Scarlatti: Missa defunctorum, Magnificat, Miserere & Salve Regina Odhecaton & Paolo Da Col

Cover Scarlatti: Missa defunctorum, Magnificat, Miserere & Salve Regina

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
02.09.2016

Label: Arcana

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Odhecaton & Paolo Da Col

Composer: Alessandro Scarlatti (1660-1725)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Introitus 05:01
  • 2 Kyrie 01:36
  • 3 Graduale 03:43
  • 4 Sequentia (Dies irae) 05:36
  • 5 Sequentia (Lacrimosa) 03:34
  • 6 Offertorium 06:18
  • 7 Sanctus 03:30
  • 8 Agnus Dei 03:06
  • 9 Communio 03:13
  • 10 Salve Regina 09:17
  • 11 Miserere 09:37
  • 12 Magnificat 02:41
  • 13 Quia respexit 01:25
  • 14 Quia fecit 02:13
  • 15 Fecit potentiam 01:40
  • 16 Deposuit potentes 02:02
  • 17 Esurientes implevit bonis 05:35
  • 18 Sicut locutus est 00:48
  • 19 Gloria patri 05:27
  • Total Runtime 01:16:22

Info for Scarlatti: Missa defunctorum, Magnificat, Miserere & Salve Regina

This recording is a discovery of Alessandro Scarlatti’s heretofore unknown sacred music, where Renaissance tradition meets Baroque sensibility for a unique and compelling recording. At the core of Odhecaton’s latest offering is the Missa defunctorum for four voices and basso continuo. It is in this magnificent score – recorded for the first time using the critical edition of Luca Della Libera – that primarily contrapuntal writing gives way to Scarlatti’s stylistic choices of great expressivity and rhetorical force, such as in the case of the astonishing Lacrimosa. The Miserere is also recorded for the first time. Written for nine voices for the Sistine Chapel, the score follows Allegri’s model only outwardly; Scarlatti, in fact, moves steadily away from it through his harmonic originality, formal richness, and expressivity. The Magnificat displays a unique synthesis of the Palestrinian model and the expressive language of the eighteenth century. In this score, Scarlatti exploits the great wealth and variety of the Marian text, particularly in the relationship between words and the emotional and descriptive spheres.

Odhecaton
Paolo Da Col, direction



Odhecaton
The Italian vocal ensemble Odhecaton (pronounced Oh-DE-kah-tohn) owes its name to the first printed book of polyphony, published in 1501 by Ottaviano Petrucci in Venice, Italy: ‘Harmonice Musices Odhecaton’. The word Odhecaton is derived from the Greek words: odè (meaning ‘song’) and ècaton (meaning ‘100’). Harmonice Musices Odhecaton was a collection of some 100 songs.

The name was chosen for the Italian vocal ensemble largely because of its core repertoire, which encompassed the work of French and Flemish composers during the Italian musical renaissance of the 15th century, notably Jacob Obrecht, Josquin Desprez, and Loyset Compère. Since the group’s debut in 1998, the repertoire has grown to include early and contemporary works by a large spectrum of composers.

Directed by Paolo Da Col, Odhecaton brings together some of the best Italian male voices specialized in the performance of Renaissance and baroque music.

The ensemble has made recordings dedicated to the music of Gombert, Isaac, Josquin, Peñalosa and Compère, and has helped rediscover the repertoire of 17th-century Spanish and Portuguese composers active in the Canary Islands. These programmes have led to appearances in Europe's leading festivals, and won them important recognition in the world of recording: 'Diapason d’or de l’année', '5 diapasons','Choc' (Le Monde de la Musique), 'Disco del mese' (Amadeus and CD Classics), and 'Cd of the Year' (Goldberg).

Beyond its central repertoire, Odhecaton has also presented a semi-staged production of Orazio Vecchi’s Amfiparnaso (directed by Enrico Bonavera, with scenery by Lele Luzzatti), and a production of sacred music by Gesualde da Venosa. From 2008 forward, Odhecaton paid particular attention to the music of Palestrina, and recently released a recording of Roland de Lassus. The group also works occasionally with instrumentalists specialized in their repertoire, including Bruce Dickey and Concerto Palatino, Gabriele Cassone, Liuwe Tamminga, Paolo Pandolfo, Jakob Lindberg, La Reverdie, and Andrea De Carlo with Ensemble Mare Nostrum.

Paolo Da Col
completed his musical training at the Conservatorio of Bologna and his musicological studies at the Università Ca’ Foscari of Venice and the Centre d’Études Supérieures de la Renaissance of Tours. From a very early age he has devoted his attention to the Renaissance and preclassical polyphonic repertoire, constantly combining the demands of research and performance.

He has been the director of the journal L’Organo (together with Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini) and of the music catalogue of the Forni publishing house of Bologna.

He has worked as a music critic, edited publications of instrumental and vocal music, and authored catalogues of musical collections and studies on the history of vocal music. He is presently librarian of the Conservatorio of Venice.

Booklet for Scarlatti: Missa defunctorum, Magnificat, Miserere & Salve Regina

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