GEORG FRIEDRICH HAENDEL Le Cantate per il Marchese Ruspoli
Emanuela Galli Roberta Invernizzi La Risonanza Fabio Bonizzoni
GCD 921522
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Performing artists
Emanuela Galli, soprano Roberta Invernizzi, soprano
La Risonanza Fabio Bonizzoni, harpsichord and direction
Luca Marzana, trumpet Nick Robinson, solo violin Carlo Lazzaroni, violinElena Tel ò, violin Barbara Altobello, violin Elisa Citterio, violin Livia Baldi, violin Caterina Dell’Agnello, cello Vanni Moretto, violone
Production details
Playing time: 74’03 Recorded at Chiesa di San Salvatore, Rodengo Saiano, Brescia (Italy), in October 2005 Engineered by Adriaan Verstijnen Produced by Tini Mathot Executive producer: Carlos Céster Editorial assistant: María Díaz Art direction & design: oficina tresminutos 00:03:00 Booklet essay: Karl Boehmer Booklet in English-Français-Deutsch-Español
Links & downloads
Commercial release sheet (PDF)
Buy this product
GEORG FRIEDRICH HANDEL (1685-1759)
Le Cantate Italiane, vol. IIRome, 1707
1-7 Armida Abbandonata (Dietro l’orme fugaci), HWV 105
8-14 Diana Cacciatrice (Alla caccia), HWV 79
15-23 Tu Fedel? Tu Costante?, HWV 171
24-31 Notte Placida e Cheta, HWV 142
32-37Un’Alma Innamorata, HWV 173
About this CD
In the autumn of last year Fabio Bonizzoni and La Risonanza embarked on a journey taking a fresh look – musicologically as well as musically – at the chamber cantatas to Italian texts and with instrumental accompaniment composed by Georg Frideric Handel during his stay in Italy. Where the first release on Glossa focused on works associated with Cardinal Pamphili in Rome, this new recording contains pieces – including the dramatic cantata Armida abbandonata and Handel’s ‘own’ Hunt Cantata – originating in the establishment of the Marquis Ruspoli and written for sopranos such asMargherita Durastante and Vittoria Tarquini.
Here it is the Milanese soprano Emanuela Galli who takes centre stage (and she also has taken on the role of Eurydice in Glossa’s recent recording of Claudio Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo directed by Claudio Cavina). Roberta Invernizzi returns, joining forces with Galli, for Diana cacciatrice. Making use of recent research the booklet notes – written on this occasion by Karl Boehmer – help to illuminate for us Handel’s sojourn in Italy in 1707 and the origins of the five cantatas recorded here.