Quid est veritas: Music from the Seicento | IBS Classical IBS212021

Quid est veritas: Music from the Seicento

£13.25

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Label: IBS Classical

Cat No: IBS212021

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Vocal/Choral

Release Date: 7th January 2022

Contents

Artists

Olalla Aleman (soprano)
Los Musicos de su Alteza

Conductor

Luis Antonio Gonzalez

Works

Cazzati, Maurizio

Cantate morali e spirituali a voce sola, op.20
» La verita sprezzata
Passacaglio
Sinfonia

Ferrari, Benedetto

Amanti, io vi so dire

Merula, Tarquinio

Hor ch'e tempo di dormire

Monteverdi, Claudio

Madrigals, Book 6: SV107-116
» Lamento d'Arianna, SV107
Scherzi musicali
» Ecco di dolci raggi il sol armato
» Et e pur dunque vero, SV 250
» Quel sguardo sdegnosetto
Si dolce e'l tormento, SV332

Sances, Giovanni Felice

Stabat Mater

Artists

Olalla Aleman (soprano)
Los Musicos de su Alteza

Conductor

Luis Antonio Gonzalez

About

This disc contains a collection of works from the Seicento, most of them well known, although it also includes a composition (Cazzati’s La Verità sprezzata) that is little or not very often heard. Since the foundation of Los Músicos de Su Alteza, we have devoted a substantial part of our work to the performance of 17th century music, often unpublished and forgotten since that time. Consequently, the vanitas argument has recurrently formed part of our programmes; and it would not be unreasonable to say that every early music project is an exercise in vanitas. The subject of this disc is truth, but vanitas has inevitably crept into it. All the vocal works on this recording offer, in their own way, partial glimpses of the truth. The truth, or rather, the truths revealed by these compositions are not always flattering. On the contrary, they are truths that hurt, truths like fists that strike those who suffer the immediate consequences of their knowledge, or those who know in advance the terrible sufferings they will endure in the future. The allegory of Truth itself is also shown transformed into a suffering person. Thus, truth and disillusionment seem inextricably linked.

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