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Cappella Mediterranea - Amore Siciliano (2024)

Posted By: delpotro
Cappella Mediterranea - Amore Siciliano (2024)

Cappella Mediterranea, Leonardo García Alarcón, Matteo Bellotto, Valerio Contaldo, Léo Fernique, Mariana Flores, Ana Vieira Leite - Amore Siciliano (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 326 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 160 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:06:48
Classical, Vocal | Label: Alpha Classics

Love, drama and betrayal under the Sicilian sun: this ‘pasticcio’ of folk melodies and music by ‘learned’ composers was born of the love of Leonardo García Alarcón and the singers and musicians of the Cappella Mediterranea for Calabrian, Sicilian and Neapolitan songs dating from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. We hear music by Alessandro Scarlatti and Sigismondo d’India, both born in Palermo, as well as works from the extraordinarily rich collection of St John’s Co-Cathedral in Malta (notably by Vincenzo Tozzi). Leonardo García Alarcón even composed a five-part fugue on La canzone di Cecilia , associated with the heroine of the drama. The music was arranged by Quito Gato. This tribute to southern Italy by Cappella Mediterranea has triumphed on stage for years; now this recording immortalises it.

La Néréide, Camille Allérat, Julie Roset & Ana Vieira Leite - Luzzaschi: Il concerto segreto (2023)

Posted By: delpotro
La Néréide, Camille Allérat, Julie Roset & Ana Vieira Leite - Luzzaschi: Il concerto segreto (2023)

La Néréide, Camille Allérat, Julie Roset & Ana Vieira Leite - Luzzaschi: Il concerto segreto (2023)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 271 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 141 Mb | Digital booklet | 00:59:15
Classical, Vocal | Label: Ricercar

An exceptional amount of musical activity took place in the court of Ferrara during the latter years of the 16 th century, in particular thanks to a remarkable trio of female voices who had been trained by Luzzasco Luzzaschi, the court’s maestro di cappella. To hear them was a privilege that Alfonso d' Este allowed his guests only briefly and infrequently. Their repertoire was kept secret and was finally published — and then only in part — in 1601. The singers of La Néréide here devote their first recording to this collection in its entirety, reconstructing the conditions in which these works were created with harpsichord, viol and lute accompaniment: the harpsichord would have been played by Luzzaschi himself, whilst the three singers mastered the other instruments with as much skill as their voices.