Marcello: Estro poetico-armonico/Junghanel, Cantus Colln

Track Listings
1. Salmo 10 in F: Mentro Io Tutta Ripongo    
2. Salmo 40 in d: O Beato Chi Pietoso    
3. Salmo 3 in g: O Dio Perche    
4. Salmo 47 in D: Questa Che Al Ciel S'innalza    
5. Salmo 44 in D: Dal Cor Ripieno    

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
It's a funny thing, the way reputations rise and fall and fade. Nowadays, Antonio Vivaldi is about as well-known as a Baroque composer can be, while his contemporary Benedetto Marcello is familiar to only a few (so far). Yet in early 18th-century Venice, both composers were equally respected--in fact, Marcello's music was performed regularly as late as 1790, while Vivaldi's music was considered passé 50 years earlier. Benedetto Marcello, as the scion of a prominent and wealthy Venetian family, didn't have to please the music-buying public (as Vivaldi did) to make a living--and he took advantage of the freedom to follow his own muse. Where Vivaldi stuck closely to established, recognizable forms (such as the ABA da capo aria and the slow-fast-slow-fast church sonata), Marcello subordinated his musical setting to the text in much the way Monteverdi, Cavalli, and Schütz did a century earlier.

In Estro poetico-armonico, a collection of Italian-language Psalm-settings for one to four solo voices, this means that the scoring, meter and/or key may change--sometimes quite abruptly--whenever there's a new idea in the text. The result sometimes seems disjointed or even downright weird, but the music is often quite lovely--and arguably very appropriate for the Psalms, whose sudden changes of mood and imagery have confounded more than one reader. Members of Cantus Cölln--here, just four singers and continuo--give a sensitive and skillful performance of five selections from the Estro. On first hearing, one might wish for more Italian-style extroversion, but the more you listen, the more subtlety, intelligence, and feeling you'll find. It's always that way with Cantus Cölln--the better you know them, the more admirable they seem. --Matthew Westphal

Marcello: Estro poetico-armonico/Junghanel, Cantus Colln, Music, Benedetto Marcello, Konrad Junghanel, Menno Van Delft, Chamber Music & Recitals, Choral, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, More than Two Solo Voices (w or w/o Keyboard or Continuo), Psalm Setting, Two Solo Voices (with or without Keyboard/Continuo), Vocal
Marcello: Estro poetico-armonico/Junghanel, Cantus Colln
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Marcello: Estro poetico-armonico/Junghanel, Cantus Colln
    Konrad Junghanel , and Cantus Colln
    Manufacturer: Harmonia Mundi
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    All Works by Benedetto MarcelloAll Works by Benedetto Marcello | Marcello, Benedetto | ( M ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Baroque (c.1600-1750) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Sacred & Religious | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
    PsalmsPsalms | Vocal Non-Opera | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
    ClassicalClassical | Imports | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B00004TYQV
    Release Date: 2000-07-11

    Tracks:

    1. Salmo 10 in F: Mentro Io Tutta Ripongo
    2. Salmo 40 in d: O Beato Chi Pietoso
    3. Salmo 3 in g: O Dio Perche
    4. Salmo 47 in D: Questa Che Al Ciel S'innalza
    5. Salmo 44 in D: Dal Cor Ripieno

    Amazon.com

    It's a funny thing, the way reputations rise and fall and fade. Nowadays, Antonio Vivaldi is about as well-known as a Baroque composer can be, while his contemporary Benedetto Marcello is familiar to only a few (so far). Yet in early 18th-century Venice, both composers were equally respected--in fact, Marcello's music was performed regularly as late as 1790, while Vivaldi's music was considered passé 50 years earlier. Benedetto Marcello, as the scion of a prominent and wealthy Venetian family, didn't have to please the music-buying public (as Vivaldi did) to make a living--and he took advantage of the freedom to follow his own muse. Where Vivaldi stuck closely to established, recognizable forms (such as the ABA da capo aria and the slow-fast-slow-fast church sonata), Marcello subordinated his musical setting to the text in much the way Monteverdi, Cavalli, and Schütz did a century earlier.

    In Estro poetico-armonico, a collection of Italian-language Psalm-settings for one to four solo voices, this means that the scoring, meter and/or key may change--sometimes quite abruptly--whenever there's a new idea in the text. The result sometimes seems disjointed or even downright weird, but the music is often quite lovely--and arguably very appropriate for the Psalms, whose sudden changes of mood and imagery have confounded more than one reader. Members of Cantus Cölln--here, just four singers and continuo--give a sensitive and skillful performance of five selections from the Estro. On first hearing, one might wish for more Italian-style extroversion, but the more you listen, the more subtlety, intelligence, and feeling you'll find. It's always that way with Cantus Cölln--the better you know them, the more admirable they seem. --Matthew Westphal

    Music Track:

    1. Micro-Classics: Arrangements and Derangements of Some of the World's Most Beloved Melodies
    2. Mozart: Divertimento K 334 / Six German Dances K 606
    3. Music By Bach's Students
    4. Music Of The World
    5. Music of the World America
    6. Music of the World: La Douce France
    7. Norske romanser
    8. Ohana: Livre des prodiges; Anneau du Tamarít
    9. Piano Music of Arnold Bax; Volume 1
    10. Popular Piano Concertos

    Music Track

    music track

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