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Benjamin Bagby, Norbert Rodenkirchen - Endzeitfragmente (Fragments for the End of Time) (2008)

Benjamin Bagby, Norbert Rodenkirchen - Endzeitfragmente (Fragments for the End of Time) (2008)
  • Title: Endzeitfragmente (Fragments for the End of Time)
  • Year Of Release: 2008
  • Label: Raumklang
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
  • Total Time: 01:17:32
  • Total Size: 353 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Fortis Atque Amara
02. ...Sin Tac Piqueme, Daz Er Touuan Scal
03. Unsar Trohtin Hat Farsalt
04. Thes Habet Er Ubar Woroltring
05. Adducentur
06. Geng Imo Tho The Godes Sunu
07. Occidentana
08. Iudicii Signum
09. Scalam Ad Caelos
10. Summi Regis Archangele Michahel

Performers:
Benjamin Bagby - Voice, Harp, Organ [Symphonia]
Norbert Rodenkirchen - Flute, Harp

Benjamin Bagby has spent his career as a scholar and performer immersed in the Medieval culture of western and northern Europe. The result has been numerous programs, recordings, performances, and publications, many of them with Sequentia, the outstanding ensemble he founded with his late wife, Barbara Thornton, in 1977. In this collection, Fragments for the End of Time 9th-11th Centuries, singer and harpist Bagby and flutist and harpist Norbert Rodenkirchen sing and play an assortment of apocalyptic fragments from Frankish, Bavarian, Alsatian, Saxon, and Aquitainian sources. Bagby is a classically trained baritone with a gorgeous, full voice that would shine in traditional repertoire and he is also a superb actor. The point of these baleful pieces was to terrify listeners with awe-inspiring imagery of the end of the world, so he pulls out all the stops with a full array of vocal techniques to create that effect, moving seamlessly through a range of ghostly Sprechstimme, howling, whispering, and ranting, as well as some full-throated lyricism. It's a dazzling virtuoso performance, and it's easy to imagine it striking terror not only in its intended audiences but also with contemporary listeners able to give themselves over to its evocative power. It's astonishing that such limited resources -- voice, flutes, and harps -- can so effectively convey the immensity of these visions of the world's end. This is a performance that should captivate any fan of very early music and one that could make converts of adventurous listeners new to this repertoire. WDR's sound is clear and nicely resonant, if a little close; listeners may need to bump down the volume a little to avoid being overwhelmed, but given the subject matter, being overwhelming may, after all, be the intent.





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