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Al Ayre Espanol & Eduardo Lopez Banzo - Handel: Amadigi di Gaula (2008)

Al Ayre Espanol & Eduardo Lopez Banzo - Handel: Amadigi di Gaula (2008)
  • Title: Handel: Amadigi di Gaula
  • Year Of Release: 2008
  • Label: Ambroisie
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, scans)
  • Total Time: 02:37:42
  • Total Size: 868 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1
1. Ouverture
2. Gavotta

Acte 1:
3. Recitativo
4. Pugnero Contro Del Fato
5. Recitativo Accompagnato
6. Notte, Amica Dei Riposi
7. Recitativo
8. Recitativo
9. Non Sa Temere Questo Mio Petto
10. Recitativo
11. Ah ! Spietato !
12. Recitativo
13. Vado, Corro Al Mio Tesoro
14. Recitativo
15. Agitato Il Cor Mi Sento
16. Sinfonia
17. Recitativo
18. Gioie, Venite In Sen
19. Recitativo
20. E Si Dolce Il Mio Contento
21. Recitativo
22. Oh Caro Mio Tesor
23. Recitativo
24. Io Godo, Scherzo E Rido
25. Recitativo
26. O Rendetemi Il Mio Bene

Acte 2:
27. Recitativo
28. Sussurrate Onde Vezzose
29. Recitativo
30. Recitativo
31. Recitativo
32. S'Estinto E L'Idol Mio

CD 2
1. Recitativo
2. T'Amai
3. Recitativo
4. Ti Pentirai, Crudel !
5. Recitativo
6. Crudel, Tu Non Farai
7. Recitativo
8. Pena Tiranna
9. Recitativo
10. Se Tu Brami
11. Recitativo
12. Recitativo
13. Tu Mia Speranza
14. Recitativo
15. Recitativo
16. Affannami, Tormentami
17. Recitativo
18. Destero Dall'Empia Dite

Acte 3:
19. Recitativo
20. Dolce Vita Del Moi Petto
21. Recitativo
22. Vanne Lungi
23. Recitativo
24. Cangia Al Fine
25. Recitativo
26. Recitativo Accompagnato
27. Recitativo
28. Addio, Crudo Amadigi !
29. Recitativo
30. Sinfonia
31. Recitativo
32. Sento La Gioia
33. Recitativo
34. Godete, Oh Cori Amanti
35. Ballo

Amadigi di Gaula had its premiere in London in 1715. Its libretto, based on a medieval legend and encompassing such effects as a magically appearing sorceress, reflects the then-fashionable English taste for spectacle in operatic production. Musically, however, the opera is of chamber dimensions, involving just five soloists, and takes in some emotionally intimate moments. In this backward-looking piece -- it even ends with a brief ballet -- Handel doesn't attempt any structural innovations: the arias and duets are cast firmly in the tripartite da capo format. Still, he finds room for the occasional imaginative touch, as when he uses French-overture gestures in a few of the ritornelli to suggest tragic breadth, or has the two voices in a hitherto contrapuntal duet launch the "B" section in straight thirds.

Here more than in most "period" productions, the musical direction sets a strong overall tone. Eduardo López Banzo paces the show with bracing vigor and lively rhythmic address. He favors brisk, energetic tempos, some of which get the singers a bit flustered in the embellished repeats. But he's also attentive to melodic shape -- ensuring, for example, that all the "feminine" phrase-endings, musical and textual, are properly tapered -- and gives the singers time to color the more inward numbers. López Banzo encourages the strings to dig into the tone in the faster movements, eliciting some of the roughness once associated with early instruments. But the woodwinds are delicate or pungently expressive, as needed, and the principal oboe duets effectively with the one trumpet when asked. Save in the wheezy introduction to Amadigi's "T'amai," the orchestral sound is big, forward and full-bodied. This is no arid historical exhumation but a living, breathing piece of theater. . . -- Opera News, Stephen Francis Vasta, November 2008


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