Musik (CD)

Francesco Cavalli. Vespro della Beata Vergine

Musiche Sacre (Venice, 1656)

Concerto Palatino; Bruce Dickey; Charles Toet

  • Reihe/Serie
    GLOSSA / Schola Cantorum Basiliensis
  • Verlag
    Glossa Music
  • Jahr
    2012
  • CD-Produktionsnummer
    GCD 922509. 2 CDs
  • Contributor
    Francesco Cavalli
  • Typ
    Musik (CD)
Abstract

Concerto Palatino
Bruce Dickey & Charles Toet, direction
Soloists:
Barbara Borden, Emily van Evera, sopranos
Rodrigo del Pozo, alto
Gerd Türk, Mark Padmore, altos/tenors
Markus Brutscher, tenor
Harry van der Kamp, Peter Zimpel, basses

Content

FRANCESCO CAVALLI
Vespro della Beata Vergine
Musiche sacre (Venice, 1656)

CD I [56:25]
Deus in adiutorium
Domine ad adiuvandum
Maria virgo semper letare
Dixit dominus
Canzon à 3
O quam pulchra es
Laudate pueri
Canzon à 4
Revertere Salomonis
Laetatus sum
Sonata à 6

CD II [64:05]
Oculi tui sancta Dei genitrix
Nisi Dominus
Canzon à 8
In prole mater in partu virgo
Lauda Ierusalem
Canzon à 10
Ave Maris Stella


About this CD
The operas of Francesco Cavalli have earned him a secure place among the masters of the 17th century, yet he has remained almost completely unknown as a composer of sacred music. While the greater part of his time and energy was undoubtedly devoted to the 32 operas which he produced in Venice, Cavalli nonetheless pursued a constant and parallel career in sacred music which spanned 60 years of activity at St. Mark’s. When Cavalli published the Musiche sacre in 1656 he was at the height of his creative powers and at the apex of his career.

As with both Monteverdi’s 1610 collection and his Selva morale of 1640, Cavalli’s Musiche sacre contains components which can be used to fulfill the liturgical requirements of a wide range of feast days. On this recording we present the principle musical items which could have been heard at second Vespers on a feast of the Virgin Mary (in this case the Feast of the Assumption) either at St. Mark’s or at one of a variety of other Venetian churches. It is no more and no less a single unified musical “work” than are Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespro della Beata Vergine, nor can it be, since the liturgy has its own formal requirements going far beyond the music.

An expert group of vocal soloists join the instrumentalists of Concerto Palatino in this landmark recording made in the mid nineties which Glossa is now proud to recover for its Schola Cantorum Basiliensis series.