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Piangete
Cantatas & Motets by Giacomo Carissimi
Concerto Delle Donne
Gill Ross
Donna Deam
Elin Manahan Thomas
Alastair Ross
David Miller
Signum Records is
delighted to announce that the ensemble Concerto delle Donne will
release their first disc on Signum Records in 2003. The disc will feature
the cantatas and motets of Giacomo Carissimi.
Carissimi is
sometimes thought of as a "one-work composer" known to the average
music-lover only for his oratorio Jephte. Choral
Societies looking for 17th century music earlier than Purcell
are therefore likely to choose Jephte.
Alastair Ross first became interested in Carissimi’s music for
the 3-soprano Concerto delle Donne line-up when he was asked to prepare a
programme “Handel and his predecessors in Italy” for the 1977 Göttingen
Festival. A review of Carissimi's oeuvre showed that there were
several pieces by Carissimi in the library of Christ Church Oxford just
waiting to be performed by the group! He chose the cantata Siam tre miseri
piangenti which has become a regular item in their concerts and which is
central to this recording. It’s a marvellous piece, full of pain,
suffering and anger. The three voices really are equal in the way they
intertwine and react to one another. Donna Deam’s solo Piangete and Gill
Ross' and Elin Thomas’s duet Ahi, non torna are similar in mood. Maybe in our cynical 21st
century we find it difficult to relate to these highly emotional,
self-obsessed, texts, but there’s no denying that they inspired some
wonderful music! Va dimanda al mio pensiero’ and Si dia
bando, alla speranza are lighter in mood – both attractive, tuneful
pieces.
There is plenty of variety in the church music as
well.
Cum reverteretur David, which begins the CD, is brilliant and virtuosic,
a dramatic account of the rivalry between David and Saul. The duet
Exulta, gaude, filia Sion is a joyful celebration of Christmas. In
Benedictus Deus et Pater the voices weave rich dissonances to convey the
suffering of the text; there’s something of the mood of Allegri’s Miserere here.
In addition to the vocal pieces the disc includes a set of
variations by Frescobaldi and Michelangelo Rossi’s flamboyant and
chromatic Toccata Settima for harpsichord, together with Kapspereger’s
charming improvisations for chittarone.
We believe that only one of the Carissimi pieces
on this CD, Exulta, gaude, filia Sion, has been recorded before, so
the disc will be an important event in the recorded-music world, and one which we
hope will revive interest in this unjustly neglected composer.
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