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With this new recording, Thibault Noally and his ensemble Les Accents are providing a portrait of the genre of the oratorio at the turn of the 17th and 18th centuries, in four stylistic schools: Naples, Rome, Venice and Vienna, in the hands of Scarlatti-père, Caldara, Porpora, Bononcini and Gasparini. From prayer to fury, and with plenty of vocal fireworks, these pieces (nine of them have never been released yet) have been selected especially for Blandine Staskiewicz and are perfect examples of balance between the quality of musical material, dramatic tension in the lyrics, and fervent feeling. The "oratorio", in the context of the Counter-Reformation, made a return to scripture, and so mixed art with religious meditation. Its first musical forms foregrounded "speaking-singing" or what would later be called recitative, and continuo. At the time, there wasn't much separating oratorio from opera. It's not even the case that the oratorio dropped visual performances: in Napes, Rome and Vienna, a number of oratorios were given in with sumptuous decor and costumes. As for musical forms, the oratorio follows the example of its stage-brother: at the end of the 17th century, the recitative was losing ground in favour of other more elegant forms, like the aria, which was rich in repetitions, coloratura and ornament. Above all, the oratorio offered the opportunity to hear in full swing some very great singers who, for different reasons, could not perform on stage: in Rome, when the popes ordered the closure of the theatres – saying that they were breeding-grounds of license and prostitution – and banned women from singing in church, people went with the princes and the prelates to cheer beautiful stars. In Napes, the four great conservatories would soon irrigate the musical life of the whole peninsula, offering oratorios that allowed their students to make a name for themselves in public. In Venice, at the four "ospedali" reserved for orphaned girls, performers would guard their modesty behind veils, but also break into sexy trills and cooing. Rome, Napes and Venice stamped their authority as the homeland of the oratorio, and to that list we have to add Vienna, the tip of the Catholic spear in German territory: thanks to the subsidy of the emperors, the city could employ the best librettists and composers that Italy produced. Born in an era of wars, the works selected here would carry the rhetorical themes of the 17th century into the middle of the 18th. © SM/Qobuz
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La Castità al Cimento (Il Trionfo della Castità) (Antonio Caldara)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Antonio Caldara, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Maddalena à piedi di Cristo (Antonio Caldara)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Antonio Caldara, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
La Converzione di Maddalena (Giovanni Bononcini)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Giovanni Bononcini, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Atalia (Francesco Gasparini)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Francesco Gasparini, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Francesco Gasparini, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Il Trionfo della Divina Giustizia (Nicola Porpora)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Nicola Porpora, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
San Casimiro rè di Polonia (Alessandro Scarlatti)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Alessandro Scarlatti, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
La Converzione di Maddalena (Giovanni Bononcini)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Giovanni Bononcini, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Giovanni Bononcini, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Il Trionfo della Divina Giustizia (Nicola Porpora)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Nicola Porpora, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Giuditta (Alessandro Scarlatti)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Alessandro Scarlatti, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Alessandro Scarlatti, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Santa Francesca Romana (Antonio Caldara)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Antonio Caldara, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Il Martirio di San Giovanni (Nicola Porpora)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Nicola Porpora, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Nicola Porpora, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Il Gardino di Rose (Alessandro Scarlatti)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Alessandro Scarlatti, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Il Martirio di San Giovanni (Antonio Caldara)
Blandine Staskiewicz, Mezzo-Soprano - Les Accents - Thibault Noally, Conductor - Antonio Caldara, Composer
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
Album Description
With this new recording, Thibault Noally and his ensemble Les Accents are providing a portrait of the genre of the oratorio at the turn of the 17th and 18th centuries, in four stylistic schools: Naples, Rome, Venice and Vienna, in the hands of Scarlatti-père, Caldara, Porpora, Bononcini and Gasparini. From prayer to fury, and with plenty of vocal fireworks, these pieces (nine of them have never been released yet) have been selected especially for Blandine Staskiewicz and are perfect examples of balance between the quality of musical material, dramatic tension in the lyrics, and fervent feeling. The "oratorio", in the context of the Counter-Reformation, made a return to scripture, and so mixed art with religious meditation. Its first musical forms foregrounded "speaking-singing" or what would later be called recitative, and continuo. At the time, there wasn't much separating oratorio from opera. It's not even the case that the oratorio dropped visual performances: in Napes, Rome and Vienna, a number of oratorios were given in with sumptuous decor and costumes. As for musical forms, the oratorio follows the example of its stage-brother: at the end of the 17th century, the recitative was losing ground in favour of other more elegant forms, like the aria, which was rich in repetitions, coloratura and ornament. Above all, the oratorio offered the opportunity to hear in full swing some very great singers who, for different reasons, could not perform on stage: in Rome, when the popes ordered the closure of the theatres – saying that they were breeding-grounds of license and prostitution – and banned women from singing in church, people went with the princes and the prelates to cheer beautiful stars. In Napes, the four great conservatories would soon irrigate the musical life of the whole peninsula, offering oratorios that allowed their students to make a name for themselves in public. In Venice, at the four "ospedali" reserved for orphaned girls, performers would guard their modesty behind veils, but also break into sexy trills and cooing. Rome, Napes and Venice stamped their authority as the homeland of the oratorio, and to that list we have to add Vienna, the tip of the Catholic spear in German territory: thanks to the subsidy of the emperors, the city could employ the best librettists and composers that Italy produced. Born in an era of wars, the works selected here would carry the rhetorical themes of the 17th century into the middle of the 18th. © SM/Qobuz
Details of original recording : Recorded October 2017 in the Saint Peter's Lutheran Church (Street Manin in Paris)
About the album
- 1 disc(s) - 17 track(s)
- Total length: 01:08:00
- Main artists: Les Accents Blandine Staskiewicz Thibault Noally
- Composer: Various Composers
- Label: Aparté
- Area: Italie
- Genre: Classical Vocal Music (Secular and Sacred)
- Period: Baroque Music
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24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo
Little Tribeca Little Tribeca
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