Georg Friedrich Händel: Alexander's Feast HWV 75, Ode for St. Cecilia's Day HWV 76 - CD, Choir Coach, multimedia | Carus-Verlag

Georg Friedrich Händel Alexander's Feast HWV 75, Ode for St. Cecilia's Day HWV 76

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In England during the 17th and 18th centuries 22 November was observed as St. Cecilia’s Day with musical performances to honor this patron saint of church music. In 1736 and 1739, with his Alexander’s Feast and the Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, based on texts by the poet John Dryden, Handel made important contributions to the festivities. Indeed, Handel took Purcell’s Cecilian odes as models, but through the use of recitatives, arias and large choruses he approached the oratorio. Both pieces were quickly recognized by contemporaries as outstanding works and already in 1739 Handel joined them together, whereby the Cecilian Ode served as the third part of Alexander’s Feast. In the years following, this practice was frequently maintained, however, beginning in the late 19th century this meaningful type of performance practice was increasingly forgotten. Carus has again joined the two works together in the present performance with Simone Kermes, the Kölner Kammerchor, and the Collegium Cartusianum, under the direction of Peter Neumann.
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  • Ouverture
  • Recitative (Tenore): ‘Twas at the royal feast
  • Air (Tenore) and Chorus: Happy, happy, happy pair!
  • Recitative (Tenore): Timotheus plac’d on high
  • Accompagnato (Soprano): The song began from Jove
  • Chorus: The list’ning crowd admire the lofty sound
  • Air (Soprano): With ravish’d ears
  • Recitative (Tenore): The praise of Bacchus
  • Air (Basso): Bacchus, ever fair – Chorus: Bacchus’ blessings are a treasure
  • Recitative (Tenore): Sooth’d with the sound
  • Accompagnato (Soprano): He chose a mournful muse
  • Air (Soprano): He sung Darius great and good
  • Accompagnato (Soprano): With downcast looks the joyless victor sate
  • Chorus: Behold Darius, great and good
  • Recitative (Tenore): The mighty master smil’d to see
  • Arioso (Soprano): Softly sweet, in Lydian measures
  • Air (Soprano): War, he sung, is toil and trouble
  • Chorus: The many rend the skies
  • Air (Soprano): The Prince, unable to conceal his pain
  • Chorus: The many rend the skies
  • Accompagnato (Tenore): Now strike the golden lyre; Chorus: Break his bands of sleep; Accompagnato (Tenore): Hark! hark! – the horrid sound
  • Air (Basso): Revenge, Timotheus cries
  • Accompagnato (Tenore): Give the vengeance due
  • Air (Tenore): The princes applaud with a furious joy
  • Air (Soprano): Thais led the way; Chorus: The princes applaud with a furious joy
  • Accompagnato (Tenore): Thus long ago; Chorus: At last divine Cecilia came
  • Recitative (Tenore, Basso): Let old Timotheus yield the prize
  • Chorus: Let old Timotheus yield the prize
  • Ouverture – Menuet
  • Recitative (Tenore): From harmony, from heav’nly harmony; Accompagnato (Tenore): When nature, underneath a heap
  • Chorus: From harmony, from heav’nly harmony
  • Air (Soprano): What passion cannot Music raise
  • Air (Tenore) and Chorus: The Trumpets loud clangor
  • La Marche
  • Air (Soprano): The soft complaining Flute
  • Air (Tenore): Sharp Violins proclaim
  • Air (Soprano): But oh! what art can teach
  • Air (Soprano): Orpheus could lead could lead the savage race
  • Accompagnato (Soprano): But bright Cecilia rais’d the wonder high’r
  • Chorus: As from the pow’r of sacred lays
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Additional material
  • Ouvertüre – Menuett

    1. Rezitativ (Tenore) Aus Harmonie, aus heil’ger Harmonie
    erwuchs dies Weltall, endlos weit.

    2. Accompagnato (Tenore) Als formlos die Natur noch war
    und ganz verworren lag,
    sich selbst noch kaum bewußt,
    klang wie Musik des Schöpfers Wort:
    „Erstarrte Welt, wach’ auf!“
    Da ordneten sich Kalt und Heiss,
    und Feucht und Trocken schieden sich,
    gehorchend der Musik.

    3. Chor Aus Harmonie, aus heil’ger Harmonie
    erwuchs dies Weltall, endlos weit:
    Von Harmonie zu Harmonie
    durchlief die Schöpfung aller Töne Klang
    zur letzten Stufe, die da war der Mensch.

    4. Arie (Soprano)

    ...

  • Ouverture – Menuet

    1. Recitative (Tenore) From harmony, from heav’nly harmony This universal frame began.

    2. Accompagnato (Tenore) When nature underneath a heap
    of jarring atoms lay,
    and could not heave her head,
    the tuneful voice was heard from high,
    arise ye more than dead.
    Then cold, and hot, and moist, and dry,
    in order to their stations leap,
    and Music’s pow’r obey.

    3. Chorus From harmony, from heav’nly harmony
    this universal frame began:
    from harmony to harmony
    through all the compasss of the notes it ran,
    the diapason closing full in man.

    4. Air (Soprano)

    ...

  • Avant-propos de l’édition Carus 10.372

    Markus Schwering>
    Traduction : Sylvie Coquillat

    Depuis le 15ème siècle, sainte Cécile, martyr romaine dès débuts du christianisme, fait l’objet d’un culte, les protestants en faisant même plus tard la protectrice de la musique d’église. D’un point de vue historique, la synthèse religieuse et musicale qu’elle incarne et qui est glorifiée dans la légende n’a aucune substance. Ce qui n’affecte en rien le culte cécilien – depuis des siècles, le 22 novembre fut et est célébré comme jour de sa commémoration par une fête de sainte Cécile accompagnée de prestations musicales. C’est aussi le cas à l’époque de Haendel à Londres. Depuis 1683, une Musical Society organise les festivités correspondantes, qui comprennent chaque fois la représentation d’une œuvre nouvelle avec référence thématique adéquate. Lorsque Haendel compose Alexander’s Feast et l’Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, il s’inscrit donc dans une

    ...

  • Erster Teil

    1. Ouvertüre

    2. Rezitativ (Tenore) Es war beim Königsfest, als Persien gewonnen war
    durch Philipps kriegerischen Sohn.
    In erhabener Pracht
    saß der göttergleiche Held
    auf seinem Herrscherthron,
    umringt von seiner tapfern Feldherrn Schar,
    die Ros’ und Myrten froh bekränzt,
    wie sie durch ihren Sieg verdient.
    Zur Seite ihm die liebliche Thais saß
    geschmückt wie eine Braut des Morgenlandes,
    in jugendlichem Glanz und stolzer Freude.

    3. Arie (Tenore) und Chor Glücklich, glücklich, glücklich Paar!
    Allein der Tapfere verdient die Schöne.

    4. Rezitativ (Tenore) Timotheus, der erhöht
    unter den Sängern sitzt

    ...

  • First Part

    1. Ouverture

    2. Recitative (Tenore) ’Twas at the royal feast, for Persia won
    by Philip’s warlike son.
    Aloft in awful state
    the god-like hero sate
    on his imperial throne;
    his valiant peers were plac’d around,
    their brows with roses and with myrtles bound.
    So should desert in arms be crown’d.
    The lovely Thais by his side
    sate like a blooming Eastern bride,
    in flow’r of youth, and beauty’s pride.

    3. Air (Tenore) and Chorus Happy, happy, happy pair!
    None but the brave deserves the fair.

    4. Recitative (Tenore) Timotheus plac’d on high,
    amid the tuneful quire,

    ...

more
Purchase
Compact Disc, 2 CDs, SACD Carus 83.424/00, EAN 4009350834248 CD, digipac
available in audio portals (streaming)
 
 
  • George Frideric Handel put his exceptionally versatile compositional abilities to the test at an early age. After moving to London in 1712, where he was appointed Composer of Musick for His Majesty’s Chapel Royal in 1723, he wrote numerous masterpieces for the royal court as well as his major opere serie. For many years he enjoyed triumphant successes with his operas, which were sung by outstanding performers, with serenades, and later also with oratorios such as Saul and Israel in Egypt. Over the years Handel’s reputation grew far beyond the city where he worked; some of his choral works, particularly Messiah, have enjoyed a performance tradition which remains unbroken to this day, and are sung by choirs throughout the world. Personal details
  • The period instrument ensemble Collegium Cartusianum, founded in 1988 as successor to the Barockorchester Koln, has a repertoire ranging from Monteverdi to Brahms. The ensemble’s participation in the complete recording of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s masses conducted by Peter Neumann earned it an outstanding reputation, subsequently confirmed by many concerts, radio broadcasts and CD recordings. As well as collaborating with the Kolner Kammerchor, the Collegium Cartusianum has also received international acclaim for its performances of J. S. Bach’s Orchestral Suites as well as Mozart and Beethoven symphonies. With Mozart’s Il Re Pastore, Mendelssohn’s St. Paul and Elijah, and Dvo?ak’s Requiem the orchestra has extended its repertoire to include opera and romantic works. It has appeared at many leading festivals in Europe and Japan, recently at the Leipzig Bach Festival with a Handel-Bach program, with Handel’s Serenata Aci, Galatea e Polifemo in Krakow and Essen at the second “Fest fur Alte Musik” in Cologne in February 2012. Personal details
  • In recent years Peter Neumann, born in Karlsruhe, has made a name for himself particularly as a conductor of Handel’s music. This is demonstrated both by the concert series “250 Years Handel Oratorios” which he initiated – performing nine music dramas in accordance with Handel’s concert schedule of 1749–1752 – and by his numerous CD recordings. He has performed masterworks from vocal and orchestral music in the European musical capitals and at many renowned festivals, ranging from Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo and Vespers for the Blessed Virgin (Palais Garnier, Paris) through J. S. Bach’s passions (last in Moscow, Oslo and Versailles) and Mass in B minor (BBC Proms) to Debussy’s Le Martyre de Saint Sébastien at the MusikTriennale in Cologne. 2010, Peter Neumann and his ensembles Kolner Kammerchor and Collegium Cartusianum were guests at the Rheingau Music Festival with Schumann’s Das Paradies und die Peri and at the Schumann Festival in Dusseldorf as well as the Leipzig Bach Festival in 2011. In June 2012 he made his highly acclaimed debut at the Cologne Opera with Handel’s Alcina. As a guest conductor, Neumann has collaborated with, among others, ChorWerkRuhr, the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the SWR Vokalensemble Stuttgart, the NDR Choir, the Schola Cantorum Tokyo, the Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam, the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie and Concerto Koln. Highlights of his extensive discography include the complete recording of Mozart’s masses (Gramophone “Crown of Crowns”), Schutz’s Musical Vesper, Schumann’s Missa sacra (Diapason d’Or) and recordings of Bach’s St. John Passion and Handel’s Alexander’s Feast and Brockes Passion (Carus). Personal details
  • Internationally Simone Kermes is one of the most sought after sopranos for dramatic roles. Her unusually large vocal range predestined her for the virtuoso works of the baroque masters, but also for soprano roles and arias of Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven. Artistic engagements have taken her to the largest, most famous concert halls in the world. She has given solo concerts in such venues as Carnegie Hall, Tchaikovsky Hall in Moscow, and the Palau de la music in Barcelona. In addition to many radio and television productions she has recorded many CDs. She has received numerous awards for her solo albms, including the annual prize of the German Record Critics, the Diapason d’Or, BBC music choice, Gramophone Disc of the month and the ECHO Classic award. Personal details
  • Virgil Hartinger studied at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the Eastman School of Music and the Oberlin Conservatory in the USA, and has taken part in master classes with Thomas Hampson, Ernst Haefliger and Richard Miller. He has worked with conductors including Jamie Laredo, Ton Koopman, Peter Neumann, Paul O’Dette, Reinhard Goebel, Christophe Coin and Sigiswald Kuijken. His repertoire ranges from the renaissance to contemporary works in concert and operatic repertoire. While still studying, he began a busy concert schedule which has taken him to the Salzburg Festival, the Folle Journée in Nantes and Lisbon, the Concertgebouw (Amsterdam), Theâtre des Champs Élysées (Paris), Prinzregententheater (Munich) and Carnegie Hall. Personal details
  • Konstantin Wolff studied with Donald Litaker at the Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe. He won the Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Prize from the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, was awarded a scholarship by the German National Academic Foundation and made his opera debut in 2005 at the Opera National de Lyon under William Christie in Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea. His concert repertoire ranges from the early baroque to the 20th century. He has performed with conductors including Gerd Albrecht, Alun Francis, Riccardo Chailly, Ton Koopman, René Jacobs, Claudio Abbado, Sir Simon Rattle and Nicholas McGegan. His first solo CD, a recording of Lieder to texts by Victor Hugo, has been enthusiastically received. Personal details

Reviews

[...] In short, this recording is an outstanding contribution to the Handel anniversary celebrations.

George Pratt
BBC Music Magazine, September 2009


[...] Peter Neumann, inzwischen ein Händel-Spezialist unter den Dirigenten, macht hier die Musik des Jubilars ungemein lebendig. Da agiert ein Solistentrio mit der stimmlich und gestalterisch überragenden Sopranistin Simone Kermes, [...] Da begeistert der Kölner Kammerchor als Ensemble homogen gemischter, zugleich gut durchhörbarer Stimmen. Dazu musiziert das Collegium Cartusianum auf Originalinstrumenten sensibel, stiltreu und angenehm schlank. [...]

Karsten Blüthgen
Neue Chorzeit, September 2009

[...] Hörenswert sind das farbenreich eingesetzte Continuo mit Laute, Cembalo und Orgel und die hervorragenden Solisten: [...]

Musica Sacra, Heft 5/2009

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