Robin Johannsen - Caldara: In dolce amore (2014)
BAND/ARTIST: Robin Johannsen
- Title: Caldara: In dolce amore
- Year Of Release: 2014
- Label: deutsche harmonia mundi
- Genre: Classical, Opera
- Quality: flac lossless +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:12:54
- Total Size: 407 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
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01. Scipione nelle Spagne: Pensieri di amante
02. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Sinfonia
03. Begl'occhi adorati (Recitativo)
04. Cantata: Begl'occhi: L'ardor che in petto sento (Aria)
05. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Sin ch'io racchiudo in seno (Recitativo)
06. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Vedrai se un cor più fido (Aria)
07. Scipione Africano: In dolce amore
08. Adriano in Siria: Numi se giusti siete
09. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Sinfonia
10. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Rotte l'aspre catene (Recitativo)
11. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: In due begl'occhi (Aria)
12. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Appena il cor senti l'acerba piaga (Recitativo)
13. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: E pur vi deggio amar (Aria)
14. Demofoonte: Se tutti i mali miei
15. Scipione Africano: Figlia a Roma
16. Temistocle: Chi mai d'iniqua stella
17. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Sinfonia
18. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Credea, Niso (Recitativo)
19. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Fuggi pur (Aria)
20. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Ma non creder ingrato (Recitativo)
21. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Fa presto ritorno (Aria)
22. I disingannati: Una donna
CANTATAS AND OPERAS – the twin pillars of secular vocal music of the baroque period. Few composers – though there are some notable exceptions – eschewed these genres if only because a set of cantatas, engraved or copied professionally and strategically dedicated, could be a comparatively inexpensive starting point for a career while opera lured with prospects of fame and fortune.
The Venetian-born Antonio Caldara (1670–1736) certainly was no exception. His set of twelve cantatas (Op. 3) appeared in 1699; his operas had been staged in theatres in Venice before his move to the court at Mantua in 1700. But with his appointment as maestro da cappella to Francesco Maria Ruspoli, prince of Cerveteri, in Rome from mid-1709 and then as vice-Kapellmeister to the imperial court at Vienna from June 1716, he encountered environments that required intense concentration on the cantata in one and on opera in the other.
In the seven years up to his departure for Vienna Caldara supplied Ruspoli with some 200 cantatas – but no more than three operas. The explanation lies in the ‘conversazioni’ that Ruspoli held in his palazzo on most Sundays throughout the year. At these, eminent clergy and diplomats, cognoscenti of the arts and friends of Ruspoli would hear their host’s small instrumental ensemble and some of his singers in new cantatas from his immensely prolific maestro. Nearly all of these are for soprano or contralto voice and most have a sequence of recitative – aria – recitative – aria. Many begin with an ‘introduzione’ comprising of two well-contrasted allegro movements. ‘Introduzioni’ and arias alike are scored for 3 strings (two violins and a bass line) or unison violins and continuo. Six arias of these three cantatas are intimate rather than grandiose, whether in their overall dimensions, slender accompaniments or small-scale musical ideas, and above all in their texts that deal with personal experiences of love: cruel, unrequited, possessive, delightfully painful, or sweet.
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01. Scipione nelle Spagne: Pensieri di amante
02. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Sinfonia
03. Begl'occhi adorati (Recitativo)
04. Cantata: Begl'occhi: L'ardor che in petto sento (Aria)
05. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Sin ch'io racchiudo in seno (Recitativo)
06. Cantata: Begl'occhi: Vedrai se un cor più fido (Aria)
07. Scipione Africano: In dolce amore
08. Adriano in Siria: Numi se giusti siete
09. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Sinfonia
10. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Rotte l'aspre catene (Recitativo)
11. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: In due begl'occhi (Aria)
12. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: Appena il cor senti l'acerba piaga (Recitativo)
13. Cantata: Rotte l'aspre catene: E pur vi deggio amar (Aria)
14. Demofoonte: Se tutti i mali miei
15. Scipione Africano: Figlia a Roma
16. Temistocle: Chi mai d'iniqua stella
17. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Sinfonia
18. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Credea, Niso (Recitativo)
19. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Fuggi pur (Aria)
20. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Ma non creder ingrato (Recitativo)
21. Cantata: Credea, Niso: Fa presto ritorno (Aria)
22. I disingannati: Una donna
CANTATAS AND OPERAS – the twin pillars of secular vocal music of the baroque period. Few composers – though there are some notable exceptions – eschewed these genres if only because a set of cantatas, engraved or copied professionally and strategically dedicated, could be a comparatively inexpensive starting point for a career while opera lured with prospects of fame and fortune.
The Venetian-born Antonio Caldara (1670–1736) certainly was no exception. His set of twelve cantatas (Op. 3) appeared in 1699; his operas had been staged in theatres in Venice before his move to the court at Mantua in 1700. But with his appointment as maestro da cappella to Francesco Maria Ruspoli, prince of Cerveteri, in Rome from mid-1709 and then as vice-Kapellmeister to the imperial court at Vienna from June 1716, he encountered environments that required intense concentration on the cantata in one and on opera in the other.
In the seven years up to his departure for Vienna Caldara supplied Ruspoli with some 200 cantatas – but no more than three operas. The explanation lies in the ‘conversazioni’ that Ruspoli held in his palazzo on most Sundays throughout the year. At these, eminent clergy and diplomats, cognoscenti of the arts and friends of Ruspoli would hear their host’s small instrumental ensemble and some of his singers in new cantatas from his immensely prolific maestro. Nearly all of these are for soprano or contralto voice and most have a sequence of recitative – aria – recitative – aria. Many begin with an ‘introduzione’ comprising of two well-contrasted allegro movements. ‘Introduzioni’ and arias alike are scored for 3 strings (two violins and a bass line) or unison violins and continuo. Six arias of these three cantatas are intimate rather than grandiose, whether in their overall dimensions, slender accompaniments or small-scale musical ideas, and above all in their texts that deal with personal experiences of love: cruel, unrequited, possessive, delightfully painful, or sweet.
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