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Heinichen: Flavio Crispo
Leandro Marziotte, Dana Marbach, Alessandra Visentin
Heinichen: Flavio Crispo
Genre: Opera & Classical Vocal
 
Following the premiere of Brescianellos Tisbe, Johann David Heinichens Flavio Crispo is now the second discovery of a never-performed Baroque opera in an interpretation by Il Gusto Barocco. This Italian opera by Heinichen,...  more »

     
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All Artists: Leandro Marziotte, Dana Marbach, Alessandra Visentin, Silke Gang, Il Gusto Barocco
Title: Heinichen: Flavio Crispo
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Cpo Records
Release Date: 3/15/2019
Genre: Opera & Classical Vocal
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Number of Discs: 3
SwapaCD Credits: 3
UPC: 761203511129

Synopsis

Product Description
Following the premiere of Brescianellos Tisbe, Johann David Heinichens Flavio Crispo is now the second discovery of a never-performed Baroque opera in an interpretation by Il Gusto Barocco. This Italian opera by Heinichen, one of the most valuable documents of its times in matters of compositional history, had been forgotten for some three hundred years until the ensemble premiered it in 2016. The historical circumstances behind this opera are very special: a quarrel involving the two world-famous castrati Senesino and Berselli caused a scandal that prevented the premiere of Heinichens opera at the Dresden court. Some anecdotes relate that the singers accused the composer of imperfect knowledge of Italian and tore the score to shreds during the rehearsal process while he looked on. Others state that Handel had wooed away the Dresden singers during a journey from Italy to London. The score is a masterpiece. To be specific, Heinichen selects a highly exquisite instrumentation in order to depict the purity and fragility of the female character Elena: in the orchestral ritornellos three sorrowful oboe voices are heard without any sort of bass foundation their song of lament itself is accompanied by the quiet pizzicato of the strings and in our interpretation of the basso continuo by harp arpeggios. This melancholy and fragile Act II finale is an exemplary instance of Heinichens poetic and highly sensitive setting of this opera libretto.