Daily deals
  SHOP.COM

 > Music >  Music

Isabella Leonarda: Vespro a cappella della Beata Vergine
Item  TCT410379
Price  $12.58
$0.25
Cashback
Format: CD | Performer: Nova Ars Cantandi | Released by Tactus Records in 2007 | Import

Go to store
Add to Trend
Set Price Alert
Similar Items You May Like
Scarlatti: Euridice Dall'Inferno: La Concettione Della Beata Vergine
$8.79 - $8.89
up to $0.18
Cashback
2 Stores

Scarlatti: Euridice Dall'Inferno: La Concettione Della Beata Vergine
$8.79 - $8.89
up to $0.18
Cashback
Format: CD | Performer: Ars Lyrica Houston | Released by Naxos Records in 2009
2 Stores
Scarlatti: Euridice Dall'Inferno: La Concettione Della Beata Vergine
Italian Music of The 15th Century
$12.49 - $13.21
up to $0.26
Cashback
2 Stores
||||
Store Info
 
Product Info
Isabella Leonarda: Vespro a cappella della Beata Vergine
Music by cloistered nuns for convent use remains an almost untouched repository of music in the European concert tradition, and the investigative qualities of Italy's Tactus label have seldom been put to better use than in recordings featuring music of this kind. The Vespro a cappella della beata vergine come from Isabella Leonarda, a composer who worked in the middle and late seventeenth century at the Congregation of the Virgins of Saint Ursula in Novara, in northern Italy near Milan. The music, except for the organ pieces by Frescobaldi and Cima that are inserted into the sequence of events, is not Baroque in nature at all; it is a pure representative of the prima prattica, the traditional Renaissance polyphony that continued to be practiced in churches and eventually evolved into the discipline of "Palestrina counterpoint" as it is known today. What's interesting about Leonarda's works, some of which are instrumental and number in the hundreds (she lived to be 84 and was composing for almost the whole time), is that their model, or at least their musical kin, among the composers of the late Renaissance, is not the ethereal and totally controlled Palestrina but Orlande de Lassus, with a good admixture of early Monteverdi: her works are both harmonically bolder and contrapuntally stricter than those of Palestrina, with heavy use of imitation that proceeds into various kinds harmonic motion. Sample especially the vigorous text expression of the Lauda Jerusalem Dominum, track 8. The one-voice-per-part performance given here is perhaps undesirable, for it would seem likelier that a group of singers would have been used if available, but the result in this case is an appealing madrigal-like feel. Also of interest is that the music, in four parts, is written for and performed by an all-male group, with a countertenor on the top line (Alessandro Carmignani successfully handles the wide compass of Leonarda's writing). Not enough is known about Leonarda to say why she did not write for female voices here, and the rest of her work has barely been touched; the notes (in Italian and English) suggest that she may have intended her music to be distributed as widely as possible. It is thus welcome news that it has been rescued from the basement of history after languishing there for more than three centuries. ~ James Manheim, Rovi
More Similar Items You Might Like
Product information and prices are provided by merchants and/or third party sources. At SHOP.COM we do everything we can to ensure the accuracy of the product information or prices displayed, but occasionally, errors occur. Please notify SHOP.COM of any information or pricing inaccuracies so that we may immediately notify the merchants to correct the problem. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.