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Vivaldi - Andromeda Liberata (2004)

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Vivaldi - Andromeda Liberata (2004)

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CD1
01 Sinfonia play
02 Popoli amici, in questo fausto giorno
03 In su queste sponde
04 Quando chiudere pensai
05 E di Giove e di Danae inclita prole
06 Sciolta dai ceppi e giu so
07 Un occhio amabile
08 O ingrata
09 Non ha tranquillo il cor
10 Signor, qual improvviso dolor
11 Si rinforzi in te spene
12 Da che il destin mi trasse
13 Se una sorta di strali Amor avesse play
14 O vicende funeste de' mortali!
15 Ruscelletti limpidetti
16 Figlia, non qui dimore
17 Madre, lascia ch'io senta in prima il core
18 Troppo ingrata mi sembri
19 Mi piace e mi diletta
20 Al talamo di Perseo
21 Madre. lascia ch'io senta in prima il core
22 Dall'alto seggio

Cd2
01 Che sare, cuore affilitto
02 Lo so, barbari fati
03 La tua nemica sorte
04 Peni chi vuol penar
05 Pria che la dea triforme
06 Dalle superne sfere lieto, Imeneo discendi play
07 Hai giŕ vinto due volte
08 Chi e fenice ad ogni foco
09 Pria che del sole i rai
10 Sovvente il sole
11 Perseo, Andromeda, amici
12 Con dolce mormorio
13 Perseo, che tardi piů
14 Sposo amato _ Cara sposa play
15 Riconosco in voi
Simone Kermes · Katerina Beranova Anna Bonitatibus · Mark Tucker Max Emanuel Cencic La Stagione Armonica Venice Baroque Orchestra Andrea Marcon - director

 

Here’s an intriguing mystery. In 2002 French musicologist Olivier Fourés came across the manuscript of this serenata, dated September 18, 1726, in the archives of the Conservatorio Benedetto Marcello in Venice and recognised one of the numbers as an aria known to be by Vivaldi. Was the whole thing by Vivaldi, or was it a pasticcio, the work of several composers?

In his booklet-note, Fourés suggests that Andromeda liberata was written to celebrate the return from Rome of Cardinal Ottoboni, patron of Corelli and Alessandro Scarlatti, and he claims, not altogether convincingly, to find allusions to the cardinal in the anonymous libretto. As to the music, he nails his colours to the fence, concluding that ‘even if it is a pasticcio, it was Vivaldi who in general elaborated the piece’. Archiv shows discretion in billing it as by ‘Vivaldi and others’.

What of the piece itself? At the beginning, Perseus has already slain the monster ravaging the countryside and set Andromeda free from the rock to which she has been chained. He is in love with her, but her heart is set on Daliso, a young foreigner who prefers his freedom. The other characters are Andromeda’s mother, Cassiope, and the shepherd Meliso, a spokesman for the Ethiopian people. In the end, Andromeda does the right thing by marrying Perseus. (Fourés sees Perseus as Ottoboni, Andromeda as Venice, and Daliso as the difficulties the banished cardinal had to overcome before returning.)

The serenata, in two parts, consists of the usual chain of recitatives and da capo arias; there are brief contributions by the chorus, and a love duet as the penultimate number. The music is delightful. After the Sinfonia and opening recitative comes a vigorous aria for Meliso (the splendid Anna Bonitatibus) with trumpets and drums, the chorus crying ‘Viva Perseo, viva!’, the triple-time rhythm varied by hemiolas. Andromeda has an aria with cello obbligato in which she expresses her feelings for Daliso, and an arioso, heard twice, where she begs her mother for time to decide. Both are touchingly sung by Simone Kermes. She also opens the second part railing against the fates with a cheerful aria featuring the horns.

This sense of the music belying the words is also to be felt in the aria Perseus sings after his rejection, which trips along in a gigue-like measure. More searching is ‘Sovvente il sole’, a Metastasian metaphor aria with violin obbligato. This is the one known to be by Vivaldi: the rich-toned Max Emanuel Cencic, here and throughout, shows himself to be in the same league as David Daniels and Andreas Scholl.

Andrea Marcon directs with an infectiously joyous brio, guilty only of allowing some over-exuberant vocal decoration. I enjoyed this set enormously: do try it. -- Richard Lawrence, Gramophone [1/2005]

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Last Updated (Wednesday, 25 June 2014 10:19)

 

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