[Kantaten / Ausw.]
CD
- Titel: Handel Uncaged : Cantatas for Alto / Lawrence Zazzo ; Jonathan Manson ; Andrew Maginley ; Guillermo Brachetta
- Originaltitel: Kantaten. Auswahl / Countertenor
- Person(en): Händel, Georg Friedrich [Komposition] ; Zazzo, Lawrence [Gesang] ; Manson, Jonathan [Instrumentalmusik] ; Maginley, Andrew [Instrumentalmusik] ; Brachetta, Guillermo [Instrumentalmusik]
- Sprache: Italienisch
- Originalsprache: Italienisch
- Umfang: 1 CD (74:26 min.) + 1 Booklet (24 Seiten)
- EAN, ISMN/Preis: 5060262791615 : EUR 17.99
- Bestellnummer: INV 1002
- Anmerkungen: Enthält: Udite il mio consiglio HWV 172; Stanco di piu soffrire HWV 167a; Figli del mesto cor HWV 112; Amore uccellatore HWV 176 / 175
- Signatur: MUSIK und TANZ > Klassik CDs
- muc B 3-0 HAEN Klassik
Inhalt: The curious title of the CD is inspired by one of the most unusual of the cantatas composed during Handel's youthful Italian sojourn, Amore uccellatore. The work itself has an odd background. It consists of two short cantatas, Venne voglia (HWV 176) and Vendendo amore (HWV 175), both extant in autograph scores and part of the repertoire. However a further unique and un-attributed copy in the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge includes a dozen more numbers continuing a narrative cast throughout in the first person. Handel scholars have until recently remained undecided about the authenticity of the continuation, but recent work now adds to the likelihood of his authorship. The result is the longest of all the solo cantatas (not, pace Lawrence Zazzo's notes, all the cantatas), running to no fewer than 30 numbers alternating recitative and mostly very brief arias, some simple AB structures rather than da capo. The tragi-comic text is rather different to the Arcadian topics usually found in cantatas of this period, consisting as it does of the first person narrative of a bird as it tries to evade capture (and re-capture) by Cupid and five women. The metaphor is obvious, but the ending, in which the bird is finally left in peace after losing its tail (and thus its beauty), is not clear. The arias, a mixture of the light-hearted and serious, are necessarily contrasted for such a lengthy work. As Zazzo notes, it is unlikely that the cantata would have been given uninterrupted, so he has found short instrumental pieces and improvisations to serve as links, a formula that works well. (WEB)
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