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Kathleen Battle

Auteur de Baroque Duet [sound recording]

31+ oeuvres 158 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Œuvres de Kathleen Battle

Baroque Duet [sound recording] (1992) — Vocalist — 34 exemplaires
A Christmas Celebration [sound recording] (1989) — Artist — 12 exemplaires
Grace [sound recording] (2008) — Artist — 9 exemplaires
Salzburg Recital [sound recording] — Artist — 9 exemplaires
So Many Stars [sound recording] — Artist — 9 exemplaires
Pleasures of Their Company [sound recording] (1990) — Artist — 8 exemplaires
Spirituals in Concert [sound recording] (1991) — Artist — 8 exemplaires
At Carnegie Hall [sound recording] — Artist — 6 exemplaires
Classic Kathleen Battle: A Portrait [sound recording] (2002) — Artist — 5 exemplaires
Angels' Glory [sound recording] (1996) — Artist — 4 exemplaires
Händel Arias [sound recording] (2003) — Artist — 4 exemplaires
Schubert: Lieder — soprano — 4 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Don Giovanni [sound recording] (1946) — Zerlina, quelques éditions220 exemplaires
A German Requiem, op. 45 [sound recording] (1868) — soprano, quelques éditions207 exemplaires
Die Schöpfung [sound recording] (1984) — Artist, quelques éditions121 exemplaires
A Midsummer Night's Dream [sound recording] (1992)quelques éditions95 exemplaires
Siegfried [sound recording] (1973) — Soprano, quelques éditions91 exemplaires
Classic Wynton [sound recording] (1998) — Artist — 14 exemplaires
J.S. Bach: Arias [sound recording] — Artist, quelques éditions8 exemplaires
Beethoven: Missa Solemnis / Mozart: Coronation Mass [sound recording] (1995) — soprano, quelques éditions6 exemplaires
Exsultate Jubilate & Arias [sound recording] (2004) — Artist, quelques éditions3 exemplaires

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Recorded 1993 and 1994.
 
Signalé
EricStellrecht | Jul 25, 2020 |
 
Signalé
EricStellrecht | Jul 25, 2020 |
Over two decades ago and fairly late at night, my local classical music radio station announcer mentioned that he was going to play a track from a new CD (I vaguely remember that it was more than one track that was played that night). I believe he mentioned Wynton Marsalis and Kathleen Battle, by name, but the names meant nothing to me then. When it was ended I was agog to know who was responsible, and what the name of that divine music was.

It wasn’t long before I owned a couple of copies for home and car, which I’ve played it countless times. When frazzled this music picks me up, when I need to bask in beautiful sounds it fills my soul. This is the CD that I would take with me to the proverbial desert island.

The program notes for the disc say that during the Baroque, trumpet signified military, religious and regal music. It says that a higher, sweeter style of playing was created for indoor playing during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries called ‘clarino’. It was matched with high voiced instruments such as the recorder, such as to be found in the Brandenburg Concerto, the voice was also well suited to composers.

“The voice was deemed an especially good match for the trumpet. In particular, the sound of the castrated male voice (castrato) was often compared to the brilliance and strength of the trumpet and all that it symbolized. Throughout the Baroque era, heroic male operatic roles, such as Julius Caesar and Alexander the Great, were typically sung by castrati. If we find the association of the castrato and a high (soprano or alto) singing range with male virility surprising today, it is partly because we fail to make a connection with the sound of the trumpet.”

The music is from some of the greats of the Baroque period: George Frideric Handel, Alessandro Scarlatti, Alessandro Stradella and Johann Sebastian Bach. The notes point out that the three Handel selections “specifically represent the trumpet’s three symbolic uses: military, regal and religious”. Straddella’s piece, is in the form of a “typical chamber sonata with a succession of four dance movements ([Allemande; Corrente; Canzone; [Gigue]) in which the solo trumpet is contrasted with a string orchestra.”

Bach’s Jauchzet Gott, a serious favorite of mine, is also to be found on this CD. This is not a surprise since it is a famous piece for voice and trumpet. “The work calls for extraordinary virtuosity from both the singer and trumpeter; the singer’s part not only demands agility and speed, but the range extends up to high c’’’. “
I have read critiques on this CD that were unfavorable. But the critics most have a far more sophisticated ear than I, because I hear nothing but beauty and passion and skill, and I suspect that I will love this disc until the day that I die.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
geohistnut | Dec 13, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
31
Aussi par
13
Membres
158
Popularité
#133,026
Évaluation
½ 4.4
Critiques
3
ISBN
5
Langues
1

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