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Vivaldi: Gloria (Vivaldi Edition)
Mingardo, Concerto Italiano, Alessandrini
Vivaldi: Gloria (Vivaldi Edition)
Genres: Pop, Classical
 

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Mingardo, Concerto Italiano, Alessandrini
Title: Vivaldi: Gloria (Vivaldi Edition)
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Naive
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 8/25/2009
Genres: Pop, Classical
Styles: Vocal Pop, Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 709861304851
 

CD Reviews

Contralto Sara Mingardo at Her Best
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 09/15/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Conductor/musicologist Rinaldo Alessandrini has recorded the more familiar of Vivaldi's two Glorias, the one designated RV 589, the one that begins with those unforgettable bouncing octaves, at least once before. This one is with his own Concerto Italiano, which comprises both original-instruments ensemble and singers (all Italian), and it doesn't differ all that much from the one he recorded with Concerto Italiano and a French chorus, Akademia Vivaldi: Gloria Magnificat. Both versions have the fastest opening movement ('Gloria in excelsis Deo') that you are ever likely to hear. Somehow it works, although I don't know how the chorus and orchestra do it. (The 'Laudamus te' is almost as fast and its two sopranos get gold medals for making it believable at that tempo. And the chorus deserves praise for its beautiful and accurate singing in the fast 'Propter magnam gloriam tuam'.) This performance is different from the earlier version in that Alessandrini opens it with a work he has tacked on, 'Ostro picta, armata spina', which is a two aria cantata for orchestra and soprano (sung meltingly by a member of the Concerto Italiano chorus, Monica Piccinini). He offers rather tortuous reasoning for having done so, but I'm glad he did because it is simply beautiful.



But the real reason for buying this disc is the performance of the second of Vivaldi's Glorias, designated RV 588. And that's because Sara Mingardo, surely one of the most talented of any current coloratura contraltos, sings in four of its solo movements. Her chocolate-syrup voice is perfect for this music. This is not to say that the orchestra, chorus and other soloists don't do a marvelous job; they do. But it is Mingardo's contribution that makes this performance really stand out.



A strong recommendation.



Scott Morrison"
Alas, not all that I hoped for
G. Rodger | Milwaukee WI USA | 10/22/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Normally I like Alessandrini and he generally chooses very good singers to work with, but while I liked the accompanying ensemble on this recording, the singers left me less than impressed. They were certainly pleasant, but that's hardly why one listens to this music. Mingardo was clearly the best here, but even her performance was not among her best. She has sounded much better on other recordings with Alessandrini--the Nisi Dominus, for example, is fantastic. And there were tracks on which she sang but was almost unrecognizable as herself. This was decidedly a weak performance and it was not helped by the hair-raising tempos--faster is not always better, especially when the singers have to white-knuckle it through the piece. The recordings of the Glorias by Robert King, while a little too English, are highly preferable to these. It's too bad, I was excited to get these and really wanted to like them, but probably won't listen to them again."
A New Friend, and a Fresh Perspective on an Old One
Paul Van de Water | Virginia, USA | 12/07/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Vivaldi doesn't get as much respect as his contemporaries Bach and Handel, but the ongoing Vivaldi Edition from Naïve may be changing that perception. While introducing us to many superb but little known works by the Red Priest, it is also offering new perspectives on familiar ones, such as the Gloria RV589. This recording also includes the lesser known Gloria RV588. In addition, both Glorias are prefaced by solo motets that, according to conductor Ricardo Alessandrini, were designed to "enrich" and "decorate" the main musical event--"Ostra picta" ("Crimson-hued rose") and "Jubilate, O amoeni chori" ("Rejoice, O delightful choirs").



Contralto Sara Mingardo deservedly gets star billing here, but the other soloists are also fine, especially soprano Monica Piccinni, who sings "Ostra picta." The singers and players of Concerto Italiano, under Alessandrini's direction, also deliver the vibrant, high-quality performances that we have come to expect of them in the baroque repertory. They make Vivaldi's well-known Gloria seem new and fresh."