FRANCESCO CAVALLI Sospiri d’amoreOpera duets and arias. Venice, 1644-1666
GCD 920940
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Giulia Semenzato, sopranoRaffaele Pe, alto
La Venexiana Efix Puleo, violin Daniela Godio, violin Luca Moretti, viola Antonio Papetti, violoncello Alberto Lo Gatto, violone Chiara Granata, triple harp Gabriele Palomba, theorbo Diego Cantalupi, theorboLuca Oberti, harpsichord
Claudio Cavina, direction
Production details
Total playing time 60:07 Recorded in Lodi (Teatro alle Vigne), Italy, in December 2015 Engineered by Matteo Costa Produced by Alberto Lo Gatto Executive producer: Carlos Céster Booklet essay by Olivier Lexa English - Français - Deutsch
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FRANCESCO CAVALLI (1602-1676)Sospiri d’amoreOpera duets and arias. Venice, 1644-1666
01 O luci belle (Eritrea) 02 Qui cadè al tuo piè (Orimonte) 03 Né meste più (Veremonda) 04 Lassa, che fò (Statira) 05 Corone ed honori (Ciro) 06 Vanne intrepido o mio bene (Statira) 07 L’aspetto feroce (Muzio Scevola) 08 D’Amor non si quereli (Ormindo) 09 Io misero fui Rege (Scipione Affricano) 10 Hor che l’aurora (Egisto) 11 Io chiudo nel core (Elena) 12 Alpi gelate (Pompeo Magno) 13 Sì, sì, che questa notte (Ormindo)
About this CD
Two of the brightest singing talents to have emerged from Italy in recent years, Giulia Semenzato and Raffaele Pe, join forces for Sospiri d’amore, a dazzling celebration of operatic arias and duets by that Baroque master of amorous emotions, Francesco Cavalli. Soprano and countertenor are supported by a modern master of Italian Baroque style in Claudio Cavina, who directs La Venexiana (Cavina has also led the Glossa recording of Cavalli’s 1656 opera Artemisia).
Working in Venice with some of the best Italian librettists around in the mid-seventeenth century, Cavalli mined rich emotional seams concerning love in his operas – from tragedy to comedy, from profundity to frivolousness, through to sensuality and vivacity – conjuring up a stream of productions which enjoyed great artistic and financial success; his influence travelled far and wide, and even just in the immediate period of the Baroque this included Rameau, Lully and Handel and Purcell.
With five full-scale duets amongst the solo arias, ariosos and recitar cantando, this new Glossa recording gloriously shows off the talents of two artists who have been gathering important stage experience in the operas of Cavalli: the Venetian Semenzato and the Lombard Pe (who made his debut on the label with The Medici Castrato). Space is also found for one of the vocal genres which Cavalli can lay claim to instigating – the dramatic lamento, here in the form of Lassa, che fò from Statira. In addition, an intriguing picture of Cavalli and his operatic inspiration is to be found in the booklet essay written by Olivier Lexa.