Henry Poller Oedipus Vídeos
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2024-05-02
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Clarke Henry Purcell Vincent Dumestre Emmanuelle Negri Zachary Wilder Wilder 2021
__ Purcell & Clarke: Son of England 00:01:22 - Purcell: Welcome to all pleasures, Z. 739 00:18:17 - Clarke: Ode on the death of Henry Purcell 00:44:01 - Purcell: Funeral sentences for the death of Queen Mary, Z. 860 01:00:59 - Purcell: Her my prayer, Oh Lord, Z. 15 Emmanuelle de Negri | Soprano Leandro Marziotte | Alto Zachary Wilder | Tenor Victor Sicard | Bass Le Poème Harmonique & Les Cris de Paris Conducted by Vincent Dumestre / Oedipus Coloneus, 2021
Henry Purcell Philippe Jaroussky Christina Pluhar Bach Schmidt Coleman Rollins 1659 1692 1695
Here we have French countertenor Philippe Jaroussky and European early music group L'arpeggiata in an arrangement by theorbist Christina Pluhar of Purcell's sensationally beautiful "Music for a While". I have always felt that the jazz and Baroque idioms work well together, especially with the fertile harmonic opportunities offered by a ground bass, as here. Jacques Loussier, for example, fused Bach with jazz brilliantly, in a way which broadened Bach's audience considerably. The Music and Composer Henry Purcell 1659 – 1695 was an English composer. Although he incorporated Italian and French stylistic elements, Purcell's was a uniquely English form of Baroque music. He is generally considered to be one of the greatest English composers; no later native-born English composer approached his fame until Edward Elgar, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Gustav Holst, William Walton and Benjamin Britten in the 20th century. Purcell's Music for a While (Z.583/2) from "Oedipus" (Incidental Music), was composed in 1692. Text by John Dryden & Nathaniel Lee Arr. Christina Pluhar Performers Philippe Jaroussky, Gianluigi Trovesi, David Mayoral, Sergey Saprichev, Francesco Turrisi, Boris Schmidt Text Music for a while shall all your cares beguile. Wond'ring how your pains were eased and disdaining to be pleased till Alecto free the dead from their eternal bands, till the snakes drop from her head, and the whip from out her hands. Images (not mine) Henry Purcell; Ornette Coleman; Philippe Jaroussky; Chet Baker; Nina Simone; Alexander Bone; Sonny Rollins; Philippe Jaroussky From "Music for a While - Improvisations on Purcell" (Erato/Warner Classics)
Henry Purcell Alfred Deller William Christie Wieland Kuijken Kuijken Stour Music Festival 1659 1692 1695 1912 1962 1979
One of my musical heroes, here we have Alfred Deller, CBE (1912 – 1979), an English singer and one of the main figures in popularising the return of the countertenor voice in Renaissance and Baroque music during the 20th century. He is sometimes referred to as the "godfather of the countertenor". His style in singing lute song, with extensive use of rubato and extemporised ornamentation, was seen as radical and controversial in his day, but is now considered the norm. Deller was an influential figure in the renaissance of early music: an early proponent of original instrument performance, and one of the first to bring this form to the popular consciousness through his broadcasts on the BBC. He also founded the Stour Music Festival in 1962, one of the first and most important early music festivals in the world. The Music Music for a while (Z.583/2) from "Oedipus" (Incidental Music), composed in 1692. Text (by John Dryden & Nathaniel Lee) Music for a while shall all your cares beguile. Wond'ring how your pains were eased and disdaining to be pleased till Alecto free the dead from their eternal bands, till the snakes drop from her head, and the whip from out her hands. Performers Alfred Deller - countertenor William Christie - harpsichord Wieland Kuijken - bass viola da gamba A Harmonia Mundi recording.
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