Conversazioni I: Cantatas from a Cardinal's Court
Works by Albinoni, Caldara, Handel, and Alessandro and Domenico Scarlatti.
Sounds Baroque
Andrew Radley, countertenor
Julian Perkins, director
The first in a series of recordings with Avie Records entitled Conversazioni, exploring the wealth of vocal and instrumental music that may have been conceived for artistic gatherings - or conversazioni - in Rome at the turn of the eighteenth century.
Conversazioni I was launched with an acclaimed concert at London's Southbank Centre on July 28th, 2011. The CD features cantatas that vacillate between the despair of unrequited love and the delights of Arcadian bliss, an instrumental overture that typifies the classical restraint of the early Italian Baroque style, and virtuosic keyboard pieces
Reviews
"Andrew Radley's career has developed fast since he left the Royal Academy of Music in 2004. There's a seductive tonal warmth (sometimes too seductive) to his voice. The countertenor does let loose the cutting edge necessary to project the dramatic angst of Handel's Mi palpita il cor ('My heart throbs'). He also interacts as a fully engaged chamber musician with Sounds Baroque and its impressive director and harpsichordist Julian Perkins. It's heartening to discover yet another group of young musicians, fuelled by intellectual curiosity and a corporate commitment to excellence, with enterprise and genuine flair. Roll on Conversazioni II."
- Classic FM
"This cleverly constructed programme is based around the very grand Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni (1667-1740), whose Roman court was a centre for music-making, poetry and all the visual arts. He was a practitioner as well as a patron, writing librettos for operas and cantatas for composers such as Alessandro Scarlatti. Ottoboni collected artworks and promising composers with equal avarice and lived well beyond his very considerable means. His tastes in other directions were also far from ascetic: the booklet notes for this disc tell us that he was reported to have sired over 60 children and to have decorated his bedroom with paintings of his mistresses posing as saints...
The programme is a refreshing mix of chamber cantatas and solo keyboard works. It is instructive to hear harpsichord pieces of Domenico Scarlatti and Handel alongside each other in light of their mutual respect and even some stylistic influence on each other. I also find Scarlatti sonatas easier to absorb when heard in small doses rather than en bloc, as is usually the case. Harpsichordist Julian Perkins is a very congenial performer who conveys an air of effortless virtuosity to this handful of well-chosen works. He plays two rich but contrasting instruments, which are both modern copies of Italian instruments: one from around 1600 and the other after Grimaldi c.1700.
Handel's cantatas owed a great deal to Domenico's (hated) father Alessandro, as do those of his contemporaries Albinoni and Caldara. So again, it is clever programming to hear similar works on similar themes by each of these composers. The Sounds Baroque ensemble, which Perkins directs, takes some small liberties with the scoring in one or two works, to suit its make-up of flute, oboe, cello, lute and harpsichord. These, admirably, are acknowledged in the notes and are probably consistent with the liberty contemporary performers would have allowed themselves. All the cantatas are fine examples of the Arcadian style, in which the loves and losses of shepherds and shepherdesses are depicted with graceful - sometimes slightly ironic - charm and ingratiating melodies... Perkins again shows great quality here and he is very ably partnered by lutenist Andrew Maginley and cellist Jonathan Byers (who soars in Handel's continuo-only Vedendo Amor).
The 'pastoral' qualities of the Baroque oboe and transverse flute are well suited here and the various composers often give them delicious melodies and harmonies. Oboist Joel Raymond plays an instrument he made himself modelled on a Thomas Stanesby instrument from around 1720. It has a wonderfully warm tone and Raymond's sensitive phrasing and gift for apt ornamentation are very impressive... The two woodwinds blend beautifully in Caldara's Clori, mia bella Clori...
Of course, a CD consisting largely of solo cantatas will stand or fall by the quality of the soloist. Happily, English countertenor Andrew Radley is a fine singer and vocal dramatist. .. he uses [the voice] with great intelligence and stylistic awareness, including some really delightful embellishment... ...I was very impressed with him and indeed with the whole ensemble. I look forward eagerly eagerly to the promised 'Conversazioni II'.''
- International Record Review
8 comments:
Flac Tracks (Web DL), covers and booklet pdf. PW: iceshoweronfire
http://bitshare.com/files/5m86uld6/ConvCantforaCarCou.part1.rar.html
http://bitshare.com/files/6wjmp4zn/ConvCantforaCarCou.part2.rar.html
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http://uptobox.com/gj3n9uyhygol/ConvCantforaCarCou.part1.rar
http://uptobox.com/3pw1ds1ipree/ConvCantforaCarCou.part2.rar
Links are interchangeable, Enoy the listening!
Thank you very much.
Oo, its beautiful, thank you!
Hallo, would you mind setting new links? None of existing here works. Thank you.
uptobox links are OK
Could you reup ? Thanxs
@ pat':
there is no need for reupload
I just checked that uptobox links in Horacio comment above (20 October 2014 at 18:26) are OK
Files not found. New links please
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