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Hildegard von Bingen is a threefold miracle: miracle that there even existed a woman composer in the twelfth century, miracle that she wrote down (or had a secretary write them) her quite numerous compositions as well as signing them, and a miracle that the manuscripts survived the ordeal of eight hundred centuries and came down to us in perfect shape. We know the names of only very few twelfth-century composers, and in most cases the name is the only information we have, not linked to any scores. Hildegard is a revelation from this perspective as well. Her works of sacred music, which consist of 77 pieces, and the liturgical drama Ordo Virtutum constitute a separate compositional approach inspired by the monophonic tradition of Gregorian chant, but which was like nothing else in its time, a distinctive approach that no one was able to continue. Although Hildegard denies having had any tuition in neumes and singing, it can be supposed that this was merely a gesture of a person who simply could not admit her own skill. But from her Vita we know that Mistress Jutta, her tutoring abbess, taught her to sing the psalms and led her to give praise on the ten-stringed psaltery. We also know that the nuns at the Rupertsberg cloister had mandatory singing lessons. It is not clear what singing tuition consisted of in those days, but noting Hildegard’s difficult melismatic, often virtuoso compositions requiring a vast vocal range, it can be presumed that the lessons must have fulfilled at least some of the requirements of our day and age. She composed her chants for both important and local feast days of the liturgical year. Her music beckons to be experimented with. As something of a challenge, the Tiburtina Ensemble chose an improvised accompaniment of the monophonic vocals on the most ancient plucked string instruments – the harp and the zither (dulce melos).
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Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Kamila Mazalová, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Daniela Cermakova, Performer - Tereza Havlíková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Tereza Havlíková, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Tereza Havlíková, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Daniela Cermakova, Performer - Kamila Mazalová, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Hana Blazikova, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Tiburna Ensemble, Performer - Barbora Kabátková, Performer - Margit Übellacker, Performer - Hildegard von Bingen, Composer
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
Album review
Hildegard von Bingen is a threefold miracle: miracle that there even existed a woman composer in the twelfth century, miracle that she wrote down (or had a secretary write them) her quite numerous compositions as well as signing them, and a miracle that the manuscripts survived the ordeal of eight hundred centuries and came down to us in perfect shape. We know the names of only very few twelfth-century composers, and in most cases the name is the only information we have, not linked to any scores. Hildegard is a revelation from this perspective as well. Her works of sacred music, which consist of 77 pieces, and the liturgical drama Ordo Virtutum constitute a separate compositional approach inspired by the monophonic tradition of Gregorian chant, but which was like nothing else in its time, a distinctive approach that no one was able to continue. Although Hildegard denies having had any tuition in neumes and singing, it can be supposed that this was merely a gesture of a person who simply could not admit her own skill. But from her Vita we know that Mistress Jutta, her tutoring abbess, taught her to sing the psalms and led her to give praise on the ten-stringed psaltery. We also know that the nuns at the Rupertsberg cloister had mandatory singing lessons. It is not clear what singing tuition consisted of in those days, but noting Hildegard’s difficult melismatic, often virtuoso compositions requiring a vast vocal range, it can be presumed that the lessons must have fulfilled at least some of the requirements of our day and age. She composed her chants for both important and local feast days of the liturgical year. Her music beckons to be experimented with. As something of a challenge, the Tiburtina Ensemble chose an improvised accompaniment of the monophonic vocals on the most ancient plucked string instruments – the harp and the zither (dulce melos).
About the album
- 1 disc(s) - 15 track(s)
- Total length: 01:04:08
- 1 Digital booklet
- Main artists: Tiburtina Ensemble Barbora Kabátková
- Composer: Hildegard von Bingen
- Label: Ricercar
- Genre: Classical
2017 Outhere 2015 TIBURTINA ENSEMBLE
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