The Madrigal Reimagined
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Resonus Classics
Magazine Review Date: 10/2024
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 64
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: RES10341

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(2) Canzonas, Movement: Canzon decimaottava a 5 |
Claudio Merulo, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Arie, Libro 1, Movement: No 3, Cruda Amarilli |
Johann Nauwach, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Toby Carr, Lute |
Madrigals, Book 5 (Il quinto libro de madrigali), Movement: Cruda Amarilli (wds. Guarini) |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Anchor che col partire |
Cipriano de Rore, Composer
Toby Carr, Lute |
Vergine bella |
Cipriano de Rore, Composer
Oliver Webber, Violin Toby Carr, Lute |
(Il) Ballo delle ingrate, Movement: Ballo |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Madrigals, Book 4 (Il quarto libro de madrigali), Movement: Ah dolente partita (wds. Guarini) |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band |
(Il) Ballo delle ingrate, Movement: Una delle Ingrate - Ahi troppo è duro |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band Oliver Webber, Violin Toby Carr, Lute |
Sinfonia a 6 |
Cristofano Malvezzi, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Quarto Intermedio:, Movement: lo che dal ciel cader |
Giulio Caccini, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band |
O che nuovo miracolo |
Emilio de Cavalieri, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Canzoni et Sonate, Movement: Canzon I, a 5 |
Giovanni Gabrieli, Composer
Monteverdi String Band |
Vestiva i colli |
Giovanni Palestrina, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band |
Preludium |
Lorenzo Tracetti, Composer
Toby Carr, Lute |
Or che’l ciel e la terra |
Cipriano de Rore, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band |
Ben qui si mostra il ciel |
Cipriano de Rore, Composer
Oliver Webber, Violin Toby Carr, Lute |
(L')Orfeo, Movement: Toccata |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Monteverdi String Band Toby Carr, Lute |
(L')Orfeo, Movement: Excerpts |
Claudio Monteverdi, Composer
Hannah Ely, Soprano Monteverdi String Band Toby Carr, Lute |
Author: Fabrice Fitch
It didn’t take long for the madrigal to become a vehicle for all manner of experimentation – reworkings of texts associated with particularly influential ones or written-out diminutions (ornaments) for both voices and instruments of the genre’s greatest hits. Fronted by soprano Hannah Ely, the Monteverdi String Band nicely evoke that variety of approaches. Ely sings with warmth and poise, best heard in ‘Ahi, troppo è duro’ in the set excerpted from Monteverdi’s Ballo delle ingrate. As one of those who established the madrigal as a genre to be reckoned with (and was acknowledged as a major influence by Monteverdi himself), Rore features prominently: violinist Oliver Webber contributes diminutions to two of his madrigals as well as performing some by his contemporaries. Instrumental interludes are culled from famous places, such as the concluding ballo from the Florentine Intermedii of 1589, which is ornamented tastefully. The flow of the recital is pleasing and logical musically, avoiding the didactic approach where ‘original’ and variations follow each other unrelentingly. Whether it truly attains to sprezzatura, the casual yet flashy extroversion so prized by commentators of the time, is debatable: unless the pulse is treated flexibly rather than strictly (as here), that quality is very hard to achieve. Much of the diminution-work here feels cautious rather than embodied.
The set from the Ballo delle ingrate works well, but the choice to close with 12 minutes from Orfeo is baffling. Granted, the prologue works well on its own (though the opening sinfonia is shorn of its tripartite structure) but the same cannot be said of the chorus rendering of ‘Ahi caso acerbo’ (for which Ely is accompanied by the string band), which comes out of the blue, giving the soprano no dramatic platform from which to launch it. Yes, the opera’s strategies were forged in the crucible of Monteverdi’s experiments with the madrigal, but that insight requires more practical illustration than these mostly minute-long excerpts afford.
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