CLAUDIO MONTEVERDIPrimo & Nono Libri dei Madrigali
La VenexianaClaudio Cavina
GCD 920921
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Performing artists
La Venexiana Claudio Cavina, director
Roberta MameliNadia RagniFrancesca CassinariClaudio CavinaRaffaele GiordaniGiuseppe MalettoMatteo BellottoGabriele PalombaMarta GraziolinoAnna Fontanastel
Production details
Playing time: 73'00Recorded at Chiesa di San Carlo, Modena (Italy), in July 2006Engineered by Roberto MeoProduced by Sigrid Lee & La VenexianaExecutive producer: Carlos CésterArt direction: Valentín Iglesias (00:03:00)Booklet essay: Stefano RussomannoEnglish Français Deutsch Español Italiano
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CLAUDIO MONTEVERDI (1567-1643)
I. Primo Libro dei Madrigali, 1587
Ch’ami la vita mia Se per avervi, ohimè A che tormi il ben mio Amor, per tua mercé Baci soavi e cari Se pur non mi consenti Filli cara ed amata Poiché del mio dolore Fumia la pastorella Se nel partir da voi Tra mille fiamme Usciam, ninfe, omai Questa ordì il laccio La vaga pastorella Amor s’il tuo ferire Donna s’io miro voi Ardo, sì, ma non tanto
II. Nono Libro dei Madrigali, 1651
Bel pastor Zefiro torna Alcun non mi consigliDi far sempre gioire Amor Quando dentro al tuo seno Non voglio amare Com’è dolce oggi l’auretta Alle danze, alle gioie Perché se m’odiavi Sì, sì, ch’io v’amo Su, su, pastorelli vezzosi O mio bene, o mia vita
About this CD
In bringing together the First and Ninth Books of Madrigals by Claudio Monteverdi it is tempting to ask the question whether some common denominator exists which is capable of encircling the entire range of ideas expressed by this journey, the duration of which lasted for over half a century. Monteverdi himself offered a clue to this question in a letter dated December 1616, where he wrote: “How will I be able to imitate the conversing of the winds if they speak not? And across them, will I be able to stir the emotions?” It is precisely his passion for the written word which guided the composer all through his career. Themes such as the world, feelings, the entirety of life, are revealed in a constant stream of words that are sung, cried, whispered, hushed and dreamt. Their rhythm, sonority and colour represent, for Monteverdi, direct proof of the mobility of the emotions, the primary material on which the composer needs to work. Published in 1587 in Venice by Angelo Gardano, the Madrigali a cinque voci… Libro primo acts as the departure point of an exploration which was to change the face of the genre over the following decades, voyaging towards new horizons in which not only music but the actual vision of the world itself was to become irrevocably altered. The Monteverdian voyage with the madrigal concludes with a posthumous (albeit detachable) chapter. Published by Alessandro Vincenti in 1651, the Libro Nono was conceived without the involvement of the composer, who had died some eight years previously. The project was born from Vincenti’s desire to exploit the pull which the composer’s name was still exerting...