Have just attended the concert Dawn of the cantata given by the Academy of Ancient Music at West Road Concert Hall in Cambridge, as part of the AAM series Musical Revolutions. Jonathan Cohen marked his debut as conductor of the AAM with this programme, which included soprano Anna Prohaska and tenors Benjamin Hulett and James Gilchrist.
The AAM continues to be at the top of the early music game and Cohen conducted from the harpsichord/chamber organ a superb programme of early Italian vocal and instrumental pieces – including pieces by Falconieri, Castello, Marini and Zanetti, and vocal solos and duets by Cavalli and Monteverdi, as well as Monteverdi's Il combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda – and the packed house showed a thorough appreciation of the evening's music by generous and enthusiastic applause.
Despite the title, the programme had no Cantatas as such, although the originally advertised programme included Barbara Strozzi's Udite amanti, which was sadly absent; this would have provided the one! However, it was a wonderful concert, and such a treat to hear live a performance of Il combattimento – here Gilchrist really gave his best. Nevertheless, the uncontested vocal highlight of the evening was the duet from Monteverdi's Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria, which closed the first half. As the lovestruck servants Melanto and Eurimaco, Prohaska and Hulett provided the very best singing of the evening; stylistically immaculate and yet fresh and full of emotion. The instrumental ensemble was also on top form, both on the sonatas and as the most fantastic continuo group.
'Historically informed' performance is alive and kicking in Cambridge: such an involved and responsive audience adds so much to the proceedings, that the audience should get a mention too!
Saturday, 28 April 2012
Monday, 16 April 2012
Nannerl, la Soeur de Mozart
Just seen Rene Feret's new film about W A Mozart's sister Nannerl. Very atmospheric account of the Mozart children's first French tour. The film is beautifully shot with subtle use of candlelit scenes and shows the difficult conditions of the Mozarts' life as an itinerant traveling musical family.
Excellent portrayal of Leopold Mozart as the ultimate pushy parent and the hard reality of court appearances. As the title suggest, the film focuses not on Wolfgang but rather on his equally talented sister at the time both of them were being shown around European courts as astonishingly gifted child prodigies.
The film has an originally and cleverly composed pastiche score and an excellent and engaging pace.
It's quite reassuring to see a French film very much in the style of the genre in the 70s: full of atmosphere and long pensive looks!
Excellent portrayal of Leopold Mozart as the ultimate pushy parent and the hard reality of court appearances. As the title suggest, the film focuses not on Wolfgang but rather on his equally talented sister at the time both of them were being shown around European courts as astonishingly gifted child prodigies.
The film has an originally and cleverly composed pastiche score and an excellent and engaging pace.
It's quite reassuring to see a French film very much in the style of the genre in the 70s: full of atmosphere and long pensive looks!
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