Gesualdo | ECM New Series 4811800

Gesualdo

£13.25

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Label: ECM New Series

Cat No: 4811800

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 18th September 2015

Contents

Artists

Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir
Tallinn Chamber Orchestra

Conductor

Tonu Kaljuste

Works

Dean, Brett

Carlo for choir and string orchestra

Gesualdo, Carlo

Madrigali libro sesto (Madrigals Book 6)
» Moro, lasso, al mio duolo
O Crux benedicta (arr. Tonu Kaljuste for string orchestra)

Tuur, Erkki-Sven

L'ombra della croce
Psalmody

Artists

Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir
Tallinn Chamber Orchestra

Conductor

Tonu Kaljuste

About

This absorbing project finds Australian composer Brett Dean and Estonian composer Erkki-Sven Tüür drawing inspiration in very different ways from the music, life and times of Carlo Gesualdo, and juxtaposes these reflections with Gesualdo’s own music.

The music of Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa (1566-1613) has exerted a powerful influence on composers down the ages. His highly-charged, mannerist, idiosyncratic vocal music constitutes “a gallery of dramatically-lit portraits of human emotions with a heavy emphasis on the extremes of joy and despair” (to quote former Hilliard Ensemble singer Gordon Jones).

Brett Dean’s ‘Carlo’ (composed 1997) begins with pure Gesualdo from the 6th Book of Madrigals, then gradually enters a very 20th century sound-world. Through use of both sampled and real-time voices as well as increasingly intense strings, Dean paints an hallucinatory picture of the Prince of Verona’s state of mind as he is driven toward his violent crimes of passion (he murdered his wife and her lover when he caught them in flagrante delicto) .

Erkki Sven Tüür’s ‘L’Ombra di Gesualdo’ references the Gesualdo motet ‘O crux benedicta’ from the 'Cantiones sacrae', and Gesualdo’s piece is also heard in an arrangement for strings by Tüür.

The programme is completed by Tüür’s ‘Psalmody’, which is without a Gesualdo-inspired subtext but it, too, cross-references older and newer music, within the narrower time-frame of Tüür’s own oeuvre.

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