) Suzie LeBlanc (soprano) & Derek Lee Ragin (countertenor) Teatro Lirico, Stephen Stubbs Della guerra la caccia ha sembianza (from Deidamia) Simone Kermes soprano (Deidamia), Antonio Abete baritone (Licomede) & Anna Bonitatibus mezzo-soprano (Ulisse) Il Complesso Barocco, Alan Curtis Tanti strali al sen mi scocchi, HWV 197 Suzie LeBlanc (soprano) & Derek Lee Ragin (countertenor) Teatro Lirico, Stephen Stubbs Se'il mio duol (Rodelinda) Sophie Daneman (soprano) The Raglan Baroque Players, Nicholas Kraemer Caro autor di mia doglia, arcadian duet HWV 182a Patricia Petibon (soprano) & Paul Agnew (tenor) Le Concert d’Astrée, Emmanuelle Haïm Cara speme (from Giulio Cesare) David Daniels (countertenor) Orchestra of the Age Enlightenment, Roger Norrington Va tacito e nascosto (from Giulio Cesare) David Daniels (countertenor) Orchestra of the Age Enlightenment, Roger Norrington |
This ravishing selection of arias and duets is drawn from some of Handel’s finest vocal works, among them the operas Xerxes (source of the famous ‘Largo’), Ariodante, with its gripping ‘Scherza, infida’, and, perhaps his most popular works for the stage, Giulio Cesare and Alcina. The generously-filled discs (two CDs for the price of one) also include the complete cantata Splenda l’alba in oriente and excerpts the dramatic cantata Armida abbandonata, the English ode L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato, and the exquisite Neapolitan serenata Aci, Galatea e Polifemo. An international cast of outstanding Handelians includes Philippe Jaroussky, Natalie Dessay, David Daniels, Véronique Gens, Ian Bostridge, Joyce DiDonato, Stephanie Blythe, Janet Baker, Vivica Genaux, Gérard Lesne, James Bowman.. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Pécou - L'Oiseau innumérable
“His collaboration with Pécou brilliantly synthesizes the delicacy and translucency of French composition post-Ravel…The result is an appealing sound world and a highly recommended recording.” International Piano, September/October 2008 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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“…at these sensible tempos, and with careful dynamic gradations, the structure of the larger choral sections emerges clearly and thus overwhelmingly. …the soloists, the chorus and the orchestra are united, as their shared smiles show, and it is moving to see how intensely the soloists, especially Joyce DiDonato, listen to one another.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2007 **** “In a short interview before this concert in Notre-Dame Cathedral, John Nelson calls this performance 'a culmination of my experience with Bach' and it is one which is characterised by the conductor's highly considered and distilled understanding of the score. This is evident in his decisive direction, which is a model of clarity. The tempi are beautifully judged, the monumental choruses are chiselled lovingly and the image-laden and reflective movements – reaching a tortured sadness and composed dignity in a superbly judged 'Crucifixus' – all conspire towards a magisterial and logical conclusion in the 'Dona nobis pacem', where heart and head seem happily entwined. What prevents this from being as memorable are both the capability of the forces, beyond a certain level, and the flawed filming – random and quick-fire shots from all manner of angles. The results are profoundly restless. There are far too many occasions where dubbing is ineptly handled, not least in the 'Laudamus te', where the admirable Joyce DiDonato is suddenly out of kilter with proceedings with an edit (26'39”) using a patch where the tempo is far too fast. Comedy is the order of the day at the end of the 'Cum Sanctu Spiritu', where Nelson is filmed bringing off the ensemble at least two beats after the music has ended. The Ensemble Orchestral de Paris perform in a fairly prosaic fashion by today's 'informed' standards and Nelson has a habit of accentuating appoggiaturas into submission; only the vibrant personality of the bassoons (notable in both bass 'arias') and the slick trumpeting ring out with complete confidence. The choir are committed and well drilled and Ruth Ziesak is the pick of the soloists, apart from an 'Et in unum' which is full of gratuitous accents – maybe in an attempt to encourage Daniel Taylor to take his head out of his copy. This DVD is not quite what it promises, though John Nelson's motivation and vision certainly bring a real sense of occasion.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “John Nelson gives Bach's great mass a highly distinguished DVD debut, with a deeply expressive performance, full of life...Nelson's tempi cannot be faulted, and the performance moves forward spontaneously to its richly satisfying closing Dona nobis pacem...Olivier Simonnet's video coverage is fully worthy of the performance.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Leopold & Wolfgang Mozart - Wind Concertos
“Paul Meyer… plays beautifully, with smooth, silken tone, immaculate dynamic control and unfailingly sensitive phrasing. …in the lightweight Oboe Concerto. Françoise Leleux gives a thoroughly delightful performance, sweet and pure of tone, nimble of articulation and relishing the work's airy grace and puckish wit. ...David Guerrier shows himself equally accomplished on the horn and trumpet. His beauty of tone and subtle control of colour create the best case for Leopold's potentially tedious Trumpet Concerto. But while his refined, understated approach to the Horn Concerto K495 (the one with the finale immortalised by Flanders and Swann) brings rewards in the first two movements, it does slightly mute the finale's fun and mischief.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2006 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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