All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Mozart: Great Mass in C minor & Exsultate, jubilate
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| |  | Julia Lezhneva: Alleluia
The vocal sensation everyone’s talking about – Russian soprano Julia Lezhneva – makes her Decca solo debut with a celebratory disc of motets from Vivaldi, Handel, Porpora and Mozart, partnered by one of the world’s leading early music ensembles, Il Giardino Armonico, conducted by Giovanni Antonini. Praised for her “pure tone” (Opernwelt) and “flawless technique” (Guardian), Lezhneva’s career has skyrocketed since her brief but extraordinary appearance at the 2010 Classical BRIT Awards in London, at the invitation of her mentor, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa. “Few young singers have been as widely celebrated so early in their careers as Kiri Te Kanawa’s protegé, the . . . Russian soprano Julia Lezhneva”, wrote The Independent. Dame Kiri recently added her voice to the critical consensus, observing that “from time time to time a really outstanding talent appears and I believe that Julia Lezhneva is just that. The brilliance of her voice and technique are extremely impressive.” “Lezhneva is at her most accomplished [in the Mozart], providing spirited and focused vocalism, running up and down the scales with effortless abandon and to fine effect. Elsewhere there are occasional deficiencies, including high notes slightly wide of the mark...Yet the precision and determination Lezhneva bring to Vivaldi's In furore...is remarkable...the period-instrument orchestra sounds fesity under Giovanni Antonini.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2013 *** “a singer of uncommon ability and vivacity...Il Giardino Armonico provide apt support throughout: their dashing, frothy strings offer a syllabub-light bed for her glass-like clarity and poise” The Independent, 12th April 2013 “a voice of bell-like purity, even throughout its compass, immaculately fluent in coloratura...Though Il Giardino Armonico's punchy, adrenaline-fuelled playing may disconcert some in Mozart, they vividly complement a singer who rivals the young Bartoli in high-octane virtuosity” Gramophone Magazine, May 2013 “[Alleluia] certainly showcases her unusual status as a Russian coloratura specialist, and one who trills and leaps with enviable cleanliness and clarity...She sings sweetly, with trills effortlessly folded in like sparkling jewels, and four top Ds easily scaled...Lezhneva’s voice, however, still seems a work in progress.” The Times, 14th June 2013 *** | 
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| |  | Felicity Lott sings Mozart
Mozart: | Exsultate, jubilate, K165 Voi avete un cor fedele, K217 Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583 Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582 Nehmt meinen Dank, ihr holden Gönner!, concert aria K383 Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528 Ruhe sanft, mein holdes Leben (from Zaïde) Lungi da te, mio bene (from Mitridate, Rè di Ponto, KV87) |
One of the most peerless Mozartians of our time, Felicity Lott has been one of the foremost sopranos to essay the composer’s major roles in the opera house. Complementing these is her magnificent disc of concert arias as well as Mozart’s beloved motet Exsultate, jubilate, and arias from two of the composer’s lesser-known operas. The recording was made in 1989 shortly after her mesmerizing performance of some of this material at the London ‘Proms’. Jane Glover and the London Mozart Players provide stylish and sympathetic support. A multi-award winning album, it is now available readily on Eloquence. “Lott is bright and lyrical (Exsultate), and tender ('Lungi da te'). She can be a bit colourless, but Glover's orchestra gives brilliantly nuanced support.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2012 **** “Exsultate, jubilate, fine as recorded sound, crisp in the playing, deliciously clear and clean in the singing, sets off with all the promise of a bright spring morning. The middle movement, "Tu virginum corona", is exceptionally beautiful in adding to its accustomed serenity a more rarely heard sense of compassion, bringing out the references to the grief that calls for consolation. Then with the "Allelujah" the sun is out again, the rhythms dance, the voice shines and rejoices in those difficult semiquavers and the final high C. … A lovely performance of "Ruhe sanft" … the marvellous Mitridate [is] crowned by a quiet high D almost as miraculous as the greater wonder of its composition by the 13-year-old boy.” Gramophone Magazine | | | (Sorry, download not available in your country) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart: Coronation Mass
Following the success of the Mozart Mass in C minor and Requiem releases, CORO is delighted to announce its third recording with Harry Christophers and the Handel and Haydn Society. Soloists Teresa Wakim, Paula Murrihy, Thomas Cooley, Sumner Thompson joined Harry and the Society to record Mozart’s Coronation Mass live at Boston’s Symphony Hall earlier this year. Mozart’s Mass in C major is one of his most popular and enduring works. Know as the ‘Coronation Mass’ – a nickname it acquired following a performance conducted by Antonio Salieri in 1791 in Prague at the coronation of Leopold II as King of Bohemia – it includes the beautifully tender Agnus Dei. Alongside the Mass on this CD are Mozart’s soprano solo Exsultate, jubilate, beautifully performed by Teresa Wakim, and Joseph Haydn’s Symphony No. 85, which was a favourite of Marie Antoinette, leading to the name ‘La Reine’, by which it is still known today. Harry Christophers was appointed Artistic Director of Boston’s internationally acclaimed Handel and Haydn Society in 2008. Founded in 1815, the Society is considered the oldest continuously performing arts organization in the U.S. and has given the American premieres of major works by Handel, Bach and Haydn, has won a Grammy Award, and will celebrate its Bicentennial in 2015. “The singing of the Boston Handel and Haydn Society Chorus is spirited throughout, with Harry Christophers highlighting some of the work's most expressive moments, notably the agonised Crucifixus, with acute perception...Throughout the disc the sound picture is finely balanced and well put together.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2012 **** “The main attraction is Harry Christophers’ Coronation Mass, heard in a refreshingly unpompous, crystalline performance. That it sounds so zingy is largely down to the singing – a smallish choir moving with singular grace and four well-matched soloists...Teresa Wakim also gives us Mozart’s Exultate, jubilate. She’s lovely, avoiding the shrillness which can blight performances of this engaging work.” The Arts Desk, 3rd November 2012 “Christophers draws out plenty of detail, and ensemble and intonation slip only occasionally given that this is a live performance; speeds are brisk” Gramophone Magazine, December 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Joan Sutherland Collector’s Album: Rare Broadcasts
Bononcini, G B: | Per la gloria d'adorarvi (from Griselda) Richard Bonynge (piano) | Donizetti: | Confusa è l'alma mia (from Emilia di Liverpool) 1957 Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Liverpool Music Singers Group, John Pritchard Madre, deh placati..Ah! di contento (from Emilia di Liverpool) 1957 with April Cantelo (soprano) Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Liverpool Music Singers Group, John Pritchard | Handel: | Di, cor mio, quanto t'amai (from Alcina) with Norma Procter (mezzo), Thomas Hemsley (tenor) Capella Coloniensis, Ferdinand Leitner Tornami a vagheggiar (from Alcina) Capella Coloniensis, Ferdinand Leitner Ombre pallide (from Alcina) 1959 Capella Coloniensis, Ferdinand Leitner | Haydn: | Si ti perdo amata sposa, Hob.XXIVb: B1 1956 Dennis Brain (horn) Goldsborough Orchestra, Charles Mackerras | Horn, C E: | Cherry Ripe Richard Bonynge (piano) | Mozart: | Exsultate, jubilate, K165 1959 Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra, Alberto Erede | Rossini: | La fioraia Fiorentina Richard Bonynge (piano) La promessa Richard Bonynge (piano) Soirées musicales: L'orgia Ernest Lush (piano) Soirées musicales: La pastorella dell'Alpi Richard Bonynge (piano) Soirées Musicales: La gita in gondola Richard Bonynge (piano) |
“This collection of broadcast material shows Sutherland's amazing precision and tonal clarity” BBC Music Magazine, February 2013 ***** “The lively, refreshing Exsultate, jubilate, a piece Sutherland didn't record commercially, shows us the capabilities of this kind of voice...you rarely hear it sung so easily and freely, or with such bright, clear, full-bodied tone. Nor is the singing merely mechanical, or inexpressive. The phrasing is deft and shapely in the outer movements...and the central Tu virginum corona is serene.” MusicWeb International, April 2013 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart: Airs Sacrés
Mozart: | Grabmusik, K42: Betracht dies Herz Vesperae solennes de Domenica, K321: Laudate Dominum Et incarnatus est (from Great Mass in C minor) Agnus Dei (from Litaniae Lauretanae, K195) Exsultate, jubilate, K165 Davide Penitente, K469 - Fra l'oscure, ombre funeste, Et incarnatus est Vesperae Solennes de Confessore, K339: Laudate Dominum Litaniae de venerabili altaris sacramento, K243 Agnus Dei (from Coronation Mass) |
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| |  | Mozart: Coronation Mass
On this disc, the Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge performs alongside four soloists and the period instrument ensemble St John’s Sinfonia. The tenor Sam Furness and bass George Humphreys both started their careers as Choral Scholars with this very choir. The mezzo-soprano Frances Bourne is in great demand on the concert platform and has sung with many of Europe’s leading conductors; the soprano Susan Gritton has amassed a vast discography that has earned her two Grammy nominations and includes, for Chandos, recordings of works by Haydn, Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Vaughan Williams. Mozart wrote the ‘Coronation’ Mass just two weeks into his appointment as Court Organist for the Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg. As it was first performed as part of the Easter liturgy of Salzburg Cathedral, perhaps ‘Paschal’ Mass would have been a more suitable title. However, the work achieved great renown after its performance at the Imperial Coronation in Prague, which took place nine months after Mozart’s death, and the name stuck. The opulence of the Gloria, in particular, is unmistakable, and the alternations between soloists and choir add drama to the text, which Mozart scored with operatic clarity. Here the choir forcefully praises and glorifies, while the soloists more intimately bless and worship. Also on this disc is Susan Gritton’s first-ever recorded performance of Mozart’s dramatic solo cantata Exsultate jubilate, and a motet for the Feast of Corpus Christi, Ave verum corpus. Mozart’s Church Sonatas, which number seventeen in all, span a period of ten years; because of their beauty and simplicity they achieved a much wider use, beyond the church and into the concert hall. The Missa brevis, KV 192 highlights Mozart’s ability to write music for the church that was not significantly different in style to the music of the court or the opera house. This mass is known as the ‘Little Credo Mass’ because of the repeated interjections of the short ‘Credo’ theme throughout – a five-note motif which Mozart many years later would use as the main theme of the last movement of his final symphony. “Violinists Margaret Faultless and Simon Jones prove lively exponents of the two sonatas...The vocal soloists, including soprano Susan Gritton, never sound as if they've been bussed in from the opera house, but skilfully match the direct, intelligently shaped singing of the choir...the sound throughout is solid” BBC Music Magazine, May 2012 **** “The St John's boys are in fine voice...St John's Sinfonia, led by the college's musician-in-residence Margaret Faultless, offer transparent accompaniment, with Mozart's ingenious horn parts particularly audible.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2012 “The best things about it are the performances of the choir and orchestra. The former sing with fervour and sensitivity as required, and the tang of the period instruments and subtlety of phrasing of the latter is full of character.” MusicWeb International, December 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart: Requiem
“This is above all a lyrical performance, both chorally and, more particularly, in the solo music, the realisation of which gave me especial pleasure. Giulini’s attentiveness to line is always much in evidence, and he obtains solo singing of a beautifully focused quality.” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Felicity Lott sings Mozart Arias
Mozart: | Exsultate, jubilate, K165 Voi avete un cor fedele, K217 Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583 Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582 Nehmt meinen Dank, ihr holden Gönner!, concert aria K383 Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528 Ruhe sanft, mein holdes Leben (from Zaïde) Lungi da te, mio bene (from Mitridate, Rè di Ponto, KV87) |
The multi award winning Mozart album recorded for ASV, unavailable for several years with accompaniment from the London Mozart Players, directed by Jane Glover. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart: Exsultate jubilate!
“Unreservedly recommended” BBC Music Magazine “This is a sunny and unpretentious disc which deserves to be among the successes of the Mozart year” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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