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Gemma Bertagnolli - Passionate Baroque Arias

Details

Format: CD
Catalog: 0094071
Rel. Date: 07/13/2010
UPC: 842977040715

Passionate Baroque Arias
Artist: Gemma Bertagnolli
Format: CD
New: In Stock - Orders filled within 2-3 business days $13.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. L'astarto, Opera: Sinfonia. Allegro
2. Il Trionfo Del Tempo E Del Disinganno, Oratorio, HWV 46A: Una Schiera Di Piaceri
3. Water Music Suite No. 1 for Orchestra in F Major, HWV 348: Minuetto
4. Adriano in Siria, Opera: Quel Cor Che Mi Donasti
5. Water Music Suite No. 1 for Orchestra in F Major, HWV 348: (...)
6. L'olimpiade, Opera in 3 Acts, RV 725: Lo Seguitai Felice
7. Concerto Grosso in G minor, Op.6/6, HWV 324: Affettuoso, Allegro Ma Non Troppo
8. Concerto Grosso in B Flat Major, Op.3/2, HWV 313: Andante
9. Arianna in Creta, Opera, HWV 32: Son Qual Stanco Pellegrino 1
10. Double Horn Concerto, for 2 Horns, Strings ; Continuo in F Major, RV 538: Largo 1
11. Rodelinda, Regina De' Langobardi, Opera, HWV 19: Ritorna, Caro Dolce Mio Tesoro 1
12. Giulio Cesare in Egitto, Opera, HWV 17: Sinfonia 1
13. Orlando Finto Pazzo, Opera in 3 Acts, RV 727: La Speranza Verdeggiando 1
14. Il Trionfo Del Tempo E Del Disinganno, Oratorio, HWV 46A: Tu Del Ciel Ministro Eletto

Details:

Bertagnoli (soprano)

More Info:

In 18th-century Italian opera the solo aria - a form of musical expression held in high favor by Humanist culture (owing to it's close link with the word); was the main, indeed almost the exclusive, vehicle for expressing the characters' feelings and emotions. And the presentation of different expressive situations is surely one of the most characteristic features of Italian opera. Unlike it's French counterpart, Italian opera showed little interest in any kind of realistic representation of the plot. Instead it focused on the music. Or more specifically, it concentrated on the capacity of the human voice to arouse emotions, of which love is naturally one of the most frequently encountered. As a result, the diverse facets of love (right down to it's idealization or to it's sacrifice for reasons of state) form the standard fare of opera plots. It is something of a commonplace to consider 18th-century opera as little more than a battleground for the display of virtuoso singers. But it would be truer to say that the singers became the unchallenged masters of the opera stage precisely because their superb technique and vocal skills made it possible to highlight the emotions and give musical life to the 'affects'; in other words, to the different states of mind of the various characters. It is no coincidence that the very etymology of the term 'aria' (from the Latin aer) is linked to the concept of a musical 'mode', in the sense of a 'manner of singing'.
        
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