Vienna 1700 – Baroque Music from Austria (2002)
Vienna 1700 – Baroque Music from Austria (2002)
DISC 1 Oh, du lieber Augustin (Compositeurs Divers) 1 Oh, du lieber Augustin 00:04:06 Battalia (Johann Caspar Kerll) 2 Battalia 00:05:44 Te Deum, K271 (Johann Joseph Fux) 3 Te Deum, K271: Te Deum 00:02:59 4 Te Deum, K271: Pleni sunt Coeli 00:03:40 5 Te Deum, K271: Te ergo: Adagio 00:05:47 6 Te Deum, K271: In te Domine: Un poco allegro 00:02:26 Antiphon Salve Regina (Compositeurs Divers) 7 Antiphon Salve Regina 00:02:36 Stabat Mater, K268 (Johann Joseph Fux) 8 Stabat Mater, K268: Stabat Mater 00:05:03 9 Stabat Mater, K268: Eia Mater 00:04:08 10 Stabat Mater, K268: Virgo Virginum praeclara 00:03:26 11 Stabat Mater, K268: Quando corpus morietur 00:01:09 Sonata a 6, "Die Pauernkirchfahrt" (Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber) 12 Sonata a 6, "Die Pauernkirchfahrt": I. Adagio - Presto 00:01:33 13 Sonata a 6, "Die Pauernkirchfahrt": II. Die Pauern Kirchfahrt 00:02:17 14 Sonata a 6, "Die Pauernkirchfahrt": III. Adagio 00:01:41 15 Sonata a 6, "Die Pauernkirchfahrt": IV. Aria: Andante 00:01:17 DISC 2 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche" 1 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": I. Allegro 00:01:04 2 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": II. Die liederliche Gesellschaft von allerley Humor 00:01:30 3 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": III. Der Mars 00:01:19 4 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": IV. Presto 00:01:06 5 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": V. Aria: Andante 00:02:03 6 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": VI. Die Schlacht 00:00:47 7 Battalia, "Sonata di Marche": VII. Lamento Verwundten Musquetirer 00:01:44 Gegrusst seist Du (Johann Heinrich Schmelzer) 8 Gegrusst seist Du 00:06:58 Polnische Sackpfeiffen 9 Polnische Sackpfeiffen 00:05:56 Ave Maria (Compositeurs Divers) 10 Ave Maria 00:02:07 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121 (Johann Joseph Fux) 11 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121: Kyrie eleison 00:03:10 12 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121: Virgo prudentissima 00:03:37 13 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121: Regina Angelorum 00:03:42 14 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121: Sub tuum praesidium 00:01:41 15 Litaniae Sancta Maria, K. 121: Domina nostra 00:01:29 Magnificat (Bible - New Testament) 16 Magnificat 00:07:13 Magnificat, K. 98 (Johann Joseph Fux) 17 Magnificat, K. 98: Magnificat 00:02:05 18 Magnificat, K. 98: Quia respexit 00:02:45 19 Magnificat, K. 98: Et misericordia ejus 00:01:59 20 Deposuit potentes 00:02:50 21 Sicut locutus est 00:02:36 A 22 Magnificat, K. 98: Amen 00:01:43 Mieke van der Sluis, Barbara Fink (soprano) Pascal Bertin (alto) Bernd Frohlich (tenor) Wilfried Zelinka (bass) Armonico Tributo Austria Domkantorei Graz Grazer Choralschola Lorenz Duftschmid (conductor)
A grim detail of Der Triumph des Todes (the Triumph of Death) by the late-Renaissance master Pieter Brueghel was chosen as cover art for this program of music composed more than a century later because it alludes to the plagues and other catastrophes that would have such a considerable influence on Viennese composers during the 1700s. Nearly all of the works offered are less than hopeful sacred settings, and the few secular ones such as the Battalias by Biber and Kerll, Biber’s Pauernkirchfahrt, and Schmelzer’s Polnische Sackpfeiffen are laced with programmatic references to war and other disconcerting events. However, if death was to be the overriding subject, these composers apparently were determined to experiment, if not have as much fun as possible undermining its dark consequences.
The majority of the program is devoted to Austria’s most important composer of the period, Johann Joseph Fux. Among his four sacred settings, the 1704 Te Deum (which receives its premiere recording here) is the longest, largest, and most spectacular of the lot. This magnificent, highly-charged, rapidly evolving piece is on par with any similar setting of its day. Fux’s grand Magnificat also is a stunner with alternating solo and tutti passages that are periodically endowed with highly inventive clusters of choral polyphony.
The instrumental selections are generally well played, though given the greater recorded competition for these pieces, they impress somewhat less. In the famous second-movement Allegro of Biber’s Battalia, where eight different melodies are played simultaneously to allude to a group of drunken musketeers, this performance by Armonico Tributo sounds almost polite when compared to Concentus Musicus Wien’s convincingly inebriated collapse (Teldec) or Il Giardano Armonico’s exquisite dissonant antics (also on Teldec). Biber’s Pauernkirchfahrt and Schmelzer’s Polische Sackpfeiffen suffer from a similar lack of abandon, especially in comparison to the imaginatively fierce, passionate renderings of the Musica Antiqua Koln (Archiv).
CPO’s sound is excellent, with life-like clarity and convincing instrumental and choral balances. In sum, while in a handful of instances other renditions are more evocative, Armonico Tributo delivers consistently respectable performances, and this fine compilation loaded with premiere recordings and rarities surely will be of interest to fans of the period. Recommended. ---John Greene, classicstoday.com
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