ANTONIO CALDARA Il più bel nome Barcelona, 1708
El Concierto Español Emilio Moreno
GCD 920310 2 CDs in slipcase
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Performing artists
El Concierto Español Emilio Moreno, direction
María Espada, soprano Raquel Andueza, soprano Marianne Beate Kielland, mezzo-soprano Robin Blaze, countertenor Agustín Prunell-Friend, tenor
Production details
Recorded live in Lleida (Auditori Enric Granados), Spain, in November 2009 Engineered and produced by Aline Blondiau and Manuel Mohino Executive producer: Carlos Céster Design: Valentín Iglesias Booklet essays: Miquel Desclot, Miguel Ángel Aguilar English Français Deutsch Español Català
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Commercial release sheet (PDF)
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ANTONIO CALDARA (1670-1736)
Il più bel nome [Libretto: Pietro Pariati]
CD I [54:32]
Prima parte
CD II [62:59]
Seconda parte
Acerca de este CD
Un momento clave para la llegada de la música italiana a tierras españolas se produjo en verano de 1708, cuando Antonio Caldara –que había visto cómo la Guerra de Sucesión Española limitaba sus oportunidades de escribir obras dramáticas para el duque de Mantua, gran amante de la ópera– llegó a Barcelona, aceptando un encargo del Archiduque Carlos («Carlos III»), pretendiente al trono español, para componer una obra con motivo de sus celebraciones nupciales.
A lo largo de tres siglos, esta serenata (Il più bel nome) permaneció olvidada (como mucha de la exitosa música teatral escrita por este compositor veneciano), situación que ahora corrigen Emilio Moreno y El Concierto Español junto a un extraordinario quinteto de solistas. Se recupera así un gran canto de alabanza a Santa Isabel y, por extensión, a la futura esposa del Archiduque Carlos, Isabel Cristina de Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.
Con gran estilo, María Espada, Robin Blaze, Raquel Andueza, Marianne Beate Kielland y Agustín Prunell-Friend evocan, a través de esta alegoría mitológica con libreto de un destacado autor para la escena, Pietro Pariati, el esplendor de la cultura cortesana a principios del siglo XVIII (y, en muchos sentidos, la duradera pasión por la ópera en Barcelona). Igualmente elegante es la dirección de Moreno al frente de El Concierto Español, en una grabación realizada tras la presentación de la obra en la ciudad de Lérida, en otoño de 2009.
There is still much work to be done in creating performing editions of Baroque music originating in Spain (and then going out and performing it...), yet this is just one area of musical life today that Emilio Moreno is contributing to. To follow on from delving into the popular culture of the turn of the 19th century, as epitomized by the tonadilla, which he successfully recreated for Glossa on La Tirana contra Mambrú, Moreno – along with El Concierto Español – turns now to the world of allegorical courtly serenatas as the shifting political national landscapes of the 17th century were disintegrating into the War of the Spanish Succession. [read more...]
If Spanish music from the Renaissance has become increasingly appreciated in recent decades that from the turn of the 19th century remains a blur for many. Not so for Emilio Moreno who – in addition to his musical expertise inthe Baroque and Classical, especially that gained through long association with the Orchestra of the 18th Century – has become something of a specialist in the music of the Age of Enlightenment in Spain. Moreno has been combining Herculean labours transcribing the scores of tonadillas from two centuries past with bringing their populist texts and music to audiences of the 21st century – both with singular success. Here he describes the nature of the dramatic genre that is the tonadilla and the level of its original success acting as barometer of the feelings of the ordinary people in Spain, especially those of Madrid. [read more...]
Whether it is as a string player, as a director of ensembles like La Real Cámara or El Concierto Español, or as a teacher and a scholar Emilio Moreno has been applying his talents in the cause of the music that he loves and defends: the previously ignored area of the Spanish Baroque and pre-Classical eras. Fortunately — and through the efforts of musicians such as Moreno — this area is far less of a desert on record than it once was (for Moreno there could still be yet more concerts). Moreno’s wide experience of such music is enhanced by his long-standing involvement with Frans Brüggen’s Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, where he is the leader of the viola section.[read more...]