No Lunchtime Concert this coming Saturday but the live evening concert will be interesting.
Cappella Mediterranea perform Il Diluvio Universale by the Sicilian composer Michelangelo Falvetti, live from Fribourg
[…]
The Flood in music: Michelangelo Falvetti, maestro di cappella at Messina Cathedral during the 1680s, is today a relatively neglected figure but his compositions burst with imagination and gripping drama (*here we go again). Il diluvio universale is a sacred 'dialogue' oratorio, in which there is no joined-up narrative (*whatever this means), but in which the soloists and chorus take roles in a sequence of dramatic tableaux. The subject is The Flood, and the cast includes God, Noah and his wife and a chorus of drowning folk, as well as Death, Divine Justice, Human Nature and the Four Elements (* not in the original).
A highly theatrical concert performance (one of the characters in costume) here. With English subtitles. The video has a generous encore and an extensive promotional section. This is a performance at Ambronay with the same performers as this broadcast. You may prefer to watch before, after (or instead of) the broadcast. Either way, it is worth a look.
Here is some more background information of the work.
Incidentally, Cappella Mediterranea’s Il Nabucco also by Falvetti was played on CD Review somewhile ago. Some of us were very impressed.
Cappella Mediterranea perform Il Diluvio Universale by the Sicilian composer Michelangelo Falvetti, live from Fribourg
[…]
The Flood in music: Michelangelo Falvetti, maestro di cappella at Messina Cathedral during the 1680s, is today a relatively neglected figure but his compositions burst with imagination and gripping drama (*here we go again). Il diluvio universale is a sacred 'dialogue' oratorio, in which there is no joined-up narrative (*whatever this means), but in which the soloists and chorus take roles in a sequence of dramatic tableaux. The subject is The Flood, and the cast includes God, Noah and his wife and a chorus of drowning folk, as well as Death, Divine Justice, Human Nature and the Four Elements (* not in the original).
A highly theatrical concert performance (one of the characters in costume) here. With English subtitles. The video has a generous encore and an extensive promotional section. This is a performance at Ambronay with the same performers as this broadcast. You may prefer to watch before, after (or instead of) the broadcast. Either way, it is worth a look.
Here is some more background information of the work.
Incidentally, Cappella Mediterranea’s Il Nabucco also by Falvetti was played on CD Review somewhile ago. Some of us were very impressed.
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