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Frescobaldi: Affetti amorosi
Arie musicali Firenze, 1630
Damien Guillon (counter-tenor), André Henrich (lute), Céline Scheen (soprano), Thomas Hobbs (tenor), Kevin Manent-Navratil (harpsichord), Marie-Domitille Murez (harp), Benoît Arnould (bass), Julien Barre (cello), Benoît Arnould (baritone)
Le Banquet Céleste
The songs certainly display the feverish shifts between exhilaration and despair built into much baroque music. Frescobaldi’s contemporary Monteverdi admittedly writes more memorable tunes,...
Frescobaldi: Affetti amorosi
Arie musicali Firenze, 1630
Damien Guillon (counter-tenor), André Henrich (lute), Céline Scheen (soprano), Thomas Hobbs (tenor), Kevin Manent-Navratil (harpsichord), Marie-Domitille Murez (harp), Benoît Arnould (bass), Julien Barre (cello), Benoît Arnould (baritone)
Le Banquet Céleste
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The songs certainly display the feverish shifts between exhilaration and despair built into much baroque music. Frescobaldi’s contemporary Monteverdi admittedly writes more memorable tunes,...
About
With Affetti amorosi Damien Guillon directs a dazzling selection of vocal works from Girolamo Frescobaldi, drawn from the Ferrara composer’s two books of Arie musicali. These arias date from 1615-1630, by which time Frescobaldi, now resident in Rome, had become a “cult” composer, and permitted great expressive freedom in the performance of his music.
Purposefully offering a recording full of contrasts and singing of human and divine love, countertenor Guillon is admirably matched by the other vocal talents in Le Banquet Céleste: soprano Céline Scheen, tenor Thomas Hobbs and bass Benoît Arnould. This new Glossa recording includes two of Frescobaldi’s enduring and moving spiritual sonnets, Maddalena alla croce and Ohimè che fur as well as one of the nascent Baroque’s favoured vocal forms, the lettera amorosa, in Vanne, o carta amorosa.
The singers are joined by lute, harp, cello and harpsichord from Guillon’s ensemble. In his wide ranging and thought-provoking essay Pierre-Élie Mamou points out vivid characteristics of this early Baroque music – including “the play of opposites that greatly moves our souls” – notably the polarities between anxiety and pleasure, and time which passes and time which remains.
Contents and tracklist
- Damien Guillon (countertenor), André Henrich (lute)
- Damien Guillon (countertenor), Céline Scheen (soprano), Thomas Hobbs (tenor)
- Le Banquet Céleste
- Kevin Manent-Navratil (harpsichord)
- Marie-Domitille Murez (harp), Benoît Arnould (bass)
- Recorded: 24-28 June 2017
- Recording Venue: Église de Froville, France
- Benoît Arnould (baritone)
- André Henrich (lute), Julien Barre (cello)
- André Henrich (lute)
Awards and reviews
9th February 2018
The songs certainly display the feverish shifts between exhilaration and despair built into much baroque music. Frescobaldi’s contemporary Monteverdi admittedly writes more memorable tunes, but I still listened happily, basking in the gorgeous strong sunshine of Damien Guillon’s counter-tenor.