Artist: Roberta Invernizzi, I Turchini, Antonio Florio
Title: Arias for Domenico Gizzi: A Star Castrato in Baroque Rome
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Glossa
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 56:41
Total Size: 307 Mb
Tracklist:01 Francesco FEO: Prima 'l vorace fulmine (Andromaca)
02 Leonardo VINCI: Amor che nasce (Didone abbandonata)
03 Alessandro SCARLATTI: Crude Parche (Telemaco)
04 Alessandro SCARLATTI: Sinfonia (Telemaco)
05 Alessandro SCARLATTI: O a morire o a goder (Telemaco)
06 Giovanni Battista COSTANZI: Per due pupille belle (Eupatra)
07 Giovanni BONONCINI: Amore inganna (Etearco)
08 Giovanni BONONCINI: Barbari siete, o Dei (Etearco)
09 Domenico SARRO: Sinfonia (Ginevra principessa di Scozia)
10 Domenico SARRO: Povero amor tradito (Ginevra principessa di Scozia)
11 Nicola PORPORA: Volo il mio sangue a spargere (Adelaide)
12 Domenico SARRO: La brama di regno (Il Valdemaro)
13 Domenico SARRO: Cieca nave, infidi sguardi (Ginevra principessa di Scozia)
14 Francesco FEO: No, non mi basterà (Andromaca)
15 Leonardo VINCI: Su la pendice alpina (Didone abbandonata)
Performers:Roberta Invernizzi, soprano
I Turchini
Antonio Florio, conductor
A new Antonio Florio-directed recording from Glossa, once more focusing on a famous Italian singer from the Baroque era, again features the gorgeous vocal qualities of the modern-day Italian interpreter of such music, Roberta Invernizzi. This new and glorious succession of virtuoso arias captivated audiences in Roman theatres through the vocal chords of one eminent singer from 1718 onwards...
Arias for Domenico Gizzi traces the spectacular career of an artist whose importance lay not just in his voice, but his skill in being engaged to sing in operas which served the political needs of the powerful early 18th-century patrons: from Queen Christina of Sweden and James Stuart, 'The Old Pretender' to Roman cardinals. Roberta Invernizzi's choice of arias from across Gizzi's years of glory, typically representing heroic male characters, draws on operas by Alessandro Scarlatti, Leonardo Vinci, Domenico Sarro, Francesco Feo, Giovanni Battista Costanzi, Giovanni Bononcini and Nicola Porpora.
As ever, Antonio Florio leads a zestful I Turchini for this new recording, whilst Giulia Veneziano, in her booklet essay, opens up what, for many, will be a previously uncharted voyage into the history of singing in its own right.
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