Hesperion XXI, Jordi Savall - Jerusalem: City Of The Two Peaces - Heavenly Peace and Earthly Peace (2008)
BAND/ARTIST: Hesperion XXI, Jordi Savall
- Title: Jerusalem: City Of The Two Peaces - Heavenly Peace and Earthly Peace
- Year Of Release: 2008
- Label: Alia vox
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: APE (image+.cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 02:32:48
- Total Size: 806 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD 1:
1. Fanfare of Jericho, 1200 av. B.C.
I Heavenly Peace: The Prophets of the Apocalypse and of the Last Judgment
2. The Sibylline Oracles (3rd century B.C.) – Jewish sources, Aramaic music
3. Introduction (Ney & percussion)
4. The Koran: Bismi Al.là ar Rahman (7th Century) – Fatihah Sura I, 2-7. Sufi sources
5. Postludium (qanun)
6. Revelation VI, 12-3 Audi pontus (12th century) (Las Huelgas mss.)
Corresponding to the Cathar Gospel of Pseudo-John V, 4
7. Postludium (medieval harp)
II Jerusalem, a Jewish city, 1000 B.C. - A.D. 70
King David makes Jerusalem the capital of the unified kingdom of Judah and Israel
8. Shofars call
9. Prayer for Jerusalem
10. Instrumental dance. Liberation of the city by Maccabeans, 164 B.C.
11. The Peace of Jerusalem (Psalm 122) - The Psalms of King David (10th Century B.C.)
12. Rabbi Akiva goes to Jerusalem. Talmud, Makkot 24b
13. Song of Exile (Psalm 137, 1-6). Destruction of the Temple and Diaspora, A.D. 70
14. Instrumental lament (shofars)
III Jerusalem, a Christian city, 326 - 1244
15. Stavrotheotokia (Hymn to the Virgin at the foot of the Cross)
Attributed to Emperor Leo VI, 886-912
Queen Helena, the mother of Emperor Constantine is in Jerusalem, A.D. 326
16. Fanfare “Pax in nomine Domine”
17. Pope Urban II, First call to the Crusade, 1095
Recited text in French
18. Crusaders’ song: Pax in nomine Domini
Marcabru (1100-1150) – 1st Crusade
19. Crusaders’ song: Chevalier, mult estes guaritz, 1146
Anonymous 12th Century – 2nd Crusade
20. Conductus : O totius Asie – Anonymous (s. XIII)
21. Planctus « Pax in Nomine Domini »
The Crusaders lose Jerusalem to Saladin
Instrumental
IVa Jerusalem, a city of pilgrimage, 383 - 1326
22. The Dome of the Rock – Ibn Battuta (1304-ca.1377)
23. Zionida: Beautiful city, delight of the world, Judah Ha-Levy (1075-1141)
CD 2:
IVb Jerusalem, a city of pilgrimage, 383 - 1326 (continued)
1. Cantiga de Santa Maria : O ffondo do mar tan châo
Alfnso X the Wise (1121-1284) CSM383
V Jerusalem, an Arabic city and an Ottoman city, 1244-1917
Arabic city, 1244 - 1516
2. Prelude (Oud)
3. The Koran, Sura XVII, 1- Mohammed ascends to heaven from the Temple Mount
4. Danse of the Soma
5. Sallatu Allah – Arabic tradition
Ottoman city, 1517 - 1917
6. Makam Uzäl Sakil “Turna”
Ottoman mss. of Kantemiroglu (17th century)
7. Suleyman the Magnificent’s dream, 1520 - Ottoman legend
Recited text in Turkish
8. Warrior’s march (Anonymous Ottoman)
The Ottoman Conquest of Jerusalem, 1517
VI Jerusalem, a Land of Refuge and Exile, 15th - 20th centuries
9. Palestina hermoza y Santa - Anonymous Sephardic (oral tradition, Sarajevo)
10. Palestinian Lament - Anonymous (oral tradition)
11. Andouni Armenian Lament, 1915 - Anonymous (oral tradition)
12. El male rahamim (Hymn to the victims of Auschwitz), 1941
Historical recording by Shlomo Katz, 1950
13. Funeral March
Instrumental
VII Earthly peace: a duty and a utopia
A plea for peace
14. Instrumental Dialogue
15. A plea for peace in Arabic
16. Adonay Prayer for peace in Hebrew
17. A plea for peace in Armenian
18. Da Pacem (Gregorian)
Dialogue of songs
19. Apo xeno meros (in Greek) - Anonym (Oral Tradition)
20. Ghazal (in Arabic)
21. Ghazal (in Hebrew)
22. Ghazal (Palestine)
23. Siente Hermosa (ladino)
24. Apo xeno meros (in Greek) Gregorian Chorus
25. Durme, hermoza donzella (ladino)
26. Ghazal (in Arabic, Greek & Hebrew)
27. Ghazal (instrumental, Morocco)
28. Final Ensemble (tutti)
29. Final fanfare “Against the barriers of the Spirit”
Performers:
LA CAPELLA REIAL DE CATALUNYA
HESPÈRION XXI
Direction: Jordi Savall
AL - DARWISH (Sufi group of Galilee)
LES TROMPETTES DE JERICHO (Ensemble Instrumental)
Yair Dalal (Oud)
Dvir Cohen, Erez Shmuel Mounk (percussion)
Yagel Harel (shofar)
Wabab Badarne (Kanun)
Usama Abu Ali (flutes, Ney)
Kaled Abu Ali , Razmik Amyan , Luis Vilamajo, Begona Olavide,
Marc Mauillon, Lior Elmalich, Muwafak Shahin Khalil,(chant)
Gaguik Mouradian (kamancha)
Dmitris Psonis (santur, morisca, percussions);
Omar Bashir, Mutlu Torun (Oud)
Fahmi Alqhai (viol)
Driss El Maloumi (chant, Oud)
Khaled Arman (rebab)
Siar Hashimi (darbouka)
DOWNLOAD LINKS
CD 1:
1. Fanfare of Jericho, 1200 av. B.C.
I Heavenly Peace: The Prophets of the Apocalypse and of the Last Judgment
2. The Sibylline Oracles (3rd century B.C.) – Jewish sources, Aramaic music
3. Introduction (Ney & percussion)
4. The Koran: Bismi Al.là ar Rahman (7th Century) – Fatihah Sura I, 2-7. Sufi sources
5. Postludium (qanun)
6. Revelation VI, 12-3 Audi pontus (12th century) (Las Huelgas mss.)
Corresponding to the Cathar Gospel of Pseudo-John V, 4
7. Postludium (medieval harp)
II Jerusalem, a Jewish city, 1000 B.C. - A.D. 70
King David makes Jerusalem the capital of the unified kingdom of Judah and Israel
8. Shofars call
9. Prayer for Jerusalem
10. Instrumental dance. Liberation of the city by Maccabeans, 164 B.C.
11. The Peace of Jerusalem (Psalm 122) - The Psalms of King David (10th Century B.C.)
12. Rabbi Akiva goes to Jerusalem. Talmud, Makkot 24b
13. Song of Exile (Psalm 137, 1-6). Destruction of the Temple and Diaspora, A.D. 70
14. Instrumental lament (shofars)
III Jerusalem, a Christian city, 326 - 1244
15. Stavrotheotokia (Hymn to the Virgin at the foot of the Cross)
Attributed to Emperor Leo VI, 886-912
Queen Helena, the mother of Emperor Constantine is in Jerusalem, A.D. 326
16. Fanfare “Pax in nomine Domine”
17. Pope Urban II, First call to the Crusade, 1095
Recited text in French
18. Crusaders’ song: Pax in nomine Domini
Marcabru (1100-1150) – 1st Crusade
19. Crusaders’ song: Chevalier, mult estes guaritz, 1146
Anonymous 12th Century – 2nd Crusade
20. Conductus : O totius Asie – Anonymous (s. XIII)
21. Planctus « Pax in Nomine Domini »
The Crusaders lose Jerusalem to Saladin
Instrumental
IVa Jerusalem, a city of pilgrimage, 383 - 1326
22. The Dome of the Rock – Ibn Battuta (1304-ca.1377)
23. Zionida: Beautiful city, delight of the world, Judah Ha-Levy (1075-1141)
CD 2:
IVb Jerusalem, a city of pilgrimage, 383 - 1326 (continued)
1. Cantiga de Santa Maria : O ffondo do mar tan châo
Alfnso X the Wise (1121-1284) CSM383
V Jerusalem, an Arabic city and an Ottoman city, 1244-1917
Arabic city, 1244 - 1516
2. Prelude (Oud)
3. The Koran, Sura XVII, 1- Mohammed ascends to heaven from the Temple Mount
4. Danse of the Soma
5. Sallatu Allah – Arabic tradition
Ottoman city, 1517 - 1917
6. Makam Uzäl Sakil “Turna”
Ottoman mss. of Kantemiroglu (17th century)
7. Suleyman the Magnificent’s dream, 1520 - Ottoman legend
Recited text in Turkish
8. Warrior’s march (Anonymous Ottoman)
The Ottoman Conquest of Jerusalem, 1517
VI Jerusalem, a Land of Refuge and Exile, 15th - 20th centuries
9. Palestina hermoza y Santa - Anonymous Sephardic (oral tradition, Sarajevo)
10. Palestinian Lament - Anonymous (oral tradition)
11. Andouni Armenian Lament, 1915 - Anonymous (oral tradition)
12. El male rahamim (Hymn to the victims of Auschwitz), 1941
Historical recording by Shlomo Katz, 1950
13. Funeral March
Instrumental
VII Earthly peace: a duty and a utopia
A plea for peace
14. Instrumental Dialogue
15. A plea for peace in Arabic
16. Adonay Prayer for peace in Hebrew
17. A plea for peace in Armenian
18. Da Pacem (Gregorian)
Dialogue of songs
19. Apo xeno meros (in Greek) - Anonym (Oral Tradition)
20. Ghazal (in Arabic)
21. Ghazal (in Hebrew)
22. Ghazal (Palestine)
23. Siente Hermosa (ladino)
24. Apo xeno meros (in Greek) Gregorian Chorus
25. Durme, hermoza donzella (ladino)
26. Ghazal (in Arabic, Greek & Hebrew)
27. Ghazal (instrumental, Morocco)
28. Final Ensemble (tutti)
29. Final fanfare “Against the barriers of the Spirit”
Performers:
LA CAPELLA REIAL DE CATALUNYA
HESPÈRION XXI
Direction: Jordi Savall
AL - DARWISH (Sufi group of Galilee)
LES TROMPETTES DE JERICHO (Ensemble Instrumental)
Yair Dalal (Oud)
Dvir Cohen, Erez Shmuel Mounk (percussion)
Yagel Harel (shofar)
Wabab Badarne (Kanun)
Usama Abu Ali (flutes, Ney)
Kaled Abu Ali , Razmik Amyan , Luis Vilamajo, Begona Olavide,
Marc Mauillon, Lior Elmalich, Muwafak Shahin Khalil,(chant)
Gaguik Mouradian (kamancha)
Dmitris Psonis (santur, morisca, percussions);
Omar Bashir, Mutlu Torun (Oud)
Fahmi Alqhai (viol)
Driss El Maloumi (chant, Oud)
Khaled Arman (rebab)
Siar Hashimi (darbouka)
Given electric performances and virile repertoire, early music regularly offers uplifting experiences, but do they hit you like bulletins ripped from today s news? Not often.
Matters are different in Jerusalem. Time and again the 52 tracks of Jordi Savall s bumper project bring you slap up against the continuing tragedy of Gaza of wrecked buildings, wailing people, and faiths at war. There will be a great peace throughout the world, until the end of time, sings Montserrat Figueras on track two, following the Greek text of a Sibylline oracle.
The rest of the programme uses the history of Jerusalem to plead for that elusive world peace. Jews, Christians, Arabs, Turks, Armenians are all given a voice in music and words from across the centuries, with different religions and cultures battling for dominance and a homeland as the end of time ticks closer...
As Savall and Manuel Forcano s collection advances, the heart is still moved, the mind still whirrs. Whatever the language and culture adopted, Figueras throbs with humanity. Instrumentally, Savall, Hespèrion XXI and their guests always give us splendour. Track by track you listen, learn, read and wonder. Jerusalem may not bring world peace any closer, but you ll never read the Gaza headlines in quite the same way again. -- Geoff Brown
Matters are different in Jerusalem. Time and again the 52 tracks of Jordi Savall s bumper project bring you slap up against the continuing tragedy of Gaza of wrecked buildings, wailing people, and faiths at war. There will be a great peace throughout the world, until the end of time, sings Montserrat Figueras on track two, following the Greek text of a Sibylline oracle.
The rest of the programme uses the history of Jerusalem to plead for that elusive world peace. Jews, Christians, Arabs, Turks, Armenians are all given a voice in music and words from across the centuries, with different religions and cultures battling for dominance and a homeland as the end of time ticks closer...
As Savall and Manuel Forcano s collection advances, the heart is still moved, the mind still whirrs. Whatever the language and culture adopted, Figueras throbs with humanity. Instrumentally, Savall, Hespèrion XXI and their guests always give us splendour. Track by track you listen, learn, read and wonder. Jerusalem may not bring world peace any closer, but you ll never read the Gaza headlines in quite the same way again. -- Geoff Brown
DOWNLOAD LINKS
Classical | FLAC / APE | CD-Rip
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