- Disc 1:
-
- Versiculus - Canto Gregoriano - Deus In Adiutorium
- Responsorium - Domine Ad Adiuvandum Me Festina Vespro Beata
- Antiphona I - Canto Gregoriano - Assumpta Est Maria In Caclum
- Psalmus 1 - Psalmus 109: Dixit Dominus
- Concerto - Nigra Sum
- Antiphona 2 - Canto Gregoriano - Maria Virgo Assumpta Est
- Psalmus II - Psalmus 112: Laudate Pueri
- Concerto - Pulchra Es
- Antiphona III - Canto Gregoriano - In Odorem Unguentorum Tuorem Currimus
- Psalmus III - Psalmus 121: Laetatus Sum
- Sonata A 2 Per Violine E Violone - (Giovanni Paolo Cima)
- Antiphonia IV - Canto Gregoriano - Benedicta Filia Tua Domino
- Psalmus IV - Psalmus 126: Nisi Dominus
- Concerto - Audi Coelum
- Disc 2:
-
- Antiphonia V - Canto Gregoriano - Pulchra Es Et Decora, Filia Hierusalem
- Psalmus V - Psalmus 147: Lauda Jerusalem Dominum
- Sonata A 3 Per Violino, Cornetto E Violone (Giovanni Paolo Cima)
- Capitulum - Canto Gregoriano - In Omnibus Requiem Quaesivi
- Hymnus - Ave Maris Stella
- Versus Et Responsorium - Canto Gregoriano - Exaltata Est Sancta Dei Genitrix
- Antiphonia VI - Canto Gregoriano - Hodie Maria Virgo Caelos Ascendit
- Magnificat
- Sonata Sopra Sancta Maria
- Oratio - Canto Gregoriana - Dominus Vobiscum
- Versus - Cato Gregoriano - Dominus Vobiscum/Benedicamus Domino
- Concerto - Duo Seraphim
- Antiphonia Beatae Mariae Virginis - Salve Regina
- Versus Et Responsorium - Canto Gregoriano - Ora Pro Nobis
- Oratio - Canto Gregoriano - Dominus Vobiscum
- Conclusio - Canto Gregoriano - DivinumAuxilium Maneat Semper Nobiscum
Prekės Aprašymas
GABRIELI CONSORT & PLAYERS/PAUL MCCREESH
John Eliot Gardiner's 1974 recording of Monteverdi's extraordinary Vespers of 1610 was a landmark, helping establish the modern reputations of both music and conductor. In 1989, to celebrate the silver anniversary of his Monteverdi Choir (named in honor of this work), he recorded the cycle again--this time live in the Basilica of San Marco in Venice. He made use of resources he didn't have 15 years earlier, like period instruments and, for soloists, a mix of early-music specialists (Ann Monoyios and Michael Chance) and opera singers (the young Bryn Terfel). As a bonus, he recorded both the standard version of the Magnificat for voices and instruments and Monteverdi's published alternative setting for six voices and organ. Gardiner gives a vigorous, theatrical, yet very detailed account of this music, caressing some phrases, thundering out others, using lots of carefully judged crescendos and decrescendos. On its terms, it works, thanks largely to the wondrous Monteverdi Choir, which can do anything asked of it. But there seems little of the sacred in the performance and almost nothing of the spontaneous or natural--the carefully calibrated effects can come across as overdetermined. In his booklet essay, Gardiner makes quite a point of his fidelity to the published score, yet he liberally adds instruments to double the voices, and he takes an odd liberty with the much-loved duet-trio "Duo seraphim": at the close of each half of the motet, at the words "plena est omnis terra," he has the tenors of his chorus take over from his soloists. If you're uncomfortable with that sort of thing, go for Andrew Parrott's marvelous one-singer-per-part performance or (for those who want a full chorus) for the version of William Christie or that of René Jacobs; if these additions don't faze you and you want a high-powered, adrenaline-rush performance, you'll find it here. --Matthew Westphal
John Eliot Gardiner's 1974 recording of Monteverdi's extraordinary Vespers of 1610 was a landmark, helping establish the modern reputations of both music and conductor. In 1989, to celebrate the silver anniversary of his Monteverdi Choir (named in honor of this work), he recorded the cycle again--this time live in the Basilica of San Marco in Venice. He made use of resources he didn't have 15 years earlier, like period instruments and, for soloists, a mix of early-music specialists (Ann Monoyios and Michael Chance) and opera singers (the young Bryn Terfel). As a bonus, he recorded both the standard version of the Magnificat for voices and instruments and Monteverdi's published alternative setting for six voices and organ. Gardiner gives a vigorous, theatrical, yet very detailed account of this music, caressing some phrases, thundering out others, using lots of carefully judged crescendos and decrescendos. On its terms, it works, thanks largely to the wondrous Monteverdi Choir, which can do anything asked of it. But there seems little of the sacred in the performance and almost nothing of the spontaneous or natural--the carefully calibrated effects can come across as overdetermined. In his booklet essay, Gardiner makes quite a point of his fidelity to the published score, yet he liberally adds instruments to double the voices, and he takes an odd liberty with the much-loved duet-trio "Duo seraphim": at the close of each half of the motet, at the words "plena est omnis terra," he has the tenors of his chorus take over from his soloists. If you're uncomfortable with that sort of thing, go for Andrew Parrott's marvelous one-singer-per-part performance or (for those who want a full chorus) for the version of William Christie or that of René Jacobs; if these additions don't faze you and you want a high-powered, adrenaline-rush performance, you'll find it here. --Matthew Westphal
Papildoma informacija
| Atlikėjas | MONTEVERDI, C. |
|---|---|
| Pavadinimas | 1610 VESPERS |
| Formatas | 2 CD |
| Barkodas | 0028947797739 |
| Leidėjas | DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON |
| Kodas | 002894779773 |
| Pradėta prekiauti | 2011.09.29 |
| Žanras | CLASSICAL |
| Kilmė | Global |
| ID | K34197 |
| Dirigentas | PAUL MCCREESH |
| Ilgas pavadinimas | 1610 VESPERS |
| Instrumentai | Ne |
| Orkestras | GABRIELI CONSORT & PLAYERS |
| Solistai | Ne |
| Žanras | Ne |
| DVD info | |
| Pristatymo laikas darbo dienomis (galioja tik Lietuvoje) | 14 - 30 |













