Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Joyce DiDonato: Drama QueensRoyal Arias from the 17th and 18th Centuries
Crowned with a Grammy Award for her last album, Diva, Divo, Joyce DiDonato joins conductor Alan Curtis and Il complesso barocco for Drama Queens, an electrifying programme of royal arias from the 17th and 18th centuries, composed by figures as famous as Handel and Vivaldi and as little known as Orlandini and Porta. As DiDonato says: “High drama, profound emotion, fearless vocal writing, time-stopping passages, historical significance and real discovery ... What more could I ask for?” The impact achieved by Joyce DiDonato with her last Virgin Classics album, Diva, Divo, was summed up by her triumph at the 2012 Grammy Awards in February: victor in the Classical Vocal Solo category, the ‘Yankee Diva’ also became the first classical singer to perform live at the Grammy ceremony, receiving a standing ovation for her spectacular rendition of the final rondo from Rossini’s La Cenerentola. Enterprising as ever, DiDonato now presents a new themed recital, conceived in partnership with Alan Curtis, who also conducted her Virgin Classic recordings of Handel’s Ariodante and Radamisto and her duet recital Amore e Gelosia with Patrizia Ciofi. Drama Queens sees DiDonato portraying a parade of royal personages in a diversity of challenging situations and extreme states of mind. “For me, this is my most exciting recording project to date,” says Joyce DiDonato,” because it is everything I deeply adore about the world of opera: high drama, profound emotion, fearless vocal writing, time-stopping passages, historical significance and real discovery. What more could I ask for? “I wanted to return to this genre of music I love so deeply: the free, mysterious, profoundly moving world of Baroque opera, but to do it in the grandest fashion – from the throne of royalty! Each of the characters is a queen (or a sorceress, which equals queen in this fantastical world) ... Well, we have allowed one princess, because the aria is completely unknown and it is simply too beautiful to be left out: ‘Madre diletta, abbracciami’ by Giovanni Porta [c1675-1755]. “What more could a singer ask for than to indulge in the antics of rage and bliss, despair and jubilation, heartbreak and true love?” she continues. “It will be an extraordinary journey, thanks to these larger-than-life characters, and I fully expect to learn a lot about myself along the way.” Conductor and musicologist Alan Curtis explains that: “Our Drama Queens are a motley group. Our idea was to cultivate extremes, to gather arias that show larger-than-life emotions. They range from noble, but sultry seductiveness, through the hysterically happy to vindictive despair and royal rage. The musical styles are also as varied as possible.” The arias range in period from the dawn of opera, Monteverdi and Cesti, to lesser-known works by Gluck and Haydn. “We also include some little-known music by Reinhard Keiser [1674-1739], notably an aria with an amazing five-part accompaniment for solo bassoons, without strings,” adds Curtis. (Joyce DiDonato describes it as “an aria of jealousy, suspicion and torment with the bassoon and voice chasing each other.”) Alan Curtis continues: “Two flashy arias by Giuseppe Orlandini [1676-1760] come from an opera about the great Jewish Queen Berenice, thought to be lost, but found in a California library ... But we have not totally excluded well-known works either. There is Joyce's beloved ‘Sposa son disprezzata’, a YouTube favourite, which most people know in the version for Princess Irene, the rejected bride in Vivaldi's Tamerlano. But it was actually taken by Vivaldi from an earlier opera by Geminiano Giacomelli [1692-1740], where it was sung by a male character and performed by the famous castrato Farinelli. Another Farinelli aria we include comes from an early serenata by Hasse; he sang in drag as one of the greatest drama queens of all time – Cleopatra! And, of course, we include everybody's favourite Cleopatra aria: Handel's ‘Piangerò la sorte mia’, from Giulio Cesare.” “Coloratura runs are lightning fast, angry declamations hurled like thunderbolts — and limpid laments meltingly cooed. I don’t like DiDonato when she gets too shouty or adds “expressive” pitch-bends. But it’s all compellingly theatrical. Great choice, too, with familiar Handel mingled with rare jewels” The Times, 3rd November 2012 **** “an anthology of suitably impassioned royal roles from Baroque operas, their emotional scope ranging from the giddy flush of love evoked by her tremulous coloratura and swooning fades as Berenice in Orlandini's "Da torbida procella", to the self-sacrifice of Porta's Ifigenia, rendered with such poised nobility” The Independent, 10th November 2012 **** “DiDonato and Alan Curtis...have unearthed some Baroque rarities. Instead of Handel's Berenice, we have Orlandini's Berenice, whose 'Da torbida procella' is an ideal fit for DiDonato's spitfire fioritura.” BBC Music Magazine, Christmas 2012 **** “DiDonato produces her most emotionally moving and sensitively embellished singing in 'Madre diletta'...Wonderfully sung, passionately played and programmed intelligently - an exemplary recital.” Gramophone Magazine, January 2013 “DiDonato caresses the plaintive lines of Piangero la sorte mia with the intensity of Bartoli, and brings a mordant, witchy edge to Ma quando tornerai...There’s sprightly support from Alan Curtis’s Italian period band. DiDonato’s fans won’t be disappointed.” Sunday Times, 13th January 2013 “In the slow-moving 'Lasciami pinagere' .DiDonato's timbre is at its most beautiful, her phrasing eloquent, the trills not distracting the smooth flow of the musical line...The virtuosity needed to triumph over the swift scalework is coruscatingly supplied by DiDonato...Alan Curtis's Complesso Barocco's partnership is invaluable...This is a treasure of a disc, for the music, the orchestra and Joyce DiDonato.” International Record Review, February 2013 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Amoureuses - Patricia Petibon
Gluck: | Venez, secondez mes désirs from Armide Non, cet affreux devoir... Je t'implore et je tremble (from Iphigénie en Tauride) Ah! Si la liberté me doit être ravie from Armide | Haydn: | Ragion nell'alma siede (from Il mondo della luna) Salamelica from Lo speziale Odio, furor, dispetto from Armida Numi possenti aita!...Dov'è l'amato bene?...Del mio core (from L'anima del filosofo, ossia Orfeo ed Euridice) Fra un dolce deliro from L'isola disabitata | Mozart: | Vorrei spiegarvi, oh Dio! K418 Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (from Die Zauberflöte) L'ho perduta, me meschina (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro) Vanne, t'affretta… Ah se il crudel periglio (from Lucio Silla) Fra i pensier più funesti (from Lucio Silla) Tiger! Wetze nur die Klauen! (from Zaïde) Le perfide Renaud me fuit from Armide |
Exceptional French soprano Patricia Petibon joins the DG roster with her debut album Amoureuses, featuring arias by Mozart, Haydn and Gluck Petibon has established herself as one of the most interesting and versatile sopranos of our day and has been widely acclaimed for her outstanding acting abilities that make her merge completely with whatever role she sings and represents on stage With Amoureuses Petibon circles around the ever-important topic of love and desire – in a series of character-portraits she explores how the very different female characters in the operas of Mozart, Haydn, and Gluck respond to the challenges of love Ranging from the dramatic fury in Haydn’s Odio, furor, dispetto and Mozart’s Der Hölle Rache . . . to the sweetness in his Deh vieni, and from the desperate sadness of his L’ho perduta . . . me meschina! to the grandeur of Gluck’s Ah! Si la liberté, the album is the perfect showcase for Petibon’s exceptional skills of expression and characterization For Amoureuses Petibon teamed up with the acclaimed period-instrument band Concerto Köln and conductor Daniel Harding, a collaboration that guarantees an effervescent, entrancing approach to the music of the Viennese masters – a captivating debut to watch for! “The French soprano's DG debut is a considerable and attractive success. There are excerpts from Gluck's Armide, too, including a heartfelt air from Act 3. In the last scene, Petibon is mesmerising in the recitative - excellent support here, and indeed throughout, from Daniel Harding - before, again, bursting out in fury.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2008 “Patricia Petibon's choice of arias by the three greatest of late 18th-century opera composers is tailor-made to display her range, in terms of both drama and sheer vocal compass. …her debut disc for DG is pure pleasure, and Daniel Harding and Concerto Köln provide first-rate support.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2008 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | ArmidaArias by Gluck, Jommelli, Haydn and Handel
Gluck: | Ah! Si la liberté me doit être ravie from Armide La chaine de l'Hymen m'etonne (from Armide) Ah! Quelle cruauté de lui ravir le jour! (from Armide) Venez, secondez mes désirs from Armide Venez, venez haine implacable (from Armide) Chaconne | Handel: | Ah crudel! (from Rinaldo) Armida abbandonata, HWV 105: aria 'Ah! crudel, e pur ten vei' Armida abbandonata: In tanti affanni miei | Haydn: | Partì Rinaldo - Se pietade avete, oh Numi (Armida) Ah, non ferir, t'arresta (from Armida) | Jommelli: | Armida Abbandonata: Sinfonia Ah! Ti sento, mio povero core (from Armida Abbandonata) Miser’Armida...Odio, furor, dispetto (from Armida Abbandonata) |
Annette Dasch (soprano) Bayerische Kammerphilharmonie, David Syrus The story of the infidel Saracen princess Armida, who falls in love with the Christian knight Rinaldo, has been a frequent source of inspiration for opera composers. For her début CD on the Sony Classical label, Berlin-born soprano Annette Dasch has selected Armida arias from four different operas, plus a cantata “Annette Dasch copes admirably with the high tessitura of "Ah! Ti sento", and there is some exciting coloratura in the Rinaldo aria and in "Se pietade avete" from Haydn's last opera for Eszterháza. David Syrus and the orchestra are first-rate: indeed, the Gluck Chaconne and the Jommelli Sinfonia are, so to speak, worth hearing in their own right.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2007 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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