Monday 30 July
1.00pm – c. 2.00pm
Cadogan Hall
The tarantella, the entrancing dance form found in several Mediterranean countries, is the unifying thread here.
L'Arpeggiata's programme recalls the popular myth that the bite of the tarantula could only be cured by music and dancing, a remedy known since the Middle Ages as 'tarantismo'. The associated songs and improvisations – tailored to match the varied symptoms of torpor, excitability and restlessness afflicting victims of the spider's poison – are revived in a virtuosic performance that transcends generic boundaries. The innovative period-instrument ensemble is joined by dancer Anna Dego.
The innovative period instrument ensemble L'Arpeggiata celebrates the Tarantella - a Mediterranean dance form which was born out of the myth that a venomous tarantula spider bite could only be cured by music and dancing.
Known in the Middle Ages as 'tarantismo', the dance moves immitated the symptoms of a tarantula bite, such as excitability and restlessness. L'Arpeggiata perform a sequence of Baroque, traditional and improvised music on the theme, including works by Falconieri, Kapsberger, Kircher and Soler.
Cazzati: Ciaccona
Strozzi: Eraclito amoroso
Trad: Stu' criatu
Improvisation: Tarantella Napoletana
Kapsberger: Toccata Prima
Trad: La Carpinese
Improvisation: Canario
Marcello Vitale: Tarantella a Maria di Nardo'
Improvisation: La dia Spagnola
Strozzi: Che si puo fare
Improvisation: Tarantella Italiana
Soler: Fandango
Kapsberger: L'Arpeggiata
Monteverdi: Si dolce e'l tormento
Marcello Vitale: Moresca
Falconiero: La Suave Melodia
Trad: Lu Passariellu
Kircher: Antidotum Tarantulae
L'Arpeggiata
Christina Pluhar (theorbo/director).
1.00pm – c. 2.00pm
Cadogan Hall
The tarantella, the entrancing dance form found in several Mediterranean countries, is the unifying thread here.
L'Arpeggiata's programme recalls the popular myth that the bite of the tarantula could only be cured by music and dancing, a remedy known since the Middle Ages as 'tarantismo'. The associated songs and improvisations – tailored to match the varied symptoms of torpor, excitability and restlessness afflicting victims of the spider's poison – are revived in a virtuosic performance that transcends generic boundaries. The innovative period-instrument ensemble is joined by dancer Anna Dego.
The innovative period instrument ensemble L'Arpeggiata celebrates the Tarantella - a Mediterranean dance form which was born out of the myth that a venomous tarantula spider bite could only be cured by music and dancing.
Known in the Middle Ages as 'tarantismo', the dance moves immitated the symptoms of a tarantula bite, such as excitability and restlessness. L'Arpeggiata perform a sequence of Baroque, traditional and improvised music on the theme, including works by Falconieri, Kapsberger, Kircher and Soler.
Cazzati: Ciaccona
Strozzi: Eraclito amoroso
Trad: Stu' criatu
Improvisation: Tarantella Napoletana
Kapsberger: Toccata Prima
Trad: La Carpinese
Improvisation: Canario
Marcello Vitale: Tarantella a Maria di Nardo'
Improvisation: La dia Spagnola
Strozzi: Che si puo fare
Improvisation: Tarantella Italiana
Soler: Fandango
Kapsberger: L'Arpeggiata
Monteverdi: Si dolce e'l tormento
Marcello Vitale: Moresca
Falconiero: La Suave Melodia
Trad: Lu Passariellu
Kircher: Antidotum Tarantulae
L'Arpeggiata
Christina Pluhar (theorbo/director).
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