Il giardino dei sospiri
£15.15
In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day
Despatch Information
This despatch estimate is based on information from both our own stock and the UK supplier's stock.
If ordering multiple items, we will aim to send everything together so the longest despatch estimate will apply to the complete order.
If you would rather receive certain items more quickly, please place them on a separate order.
If any unexpected delays occur, we will keep you informed of progress via email and not allow other items on the order to be held up.
If you would prefer to receive everything together regardless of any delay, please let us know via email.
Pre-orders will be despatched as close as possible to the release date.
Label: Pentatone
Cat No: PTC5186725
Format: Hybrid SACD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 17th May 2019
Contents
Works
AtaliaAngelica e Medoro: Or ch'e dal sol difesa
Arianna abbandonata, S98
Maria dolorata
Artists
Magdalena Kozena (mezzo-soprano)Collegium 1704
Conductor
Vaclav LuksWorks
AtaliaAngelica e Medoro: Or ch'e dal sol difesa
Arianna abbandonata, S98
Maria dolorata
Artists
Magdalena Kozena (mezzo-soprano)Collegium 1704
Conductor
Vaclav LuksAbout
Il giardino dei sospiri is a collection of scenes from secular cantatas on tragic love, ranging from Handel’s Qual ti riveggio (Ero e Leandro, HWV 150) to new editions of works by Leo (Angelica e Medoro), Marcello (Arianna abbandonata) and Gasparini (Atalia). These vocal works are connected through instrumental pieces by Handel (Sinfonia from Agrippina) and Vinci (Sinfonia from Maria dolorata).
Initially conceived as a scenic project, Il giardino dei sospiri offers a richly-faceted and profoundly moving aural drama. Kožená interprets the tragic heroines of these love stories with fervour, accompanied by Václav Luks and Collegium 1704.
Sound/Video
Paused
-
1Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Prestissimo
-
2Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Adagio assai
-
3Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - In minuet. Presto
-
4Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Dove, misera, dove
-
5Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Come mai puoi
-
6Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Se fia che pensi, o caro
-
7Marcello: Arianna abbandonata - Che dolce foco in petto
-
8Vinci: Sinfonia from 'Maria dolorata' - (Allegro)
-
9Vinci: Sinfonia from 'Maria dolorata' - Largo
-
10Vinci: Sinfonia from 'Maria dolorata' - (Minuet)
-
11Gasparini: Atalia - Ombre, cure sospeti
-
12Leo: Angelica e Medoro - Or ch'e dal sol difesa
-
13Leo: Angelica e Medoro - Siedi, siedi ben mio
-
14Leo: Angelica e Medoro - Che detto avranno mai
-
15Handel: Agrippina, HWV 6 - Sinfonia
-
16Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Qual ti riveggio, oh Dio
-
17Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Empio mare, onde crudeli
-
18Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Amor, che ascoso ne' suoi vaghi lumi
-
19Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Se la morte non vorra
-
20Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Questi dalla mia fronte
-
21Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Si muora, si muora
-
22Handel: Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 - Ecco, gelide labbra
Europadisc Review
The Italian 18th-century cantata is a better-known genre than it used to be, largely thanks to a number of excellent recordings in recent years. But Kožená and Luks manage to turn up some works that are still rarities, starting their journey in Venice with Arianna abbandonata by Benedetto Marcello (1686-1739). The classical myth of Ariadne abandoned on Naxos by Theseus only to be wooed by Bacchus is an enduring one that has enjoyed some memorable musical treatments. Marcello was a Venetian nobleman and amateur composer with conservative tastes, yet what he lacked in lyrical flair he made up for in inventiveness. After a stylishly performed opening sinfonia in three movements, an intensely felt recitative with sustained strings and brooding plucked continuo outlines Ariadne’s plight. The central slow aria, complete with Vivaldian harmonic sequences, hits home here thanks to some deftly deployed harmonic shading and Kožená’s clear yet gently caressing vocal line, while the strikingly upbeat concluding aria suggests that Ariadne is already anticipating the imminent arrival of Bacchus.
Another three-movement sinfonia, from Leonardo Vinci’s Neapolitan oratorio Maria dolorata, leads to a powerful performance of the multi-section aria ‘Ombre, cure sospetti, from Francesco Gasparini’s Venetian oratorio Atalia (1696). Here Kožená gives a masterclass in presenting a range of emotions and tones to express Atalia’s torment and anxiety at having ordered the murder of her descendants. It will have you on the edge of your seat.
The listener is then transported to Naples for the pastoral idyll of Angelica e Medoro by Leonardo Leo (1694-1744). Its gentle vocal lines are stylishly unfolded by Kožená, while Luks and his musicians make the most of the plentiful nature allusions in the exceptionally vivid instrumental accompaniments, while the concluding aria ‘Che detto avranno mai’ hints at the unspoken joys (and pains) of the two lovers in a performance that clearly relishes the music’s lightly-worn elegance.
All roads, it is said, lead to Rome, and that is where this musical journey leads too, in the form of Qual ti riveggio, HWV 150 (1707), one of Handel’s finest solo Rome cantatas, composed for Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni. The action itself takes place at the strait of Hellespont where the lovers Ero and Leandro meet every evening, Ero’s lantern guiding Leandro across the strait. But the lantern has been blown out, and Leandro has drowned, giving rise to a memorable sequence of emotional outpourings that prompt some of the young composer’s most striking ideas, before Ero throws herself into the depths. Here Kožená, Luks and Collegium 1704 are at the top of their game, in a performance that brings out the beauty as well as the expressive immediacy of Handel’s music. A particular highlight is the vigorous, boldly inventive, gavotte-like central aria ‘Se la morte non vorrŕ’, oboes adding incisiveness to the sound without any loss of beauty. The third aria, ‘Si muora, si muora’, which precedes the closing recitative, is almost unbearably intense, setting the seal on an outstanding performance from the Czech mezzo.
Thoroughly researched, lovingly performed and recorded, and with a judicious selection of purely instrumental sinfonias to balance the high emotions of the vocal numbers, this is a peach of a disc that will delight Magdalena Kožená’s many admirers as well as all lovers of Baroque music.
Reviews
Error on this page? Let us know here
Need more information on this product? Click here