Labels

flac (326) mp3 (324) 16-bit (308) usa (293) 320kbps (233) classical (230) noise (203) jazz (121) italy (75) opera (74) modern classical (72) baroque (71) romanticism (68) chamber music (66) live (60) germany (49) classical period (46) religious (46) collaboration (44) france (43) split (43) japan (39) uk (39) england (38) industrial (37) 2007 (36) austria (36) choral (34) japanoise (32) v0 (32) drone (31) canada (29) country (29) 2018 (27) 2015 (25) 2017 (25) naxos (25) 192kbps (24) 2005 (22) dark ambient (22) nsfw (22) sweden (22) 2012 (21) denmark (21) 1992 (20) 2006 (20) 2010 (20) 2013 (20) 2003 (19) 2008 (19) 2009 (19) compilation (19) power electronics (19) 24-bit (18) folk (17) hyperion (17) 1996 (16) 2011 (16) blues (16) columbia (16) hnw (16) prestige (16) rock (16) 1956 (15) 1995 (15) john wiese (15) czechia (14) finland (14) harmonia mundi (14) russia (14) 1997 (13) art taylor (13) electroacoustic (13) johnny griffin (13) phil blankenship (13) sam mckinlay (13) the rita (13) 1993 (12) 1994 (12) 2000 (12) 2002 (12) 2004 (12) 2014 (12) 2016 (12) 2019 (12) 256kbps (12) ambient (12) harsh noise wall (12) joseph haydn (12) lieder (12) switzerland (12) 1957 (11) 1960 (11) 2001 (11) ballet (11) v2 (11) 128kbps (10) 1972 (10) 1998 (10) brad rose (10) free jazz (10) gospel (10) lhd (10) richard ramirez (10) 1973 (9) 1999 (9) jackie mclean (9) nathan young (9) nicola porpora (9) renaissance (9) 1959 (8) 1961 (8) 1976 (8) 1977 (8) 1978 (8) 1985 (8) 1987 (8) ajilvsga (8) big band (8) chandos (8) contemporary (8) dacapo (8) dave holland (8) emi classics (8) fusion (8) hampton hawes (8) kevin drumm (8) oratorio (8) othmar schoeck (8) pain jerk (8) paul chambers (8) richard wagner (8) sun ra (8) vomir (8) 1958 (7) 1967 (7) 1968 (7) 1969 (7) 1971 (7) 1974 (7) 1979 (7) 1986 (7) 1988 (7) 1989 (7) aaron dilloway (7) andreas staier (7) belgium (7) bis (7) carl nielsen (7) donald byrd (7) ecm (7) frank morgan (7) hank mobley (7) igor stravinsky (7) jack dejohnette (7) jenő jandó (7) kenny drew (7) knurl (7) macronympha (7) pop (7) rca (7) 1962 (6) 1964 (6) american primitive (6) brilliant classics (6) christoph willibald gluck (6) deutsche grammophon (6) doug watkins (6) duke ellington (6) eddie "lockjaw" davis (6) erato (6) francesco cavalli (6) giacinto scelsi (6) glossa (6) jan ladislav dussek (6) johann adolf hasse (6) johann sebastian bach (6) john gilmore (6) louis hayes (6) marc-antoine charpentier (6) norway (6) per nørgård (6) self abuse (6) self-released (6) sonny stitt (6) 1955 (5) 1963 (5) 1970 (5) 1982 (5) 1991 (5) 2020 (5) 224kbps (5) andré grétry (5) billy higgins (5) blue note (5) carl ditters von dittersdorf (5) chick corea (5) cpo (5) free folk (5) government alpha (5) incapacitants (5) maria callas (5) mikko aspa (5) moodsville (5) new jazz (5) niels-henning ørsted pedersen (5) pure (5) red garland (5) richard strauss (5) riverside (5) toshiji mikawa (5) troniks (5) vocal jazz (5) yusef lateef (5) 1951 (4) 1952 (4) 1965 (4) 1980 (4) 1981 (4) 4ib (4) alexander scriabin (4) antonio lotti (4) atlantic (4) barry harris (4) ben riley (4) blue sabbath black cheer (4) bob dylan (4) charles mingus (4) charles wuorinen (4) china (4) cracksteel (4) dan johansson (4) decca (4) deterge (4) dexter gordon (4) emil beaulieau (4) erstwhile (4) field recordings (4) franz schubert (4) freak animal (4) gene ammons (4) haare (4) hanson (4) heavy psych (4) herbert howells (4) hip-hop (4) impressionism (4) jazzland (4) jim haras (4) johan svendsen (4) jon borges (4) junior mance (4) kenny clarke (4) kenny wheeler (4) kungliga filharmonikerna (4) larry gales (4) mal waldron (4) marshall allen (4) mercury (4) miles davis (4) mosaic (4) mo・te (4) msbr (4) ominous recordings (4) orchester der bayreuther festspiele (4) orchestra del teatro alla scala (4) oslo-filharmonien (4) patrick o'neil (4) philharmonia orchestra (4) rrrecords (4) sakari oramo (4) sam jones (4) team boro tapes (4) tullio serafin (4) verve (4) vincenzo bellini (4) virgin classics (4) warner classics (4) wilhelm stenhammar (4) william shakespeare (4) 1954 (3) 1975 (3) abisko (3) airto moreira (3) alban berg (3) antonio caldara (3) balthasar-neumann-chor (3) barney kessel (3) black leather jesus (3) bootleg (3) buzz freeman (3) cedar walton (3) charlie haden (3) chess (3) chondritic sound (3) christoph prégardien (3) christophe rousset (3) cipher productions (3) cti (3) debut (3) dietrich fischer-dieskau (3) digitalis recordings (3) doom (3) dynamic (3) ecm new series (3) elmo hope (3) elvin jones (3) erik nystrand (3) estonia (3) fumio kosakai (3) genesis (3) genoasejlet (3) georg friedrich händel (3) george enescu (3) george jones (3) giacomo carissimi (3) giovanni legrenzi (3) giovanni pierluigi da palestrina (3) girolamo frescobaldi (3) glenn gould (3) grunt (3) herbie hancock (3) hospital productions (3) howard shelley (3) hungaroton (3) internazionale (3) janushoved (3) jason lescalleet (3) jean-philippe rameau (3) jim hall (3) joe farrell (3) johann baptist vanhal (3) john coltrane (3) john olson (3) johnny cash (3) julianne baird (3) kaija saariaho (3) latin (3) les arts florissants (3) les talens lyriques (3) marcia bassett (3) mario venzago (3) maurizio bianchi (3) new age (3) new forces (3) ottorino respighi (3) pain nail (3) phil collins (3) philips classics (3) philly joe jones (3) progressive rock (3) r&b (3) ray brown (3) red mitchell (3) robbie basho (3) romania (3) sam rivers (3) shelly manne (3) skin crime (3) solipsism (3) sony classical (3) spoken (3) the gift of music (3) the new blockaders (3) the parley of instruments (3) thomas hengelbrock (3) tommy flanagan (3) torturing nurse (3) tourette (3) urashima (3) vasculae (3) veljo tormis (3) walter bishop jr. (3) wardell gray (3) wiener philharmoniker (3) william christie (3) willie nelson (3) 1928 (2) 1941 (2) 1942 (2) 1948 (2) 1953 (2) 1990 (2) academy of st. martin-in-the-fields (2) alex riel (2) alfred schnittke (2) amp (2) antonio de almeida (2) anw (2) aparté (2) arcana (2) archiv produktion (2) armenia (2) art blakey (2) art farmer (2) art pepper (2) arthur phipps (2) atma classique (2) bacillus (2) bacteria field (2) balthasar-neumann-ensemble (2) benny carter (2) berliner philharmoniker (2) bill hardman (2) billie holiday (2) bizarre audio arts (2) blind lemon jefferson (2) blue mitchell (2) bob dylan & the band (2) brigitte fassbaender (2) bruno maderna (2) buell neidlinger (2) buster williams (2) camesina quartet (2) capitol (2) cecil mcbee (2) chant (2) charisma (2) charles valentin alkan (2) chris goudreau (2) claudio cavina (2) col legno (2) concord jazz (2) craig taborn (2) curtis fuller (2) das alte werk (2) david allan coe (2) deathbed tapes (2) denshi zatsuon (2) der ring (2) dial square tapes (2) dick griffin (2) document (2) dominick fernow (2) doug sides (2) droughter (2) ebm (2) edgar doneux (2) el saturn (2) electronic (2) electronica (2) epic (2) ernie farrow (2) fecalove (2) fusty cunt (2) gary bartz (2) gelsomina (2) george cables (2) george proctor (2) gerd albrecht (2) gian francesco malipiero (2) gioacchino rossini (2) giovanni maria trabaci (2) gnarled forest (2) goat (2) greh holder (2) göteborgs symfoniker (2) hank williams (2) harbinger sound (2) hard bop (2) harry partch (2) heinz holliger (2) heinz hopf (2) helicopter (2) henry purcell (2) herbert von karajan (2) hhl (2) hive mind (2) hong chulki (2) hong kong (2) hong kong philharmonic orchestra (2) hugh lawson (2) ignaz joseph pleyel (2) improvised (2) in slaughter natives (2) incidental music (2) india (2) ireland (2) island (2) jaap van zweden (2) jack rose (2) jason crumer (2) jean-baptiste lully (2) jean-joseph cassanéa de mondonville (2) jean-paul fouchécourt (2) jimmy rowles (2) jimmy woode (2) johann nepomuk hummel (2) johann pachelbel (2) johannes brahms (2) john mclaughlin (2) john neschling (2) john prine (2) john storgårds (2) josé van dam (2) julian priester (2) k2 (2) kai wessel (2) kaikhosru shapurji sorabji (2) karl böhm (2) keith brewer (2) keith jarrett (2) kenny dorham (2) la venexiana (2) lake shark harsh noise (2) legless (2) leonardo leo (2) leoš janáček (2) leroy vinnegar (2) les musiciens du louvre (2) lex humphries (2) liberty uganda (2) mania (2) marc minkowski (2) marco polo (2) mario filippeschi (2) mariss jansons (2) marjana lipošek (2) marty krystall (2) matthew gee (2) max emanuel cencic (2) mdg (2) medieval (2) michelle deyoung (2) mmb (2) mnem (2) mode (2) modern harmonic (2) monique zanetti (2) montserrat caballé (2) mother savage noise productions (2) mutant ape (2) muzio clementi (2) n. (2) new london chamber choir (2) nicola rossi-lemeni (2) nicola vinciguerra (2) nicolai gedda (2) olympisk løft (2) ondine (2) opera d'oro (2) opus arte (2) orchestra del maggio musicale fiorentino (2) orchestra of the antipodes (2) orchestra of the metropolitan opera (2) orchestre de la rtb (2) orf radio-symphonieorchester wien (2) orfeo (2) ornette coleman (2) oscar peterson (2) pan classics (2) peter holman (2) philips (2) pinchgut live (2) praga digitals (2) prairie fire (2) prurient (2) ray bryant (2) richard egarr (2) richard tucker (2) richie kamuca (2) robedoor (2) rundfunkchor leipzig (2) ryan bloomer (2) scorpio (2) scotland (2) segerhuva (2) sergio vartolo (2) sewer election (2) sharon's last party (2) she walks crooked (2) sick llama (2) skin graft (2) slaughter productions (2) slugs' saloon (2) sonny rollins (2) soul jazz (2) south korea (2) squamata (2) staatskapelle dresden (2) steeplechase (2) stefano aresi (2) stephen layton (2) steve coleman (2) stile galante (2) strata-east (2) symphonieorchester des bayerischen rundfunks (2) tapeworm tapes (2) techno (2) telarc (2) teldec (2) tetsuo furudate (2) the band (2) the basement tapes (2) the north sea (2) the young danish string quartet (2) thelonious monk (2) tommy potter (2) trash ritual (2) treriksröset (2) tribute (2) troum (2) two assistant deputy ministers (2) tzadik (2) v1 (2) vanguard (2) vanity productions (2) varg (2) werewolf jerusalem (2) white gold (2) wilbur ware (2) wolfgang amadeus mozart (2) worthless recordings (2) wynton kelly (2) xerxes (2) yazoo (2) zaïmph (2) zwangsbelgucktertum (2) âmes sanglantes (2) 16 shots per second (1) 160kbps (1) 1917 (1) 1926 (1) 1927 (1) 1929 (1) 1930 (1) 1931 (1) 1933 (1) 1935 (1) 1936 (1) 1937 (1) 1940 (1) 1943 (1) 1947 (1) 1950 (1) 1966 (1) 1983 (1) 1984 (1) 23 productions (1) 26 volts of danger recordings (1) a raja's mesh men (1) a&m (1) a.l. lloyd (1) a.z.a.b. (1) aam (1) abandon ship (1) academy of ancient music (1) accord (1) adam riis (1) addison farmer (1) adriano (1) adriano maria fazio (1) adrienne soós (1) agnes baltsa (1) agression sonore (1) alain lombard (1) alan curtis (1) alan feinberg (1) albany (1) albert ammons (1) albert ayler (1) albert heath (1) alchemy (1) aleksandar nenad (1) alexander weimann (1) alexei lubimov (1) alfarmania (1) allyson mchardy (1) alms (1) alpha classics (1) amandine beyer (1) ambrosian opera chorus (1) american composers orchestra (1) american tapes (1) amos trice (1) an innocent young throat-cutter (1) anarchofreaksproduction (1) andrea coen (1) andrea stadel (1) andreas karasiak (1) andrew goodwin (1) andris nelsons (1) andrius zlabys (1) andré anichanov (1) angst (1) anna moffo (1) anna tomowa-sintow (1) annette dasch (1) annette krebs (1) anselmo colzani (1) anssi karttunen (1) antal dorati (1) anthony korf (1) anthony walker (1) antilles (1) antoine brumel (1) antonino votto (1) antonio de cabazón (1) antonio figueroa (1) antonio salieri (1) antonín dvořák (1) apple (1) aradia ensemble (1) arianna art ensemble (1) arion (1) arkiv produktion (1) arne deforce (1) arnold schönberg (1) ars produktion (1) art konkret (1) art yard (1) arthur honegger (1) artifizii musicali (1) artists house (1) artur bodanzky (1) ash international (1) asylum (1) atma baroque (1) aube (1) audiobot (1) aurora orchestra (1) auser musici (1) australia (1) autrement qu'être (1) avanti! chamber orchestra (1) avery sharpe (1) axel kober (1) backasvinet (1) barbatos productions (1) barrikad (1) bascom lamar lunsford (1) bastiaan blomhert (1) batzdorfer hofkapelle (1) bayer (1) bbc legends (1) bbc philharmonic (1) bbc scottish symphony orchestra (1) bbc symphony orchestra (1) benjamin britten (1) bennie maupin (1) benny bailey (1) berlin classics (1) berliner symphoniker (1) bernard deletré (1) berner symphonieorchester (1) big bill broonzy (1) big hole (1) bill connors (1) bill evans (1) billy cobham (1) billy osbourne (1) billy strayhorn (1) birth refusal (1) bizarre uproar (1) bjarte engeset (1) black lion (1) black matter phantasm (1) black ring rituals (1) black saint (1) blind blake (1) blind boy fuller (1) blind willie johnson (1) blind willie mctell (1) blod (1) blossoming noise (1) blue cheer (1) bluebird (1) boaz sharon (1) bocksholm (1) bohdan warchal (1) bongiovanni (1) br-klassik (1) bradíc (1) breathing problem (1) breathing problem productions (1) brenton banks (1) brewer chamber orchestra (1) brise-cul (1) broken flag (1) bruno cocset (1) bruno gini (1) bruno procopio (1) bud powell (1) budapesti madrigálkórus (1) buddah (1) buddy montgomery (1) c. lavender (1) c.l. smooth (1) cajun (1) caligula031 (1) call cobbs jr. (1) callow god (1) camerata bern (1) camerata schweiz (1) camilla nylund (1) canary (1) cantillation (1) cantus classics (1) cappella coloniensis (1) cappella musicale pontificia sistina (1) capriccio (1) caprice (1) carl heinrich graun (1) carl smith (1) carlo ipata (1) carlos giffoni (1) carnegie melon philharmonic (1) carus (1) catherine bott (1) celeste lazarenko (1) celluloid murder (1) centaur (1) chaconne (1) challenge classics (1) chamber orchestra i tempi (1) charles gounod (1) charles koechlin (1) charles moffett (1) charles tolliver (1) charlie persip (1) charlie rice (1) charlie rich (1) chloroform rapist (1) choeur de chambre de namur (1) choir of aam (1) choir of trinity college cambridge (1) chris laurence (1) christian gerhaher (1) christian nicolay (1) christian stadsgaard (1) christiane eda-pierre (1) christoph croisé (1) christophe dumaux (1) christopher jackson (1) christopher moulds (1) christopher robson (1) christophorus (1) chœurs de la rtb (1) cinquecento (1) city of london sinfonia (1) clarius audi (1) clark terry (1) claudette leblanc (1) claves (1) clef (1) clifford jordan (1) cloama (1) cold meat industry (1) come organisation (1) complesso pro musica firenze (1) composers recordings inc. (1) concentus vocalis (1) concerto köln (1) concerto vocale (1) concrete mascara (1) condo horro (1) connie kay (1) consortium carissimi (1) contagious orgasm (1) conte candoli (1) conway twitty (1) cori spezzati (1) coro claudio monteverdi (1) coro della radiotelevisione svizzera (1) crd (1) cremation lily (1) crimes of the crown (1) cruel nature (1) curtis lundy (1) cyclic law (1) d.a.c. (1) daniel sepec (1) daniel szeili (1) daniela dolci (1) danilo serraiocco (1) dannie richmond (1) danny ray thompson (1) dante quartet (1) dare2 (1) dave frishberg (1) david adams (1) david bates (1) david izenzon (1) dawn upshaw (1) dead birds (1) dead body collection (1) deadline recordings (1) death industrial (1) desolation house (1) deutsche kammerakademie (1) deutsches symphonie-orchester berlin (1) diana montague (1) diego fasolis (1) dieter klöcker (1) dino valente (1) discipline (1) disques pierre verany (1) dizzy gillespie (1) dizzy reece (1) dj premier (1) dmitri shostakovich (1) doc bagby (1) dolce & tempesta (1) don alias (1) don byas (1) don cherry (1) don gibson (1) don patterson (1) donald bailey (1) dorian keilhack (1) dorothee oberlinger (1) dosis letalis (1) double leopards (1) douglas ahlstedt (1) dr koncertkoret (1) dr vokalensemblet (1) dresdner kapellknaben (1) drew minter (1) dried up corpse (1) drinkluder (1) duke jordan (1) dusa (1) dust-to-digital (1) dwight yoakam (1) ebe stignani (1) eberhard weber (1) ebony-duo (1) eckhart hübner (1) eclipse (1) ed lyon (1) eddie gale (1) eddie gomez (1) edgard varèse (1) editions de l'oiseau lyre (1) editions mego (1) edvard grieg (1) edward brewer (1) edward vesala (1) eesti filharmoonia kammerkoor (1) einojuhani rautavaara (1) eje thelin (1) elbogen fonogram (1) eleczema (1) elektra (1) elena cecchi fedi (1) elisabeth rethberg (1) elisabeth schwarzkopf (1) elizabeth calleo (1) elizabeth farnum (1) elsa benoit (1) elvis presley (1) emaciator (1) emeralds (1) emil richards (1) emiliano gonzalez toro (1) emmanuel pahud (1) emmylou harris (1) endymion ensemble (1) enemata productions (1) english bach festival baroque orchestra (1) ensemble elyma (1) ensemble für frühe musik augsburg (1) ensemble la pifarescha (1) ensemble legrenzi (1) ensemble modern orchestra (1) ensemble olivier opdebeeck (1) ensemble seicentonovecento (1) ensemble vocal françoise herr (1) epoca baroca (1) erasmo ghiglia (1) erdódy chamber orchestra (1) eric harland (1) erin headley (1) erin helyard (1) ernst ottensamer (1) esa-pekka salonen (1) esp-disk (1) et'cetera (1) ethnic (1) evan parker (1) evelyn lear (1) evgeny kissin (1) evil moisture (1) ewan maccoll (1) experiments in american music (1) fabienne jost (1) fag tapes (1) failing lights (1) failoni orchestra (1) fall into void recs (1) fausto cleva (1) fedora barbieri (1) ferenc szekeres (1) ffrr (1) filippo piccolo (1) fingering eve (1) finlandia (1) flatline construct (1) flavio colusso (1) fonation orange (1) forced orgasm (1) fort evil fruit (1) francesco albanese (1) francesco cera (1) franck-emmanuel comte (1) franco fagioli (1) francy boland (1) franz berwald (1) franz schuber (1) françois devienne (1) françois-xavier roth (1) freckle (1) fred jordan (1) fred neil (1) freddie waits (1) frederico maria sardelli (1) fredrik malmberg (1) freiburger barockorchester (1) fresh sound (1) friedrich schorr (1) frits celis (1) fromental halévy (1) frédéric chopin (1) fuga libera (1) further (1) g.t. hogan (1) gabriel garrido (1) galactique (1) gambit (1) gameboy (1) gary bertini (1) gary cooper (1) gaudeamus (1) gennady rozhdestvensky (1) genuin (1) georg philipp telemann (1) george joyner (1) george onslow (1) george wadenius (1) george zeppenfeld (1) gerald finzi (1) gerhard müller-hornbach (1) gevorg gharabekyan (1) gianandrea noseda (1) gidon kremer (1) gil coggins (1) gil scott-heron (1) gilles de rais order (1) giovanni battista costanzi (1) giovanni guglielmo (1) giovanni sollima (1) gipsy sphinx (1) giuseppe di stefano (1) giuseppe modesti (1) giuseppe valengo (1) giuseppe verdi (1) giuseppina bridelli (1) gli incogniti (1) glistening examples (1) gnp (1) goaty tapes (1) golden years of new jazz (1) gomikawa fumio (1) gordon wilson ashworth (1) gould piano trio (1) graham pushee (1) grant green (1) great opera performances (1) gremlynz (1) grkzgl (1) guild (1) guilty connector (1) gun-brit barkmin (1) gunnar graarud (1) guy clark (1) guy delvaux (1) gächinger kantorei stuttgart (1) gérard lesne (1) hadleigh adams (1) hal hutchinson (1) hanged mans orgasm (1) hank jones (1) hans hotter (1) hans-christoph rademann (1) hanspeter gmür (1) harald stamm (1) harold land (1) harry edison (1) harry james (1) harshnoise (1) hat art (1) heavy tapes (1) hebi like a snake (1) helen humes (1) helene gjerris (1) helga dernesch (1) helios (1) helmut walcha (1) henning voss (1) henry grimes (1) herb ellis (1) herbert kegel (1) herbie lewis (1) heretic grail (1) hermann wright (1) hervé niquet (1) hidemi suzuki (1) highnote (1) hilton ruiz (1) hologram label (1) holst singers (1) horace arnold (1) horace parlan (1) horace silver (1) howard griffiths (1) howard mcghee (1) howlin' wolf (1) hubert laws (1) hubert wild (1) huff raid robot (1) hugh ragin (1) hugh schick (1) human larvae (1) hungary (1) håkan hagegård (1) ian partridge (1) iatrogenesis (1) ideal recordings (1) ides recordings (1) idiopathic (1) idris muhammad (1) iestyn davies (1) igor markevitch (1) ike turner (1) il complesso barocco (1) il fondamento (1) il pomo d'oro (1) ilan volkov (1) impregnable (1) impulse! (1) inhalant (1) inhos (1) inner city (1) innova recordings (1) institut (1) institute of paraphilia studies (1) interior one (1) irmgard seefried (1) isabelle van keulen (1) israel (1) istván várdai (1) ivo haag (1) ivor gurney (1) j.j. johnson (1) jaakko vanhala (1) jack sheldon (1) jaco pastorius (1) jaki byard (1) jamaica (1) james blackshaw (1) james ehnes (1) james lockhart (1) james wood (1) jan dismas zelenka (1) jan garbarek (1) jane getz (1) jaribu shihad (1) jarl (1) jaro prohaska (1) jason "evil" covelli (1) jazz:west (1) jean-françois gardeil (1) jean-françois jenny-clark (1) jean-jacques rousseau (1) jeff witscher (1) jeffrey thompson (1) jeru the damaja (1) jessye norman (1) jetset (1) jimmy bond (1) jimmy forrest (1) jimmy heath (1) jimmy yancey (1) joe gordon (1) joe guy (1) joe henderson (1) joe mondragon (1) joe pass (1) joe turner (1) joe zawinul (1) johannes goritzki (1) johannes kalitzke (1) johannes wildner (1) john bull (1) john eliot gardiner (1) john fahey (1) john handy (1) john kurnick (1) john ore (1) john parricelli (1) john simmons (1) john taylor (1) john witfield (1) jon christensen (1) joni mitchell (1) josef greindl (1) joseph robichaux (1) josé carreras (1) joyce didonato (1) juan pablo izquierdo (1) judith bettina (1) judith bingham (1) judith pannill (1) jukka tiensuu (1) jukka-pekka saraste (1) julia varady (1) june anderson (1) june tyson (1) järtecknet (1) jérôme corres (1) jörg waschinski (1) jürg henneberger (1) k2b2 (1) kadaver (1) kakerlak (1) kammerchor heidelburg (1) kaos kontrol (1) karen dalton (1) karin branzell (1) karl elmendorff (1) karl engel (1) karl schmidt verlag (1) katarina (1) kathryn scott (1) kein & aber (1) kenny barron (1) kenny burrell (1) kenny dennis (1) kent nagano (1) keranen (1) keränen (1) kevin eubanks (1) kickacid (1) kikanju baku (1) kim kashkashian (1) kinky music institute (1) kiri te kanawa (1) kirill gerstein (1) kirill kondrashin (1) klanggalerie (1) klaus florian vogt (1) klaus merterns (1) knabenchantorei basel (1) konrad wagner (1) koryphaia (1) krautrock (1) kremerata baltica (1) kris kristofferson (1) kurt eichhorn (1) la nuova musica (1) la stagione armonica (1) larry bunker (1) last rape (1) laura heimes (1) lawo classics (1) lawrence marable (1) le concert de l'hostel dieu (1) le concert spirituel (1) le nouvel opéra (1) lee konitz (1) lee morgan (1) leibstandarte ss mb (1) leo (1) leonardo vinci (1) lera auerbach (1) leroy williams (1) les basses réunies (1) les disques du soleil et de l'acier (1) les paladins (1) less than zero (1) lew tabackin (1) lewis nash (1) liberty (1) linda mccartney (1) linda perillo (1) lionel hampton (1) lionel rogg (1) liszt ferenc kamarazenekar (1) lloyd mayers (1) london mozart players (1) london sinfonietta (1) london symphony orchestra (1) lone star (1) lorenzo coppola (1) lorraine hunt (1) lost light (1) love earth music (1) lucine amara (1) ludwig august lebrun (1) luigi dallapiccola (1) luke huisman (1) luqman ali (1) lusine zakaryan (1) luzzasco luzzaschi (1) lyrichord (1) m4a (1) mackenzie chami (1) mads vinding (1) mady mesplé (1) mahan esfahani (1) maim (1) mainstream (1) makoto akatsu (1) malcolm proud (1) malcolm stewart (1) mara zampieri (1) marc-andré hamelin (1) marcello lippi (1) marco deplano (1) marcus creed (1) margaret kampmeier (1) margrit weber (1) marguerite krull (1) maria bayo (1) maria müller (1) marianne schroeder (1) marie-adeline henry (1) marin alsop (1) mark durgan (1) mark kozelek (1) mark padmore (1) martial solal (1) martin france (1) martin gabriel (1) martin haselböck (1) martin sturfält (1) martyn hill (1) marvin "smitty" smith (1) maría bayo (1) mass ornament (1) massimo palombella (1) masumi nagasawa (1) mats widlund (1) matthias goerne (1) matthias jung (1) max lorenz (1) maxim emelyanychev (1) mccoy tyner (1) meade "lux" lewis (1) medusa (1) melodiya (1) menstrualrecordings (1) merle haggard (1) merzbow (1) metal (1) mgb (1) michael mcdonald (1) michel plasson (1) michèle dévérité (1) miisc (1) mike connelly (1) mike mainieri (1) milestone (1) military (1) misanthropic agenda (1) mlehst (1) moisture discipline (1) mondo musica (1) monica bacelli (1) monica piccinini (1) monika leskovar (1) monk montgomery (1) monteverdi choir (1) moscow philharmonic orchestra (1) moscow symphony orchestra (1) motette (1) mps (1) msi (1) muse (1) musica alta ripa (1) musica fiorita (1) musica omnia (1) mutare ensemble (1) muzikaal kabaal (1) myto (1) münchner rundfunkorchester (1) nancy hadden (1) nanny larsen-todsen (1) nat adderley (1) ncfo (1) near passerine devotionals (1) nectroik fissure (1) neeme järvi (1) neil varon (1) nepomuk fortepiano quintet (1) netherlands (1) neville marriner (1) new brutalism (1) new chamber opera (1) new world (1) newport classic (1) nfw (1) nicholas mcgegan (1) nick drake (1) nicola fiorenza (1) nicola monti (1) niellerade fallibilisthorstar (1) nigel short (1) nihilist commando (1) nikolai myaskovsky (1) nino sanzogno (1) no fun productions (1) no rent (1) nonesuch (1) norfolk trotter (1) norman simmons (1) novus (1) nuovo era (1) nurse etiquette (1) objective/subjective (1) ochu (1) octa (1) okeh (1) olaf bär (1) old hat (1) ole kristian ruud (1) oliver knussen (1) olivier messiaen (1) olivier opdebeeck (1) onzy matthews (1) opera lafayette orchestra (1) opus 111 (1) orchester der deutschen oper berlin (1) orchestra 'van wasenaer' (1) orchestra del teatro la fenice (1) orchestra di milano della rai (1) orchestra leonardo leo (1) orchestre de l'opéra de lyon (1) orchestre de l'opéra de paris (1) orchestre de louis de froment (1) orchestre du capitole de toulouse (1) orchestre philharmonique de monte-carlo (1) orchestre philharmonique de strasbourg (1) orchestre philharmonique royal de liège (1) organ (1) orquestra sinfônica do estado de são paulo (1) oscillating innards (1) oslo philharmonic wind soloists (1) otoroku (1) oubliette (1) p-tapes (1) p.e. (1) pablo bruna (1) pacrec (1) panta rhei (1) parnassus ensemble (1) parnasus symphonicus (1) patrice djerejian (1) patricia johnson (1) patricia petibon (1) patricia spence (1) patrizia zanardi (1) patsy cline (1) paul bryant (1) paul dombrecht (1) paul mccartney (1) paul motian (1) pauline vaillancourt (1) pavel kolesnikov (1) payday (1) peasant magik (1) pedro de araujo (1) peking crash team (1) pekka perä-takala (1) pelt (1) pentatone (1) percussive rotterdam (1) percy heath (1) perpetual abjection (1) pete johnson (1) pete rock (1) pete rock & c.l. smooth (1) peter erskine (1) peter gabriel (1) peter jablonski (1) peter reichert (1) peter rundel (1) peter watchorn (1) philharmonische werkstatt schweiz (1) philippe jaroussky (1) philippe pierlot (1) philly jazz (1) phurpa (1) piano classics (1) pietro bosna (1) plácido domingo (1) poland (1) pollutive static (1) polydor (1) porn noise (1) portugal (1) praxis dr. bearmann (1) propergol (1) propulsive audio (1) puce mary (1) puerto rico (1) putrefier (1) párkányí quartet (1) péter szabó (1) quack quack (1) quatuor molinari (1) radio sinfoniaorkesteri (1) ralph moore (1) ralph vaughan williams (1) rap-a-lot (1) raubbau (1) ray draper (1) ray drummond (1) red callender (1) redsk (1) reggae (1) reinhold gliere (1) renata rusche (1) rene maison (1) rené jacobs (1) reprise (1) rev. gary davis (1) rias kammerchor (1) ricercar (1) ricercar consort (1) richard hickox (1) richard russell (1) richard williams (1) rinaldo alessandrini (1) rita coolidge (1) rita streich (1) robert craft (1) robert crumb (1) robert kerns (1) robin johannsen (1) rodney crowell (1) rodney kendrick (1) roel dieltiens (1) rogueart (1) roland bufkens (1) roland hanna (1) rolando panerai (1) romantcism (1) romina basso (1) ron carter (1) roost (1) rosamunde quartett (1) roscoe mitchell (1) rossella ragatzu (1) roy goodman (1) roy hargrove (1) roy haynes (1) royal liverpool philharmonic orchestra (1) royal scottish national orchestra (1) rrr (1) rudolf schock (1) rudolph palmer (1) ruggero leoncavallo (1) rundfunk-sinfonieorchester leipzig (1) rundfunkchor berlin (1) russ freeman (1) ryan brown (1) ryu hankil (1) sabine meyer (1) sacred harp (1) sahib shihab (1) sam larner (1) samuel barber (1) sandra arnold (1) sarah makem (1) satan's din (1) saturn research (1) saverio mercadante (1) savoy (1) schakalens bror (1) scott lafaro (1) scum yr earth (1) sebastian tewinkel (1) sebatián aguilera de heredia (1) seicento (1) seiji ozawa (1) serbia (1) serge baudo (1) sergey pakhomov (1) seven sermones ad mortuos (1) sharon quartet (1) sharpwaist (1) sick seed (1) siege electronics (1) signum classics (1) simon joy chorale (1) simon keenlyside (1) simon rattle (1) sinner lady gloria (1) sissisters (1) sixes (1) skeleton dust recordings (1) skin area (1) skip james (1) slave chandelier (1) slide hampton (1) slovenský komorný orchester (1) snuff (1) solid state (1) soloists of the cappella musicale di s. petronio di bologna (1) sonia prina (1) sonnenrad (1) sonny clark (1) sophie bevan (1) soul (1) soul note (1) sound & fury (1) soup (1) spain (1) spine scavenger (1) spite (1) spykes (1) st. petersburg state symphony orchestra (1) staatsorchester rheinische philharmonie (1) stadttheater bern (1) stan sulzamnn (1) stanley clarke (1) stanley cowell (1) steel hook prostheses (1) stefan parkman (1) stefan östersjo (1) stefano demicheli (1) steffen kubach (1) stegm (1) stenhammar quartet (1) stepan turnovsky (1) stephanie mccallum (1) stephen alltop (1) stephen hough (1) stephen rice (1) sterile (1) steve earle (1) steve ellington (1) steve goodman (1) steve osborne (1) stimbox (1) strict (1) studio de musique ancienne de montréal (1) sun kil moon (1) sunny murray (1) support unit (1) survivalist (1) suzie leblanc (1) swampland (1) symonický orchester slovenského rozhlasu (1) symphonieorchester des orf (1) symphony orchestra of vlaamse opera (1) synthpop (1) s·core (1) sächsisches vocalensemble (1) sønderjyllands symfoniorkester (1) südwestdeutsches kammerorchester pforzheim (1) takoma (1) taku unami (1) tall poppies (1) tani tabbal (1) tape room (1) tape tektoniks (1) tapiolan kamarikuoro (1) taskmaster (1) teddy charles (1) teddy stewart (1) teddy wilson (1) tenebrae (1) tension collapse (1) terror cell unit (1) the brabant ensemble (1) the cherry point (1) the copper family (1) the doobie brothers (1) the king's consort (1) the level of vulnerability (1) the london haydn quartet (1) the percussive planet ensemble (1) the queen's chamber band (1) the voice of the people (1) the vomit arsonist (1) theo adam (1) theorema (1) thomas arne (1) thomas füri (1) thomas hayward (1) thrill jockey (1) tibet (1) tibetan monks (1) tim frederiksen (1) tim hardin (1) tito gobbi (1) tom krause (1) tom t. hall (1) tom van der geld (1) tom waits (1) tommy bryant (1) tony dumas (1) topic (1) torsten kerl (1) toshiko akiyoshi (1) total black (1) total zero (1) tower voices new zealand (1) tradition (1) train cemetery (1) transition (1) transparency (1) trashfuck (1) trauma tone recordings (1) triangle (1) troglosound (1) trojan (1) trondheim symfoniorkester (1) troubleman unlimited (1) trudelise schimdt (1) trummy young (1) turgid animal (1) turkey (1) tyshawn sorey (1) tõnu kaljuste (1) tøke moldrup (1) ukraine (1) ulf bästlein (1) ulf schirmer (1) uncle dave macon (1) unclean (1) united artists (1) united forces of industrial (1) utmarken (1) utsu tapes (1) uwe grodd (1) uzusounds (1) vadym kholodenko (1) valois (1) vanguard productions (1) vasily petrenko (1) vee-jay (1) venezuela (1) vern gosdin (1) vernon handley (1) verve forecast (1) vhf (1) victor sproles (1) vienna mozart academy (1) vinnie colaiuta (1) visions (1) vito paternoster (1) vivat (1) vms (1) vms elit (1) vogue schallplatten (1) vokalensemble nova (1) vårtgård (1) véronique gens (1) wagon (1) wall noise action (1) walter davis jr. (1) waltraud meier (1) warner bros. (1) washington phillips (1) wav (1) wayne shorter (1) wdr (1) wdr sinfonieorchester köln (1) webb pierce (1) webster young (1) wendy warner (1) werner haselau (1) wes montgomery (1) what we do is secret (1) wiener akademi (1) wiener kammerchor (1) wiener staatsopernorchester (1) wil bill davis (1) wilhelm furtwängler (1) william bennett (1) william winant (1) willie dixon (1) willie johnson (1) willie jones (1) windham hill (1) woody shaw (1) workbench (1) workturm ghetto (1) woven skull (1) xl recordings (1) yevgeny mravinsky (1) young god (1) z-ro (1) zabelle panosia (1) zombi attack (1) zyklon ss (1) åke hodell (1) åke persson (1) æon (1)
Showing posts with label thomas hengelbrock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thomas hengelbrock. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 January 2021

Antonio Lotti - Requiem; Credo; Miserere


"The music chronicles of the 18th century constantly draw our attention to a name held in great admiration and respect: Antonio Lotti.

"There are still numerous manuscript copies of his compositions to be found in libraries all over Europe, as testimony to the immense range and effect of his work. In strange contrast to the above we must add that hardly any of these wonderful compositions are available in modern editions. Lotti's sphere of activity was limited almost entirely to the Cathedral of San Marco in Venice. He probably grew up in Hanover (where his father Matteo Lotti was Hofkapellmeister); in Venice, we first find him studying with Giovanni Legrenzi, then as an extra alto in the choir, later as an organist and finally as 'maestro di cappella'. He had only one extended absence from his adopted home: in 1717, he accepted an invitation to the Court at Dresden from the Saxon Elector Friedrich August II and over the following two years he wrote several operas and much new sacred music there. In a report of November 22, 1717, we read:

"'In a manner quite unfamiliar here the Italian composers sent by His Excellency the Elector from Venice to Dresden have exalted our church by preparing in honour of Sain Cecilia within the octave of her feast day a sung High Mass lasting nearly three hours and executed with such admirable artistry both in respect of the singing voices and of the instruments as has never before been heard in Dresden.'

"Unfortunately it can no longer be determined with certainty which works Lotti brought with him to Dresden, which he composed there and which he sent to Dresden after his return to San Marco. Clearly the composer and the Elector remained in contact for some years. Many of these compositions are still in the archives of the Sächsische Landesbibliotek in Dresden. The operatic works 'Alessandro Severo', 'Ascanio', 'Teofane' and 'Giove in Argo' (with which the new Court theatre in the Zwinger was opened on September 3, 1719) are to be found in the library along with a string of important sacred works. Most of them are available in performing parts as well as in full score; some of them were prepared in the 1730s by the Dresden threatre and court composer Giovanni Alberto Ristori. Johann Sebastian Bach copied Lotti's 'Missa sapientiae' when he was in Dresden and joins the company of George Frideric Handel, Jan Dismas Zelenka and Johann Georg Pisendel among those German composers whose work was influenced by the encounter with Lotti and his music.

"The works on this recording are characteristic of Lotti's masterly treatment of diverse forms and compositional techniques. The 'Requiem in F major' is remarkable for its sheer abundance of invention. Artfully extended chordal harmony of laconic brevity; all the varieties of polyphony are tried up to eight-part harmony, and juxtaposed in thrilling contrast. Lotti by no means eschews the operatic gesture (see his six-part 'Rex tremendae majestatis') and touches the heart with his cantabile 'dolcezza' and tenderness in the arias and duets (with particular emphasis in the 'Recordare, Jesu pie' and 'Lacrimosa'). The sonic range of the orchestra is augmented with many new tone colours by imaginative and sometimes idiosyncratic use of the various instruments (e.g. the combination with muted trumpet).

"The 'Miserere in D minor' - performed annually in the cathedral of San Marco in Venice till the end of the 18th century during Lauds on the Thursday morning of Holy Week - shows Lotti's feeling for harmonic modulations of great sweetness and suppleness. It is impressive and instructive to see how the expansive Miserere text is here structured within a larg-scale plan of harmonic architecture and assembled into large units - and some may have thought this first happened with Bruckner!

"With its virtuoso-concertante style, the 'Credo in F major' is not dissimilar to Vivaldi's church music of the same period, even if one cannot entirely escape the impression of the conventional. In the Crucifixus, the heart of this five-section work, Lotti piles up the dissonances that we can only concur with a contemporary account which related that Antonio Lotti's sacred works are of such 'amazing euphony that one cannot say if this should conduce more to lamentation or to holy delight.'" (Thomas Hengelbrock, tr. Janet & Michael Berridge. From the liner notes.)

Performers: Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble, Balthasar-Neumann-Chor, Thomas Hengelbrock

1. Requiem In F Major: Requiem Aeternam
2. Requiem In F Major: Kyrie Eleison
3. Requiem In F Major: Dies Irae
4. Requiem In F Major: Quantus Tremor
5. Requiem In F Major: Tuba Mirum
6. Requiem In F Major: Mors Stupebit
7. Requiem In F Major: Liber Scriptus
8. Requiem In F Major: Judex Ergo
9. Requiem In F Major: Quid Sum Miser
10. Requiem In F Major: Rex Tremendae
11. Requiem In F Major: Recondare, Jesu Pie
12. Requiem In F Major: Quaerens Me
13. Requiem In F Major: Juste Judex
14. Requiem In F Major: Ingemisco
15. Requiem In F Major: Qui Mariam
16. Requiem In F Major: Preces Meae
17. Requiem In F Major: Inter Oves
18. Requiem In F Major: Confutatis Maledictis
19. Requiem In F Major: Oro Supplex
20. Requiem In F Major: Lacrimosa
21. Requiem In F Major: Judicandus
22. Requiem In F Major: Domine Jesu Christe
23. Requiem In F Major: Hostias Et Preces
24. Requiem In F Major: Quam Olim
25. Miserere Mei Deus
26. Credo: Credo In Unum Deum
27. Credo: Crucifixus
28. Credo: Et Resurrexit. Presto
29. Credo: Sanctus. Allegro
30. Credo: Et Vitam

Friday, 29 January 2021

Antonio Lotti; Jan Dismas Zelenka; Johann Sebastian Bach


"The dictates of fashion were a powerful factor in music, too, over the centuries, exercising a substantial influence on the complex interaction between composers, their patrons and their public. Music went out of date in the space of a few decades - sometimes in the space of a few years. And this meant that many works that delighted the ear when they were first heard were soon forgotten again. Changing fashions consigned them to the recesses of musical archives, with only a handful of scholars and devoted librarians still aware of their existence.

"One exception to this rule was sacred music. Since the Reformation at the latest, with the processes of denominational rethinking that it triggered, the Church tended increasingly to preserve what it deemed to be worthwhile, and to keep these values present in people's minds. Thus the strict counterpoint with its deliberate outward plainness that was developed in the 17th century from the legacy of Palestrina and other Late Renaissance masters, and was elevated to the ideal of a time-honoured stile antico, remained the central point of reference for many composers of religious music in the 18th century. These composers studied and made use of the 'old style' in some cases in its pure form, in others by adapting it sensitively to suit the taste of their own time.

"Jan Dismas Zelenka, Johann Sebastian Bach and Antonio Lotti - all three composers had a good command of the traditional church style and its adaption for which they were admired by contemporaries. And although they never actually met, their biographies are connected through Zelenka.

"Lotti was born in 1667 in Venice and spent most of his life in his native city, where - like so many successful composers of his time - he worked both as a church musician (he was organist at St. Mark's) and as an opera composer. In 1717 he was given leave from his duties in Venice to spend two years at the Dresden court, where he enjoyed huge success. He returned to La Serenissima in 1719, remaining there until his death in 1740. He wrote five operas for Dresden, and also worked in the Hofkirche church together with the Italian musicians who had accompanied him to the city known as 'Florence on the Elbe'. A substantial number of sacred works by Lotti bear witness to this: some of them he wrote especially for Dresden, others he brought with him from Italy.

"When Lotti took up his position, Zelenka had already been playing the double bass in the Dresden court orchestra for a few years. But while Lotti was in Dresden, Zelenka spent most of his time in Vienna in the retinue of Friedrich August II, the heir to the Saxon throne. And in the city on the Danube, he took the opportunity to study with the kapellmeister at the Imperial court, Johann Joseph Fux, who was one of the most respected teachers of classical counterpoint. Zelenka also accumulated a collection of manuscript scores of the works of old masters while in Vienna, which he later made use of for his own compositions.

"After his return to Dresden, Zelenka was mainly responsible for the Catholic church music at court. In addition to composing works of his own - masses, music for vespers, litanies and compositions for Easter week -, his duties also included obtaining and arranging other composers' works. Among the music that Zelenka arranged for performance in the Dresden church there are also compositions by the erstwhile court kapellmeisters Antonio Lotti, including a mass in G minor/G major that consists only of a Kyrie and a Gloria; to distinguish this from other masses, Zelenka gave this one the name 'Missa Sapientiae'. [...]

"According to Bach's song Carl Philipp Emanuel, Zelenka was one of the composers who Johann Sebastian Bach knew personally and held in high regard. No documents have come to light so far providing any indication of how the two composers communicated, but Bach obviously had access to Zelenka's collection of scores, as there was a copy of the latter's arrangement of Lotti's 'Missa Sapientiae' in his own music library.

"For Easter week 1738, Zelenka made a setting of the penitential psalm 'Miserere mei, Deus' as a sequence of strongly contrasting movements. The complete text of the psalm itself appears in the second of the five movements; it is followed by the doxology 'Gloria Patri', which is spread over two movements. The two outer movements are choruses featuring only the agitated rhythms, first the orchestral parts penetrate one another with much dissonance, then the choir comes in and unfolds a lament of colossal intensity. Unlike many of his fellow composers, such as Lotti or Leonardo Leo, who a vividly discriptive text inspired to a rich variety of emotions and intonation, Zelenka opted for an approach that is nothing short of archaic. From his collection of music of the old masters - copies of scores that he had accumulated in Vienna - Zelenka picked out a recercar by Girolamo Frescobaldi and took the latter's strictly contrapuntal, four-part setting as the basis for his own vocal writing, which adheres pretty closely to the 100-year-old model. Under these circumstances, it is impossible for the music to reflect specific expressive nuances in the text - and indeed, this was clearly not Zelenka's intention. The dignity of the Old Testament text is emphasised by the venerable character of Frescobaldi's austere style. However, the core message of the psalm, a plaintive emotional outcry, does not simply recur like a motto in the contrapuntal writing, but also forms the unusually radical framework of the piece, and this not only regards the almost shocking extremes in the dynamics. Even in the context of Zelenka's many highly unconvential compositions, 'Miserere mei, Deus' is in a class of its own.

"Johann Sebastian Bach likewise had frequent recourse to both his own works and those of other composers, not least because, as cantor of St. Thomas's, Leipzig, he had an enormous workload to cope with. He originally wrote the cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen', BWV 12, in Weimar back in 1714, and he performed it again ten years later in Leipzig. On this occasion, he changed the original score, transposing it up by a tone. What's more, Bach later used the main part of the opening chorus, a chaconne that develops over a chromatically-led lament in the bass line, in his B minor Mass, where it appears, transposed, structurally enlarged and fitted with a new text, as the 'Crucifixus' in the Credo.

"The combination of chromatic writing and motet style is something that Bach's cantata shares with several settings of the 'Crucifixus' by Lotti, which with their radicalisation of classic counterpoint are among his most impressive works. But in some of his complete mass movements, too, Lotti also achieves moments of compelling expressiveness with similar means. Large parts of the 'Missa a tre cori', which he wrote in and for Venice, but also performed in Dresden, are laid out so that a constant alternation of intensely expressive, dense counterpoint with more loosely-woven passages ensures variety. As for the text itself, which is musically reinterpreted time after time as no other text had been since the Middle Ages: Lotti elicits entirely new facets from it. Thus the dance-like blithe spirits of the 'Gloria in excelsis Deo' is followed by an abrupt change of mood for the '...et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis', a thought-provoking motet with obbligato orchestra. Contrasts like this occur throughout the work, but Lotti's mastery of his art - recognised by both Zelenka and Bach - is evident not least in the fact that he always manages the balancing act between different styles and expressive worlds." (Thomas Seedorf, tr. Clive Williams. From the liner notes.)

Performers: Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble. Balthasar-Neumann-Chor, Thomas Hengelbrock

1. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Miserere I
2. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Miserere II
3. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Gloria Patri I
4. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Gloria Patri II
5. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Sicut Erat
6. Jan Dismas Zelenka - Miserere In C Minor, ZWV 57: Miserere III
7. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: Sinfonia
8. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen'
9. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Wir Müssen Durch Viel Trübsal'
10. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Kreuz Und Kronen Sind Verbunden'
11. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Ich Folge Christum Nach'
12. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Sei Getrost'
13. Johann Sebastian Bach - Cantata 'Weinen, Klagen, Zittern, Zagen', BWV 12: 'Was Gott Tut, Das Ist Wohlgetan'
14. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Kyrie Eleison
15. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Christe Eleison
16. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Kyrie Eleison
17. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Gloria In Excelsis
18. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Et In Terra Pax
19. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Laudamus Te
20. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Gratias Agimus Tibi
21. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Domine Deus
22. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Domine Filii
23. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Domine Deus, Agnus Dei
24. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Qui Tollis
25. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Qui Sedes
26. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Quoniam Tu Solus
27. Antonio Lotti - Missa A Tre Cori: Cum Sanctu Spiritu

Thursday, 28 January 2021

Antonio Lotti; Johann Sebastian Bach - Missa Sapientiae; Magnificat


"According to a recently discovered source, Antonio Lotti was born not in Hanover, as had been presumed previously, but on 5 January 1667 in Venice. His parents - the 'sonatore' Matteo Lotti and Marina Gasparin, the daughter of a 'baracol' - married in 1662 in the Venetian church S. Marino, and it was also there that their son Antonio Lotti was baptized on 25 January 1667. Antonio Lotti spend the greater part of his life in the city on the lagoon, where he received his training from the Maestro di cappella of San Marco, Giovanni Legrenzi, and the local tenor and counterpoint teacher Lodovico Fuga. In 1689 Lotti himself was hired as a falsetto, and in 1702 also as second organist at San Marco. He occupied various positions in the chapel until in 1736 he was able to prevail in the competition for the coveted office of 'Maestro di cappella'. He occupied various positions in the chapel until in 1736 he was able to prevail in the competition for the coveted office of 'Maestro di cappella'. He held his post until his death in Venice on 5 January 1640. Lotti wrote numerous sacred music compositions for San Marco and for other institutions such as the ospedali, the orphanages that were famous for the well-grounded musical education of their pupils. At the same time, with nearly twenty successful stage works, Lotti was considered as one of the leading representative of Venetian opera, and it was above all this reputation that led in 1717 to an invitation to Dresden by the Prince Elector of Saxony, Friedrich August. Lotti spent about two years, with his opera troop at the Saxon court, until the conclusion of the festivities in honor of the marriage of Friedrich August and Princess Maria Josepha of Hapsburg in 1719. Five large-scale stage works were written during this time. The Italian musicians also occasionally performed in the court church, and a number of sacred works by Lotti have survived in the Saxon State Library: Masses and individual Mass movements, a requiem, and various psalm settings. In terms of style and because of the high quality of their performance, Lotti's church music compositions were perceived by his contemporaries as being novel. In a report by the Dresden Jesuits, for example, it is written:

"'In a manner completely new here the Italian musicians, who were sent by his Highness the Prince Elector from Venice to Dresden, brought our church to life when they [...] embellished a High Mass, which lasted almost three hours, with such admirable artistic skill both in terms of the voices as well as the instruments, such as one has never before heard in Dresden.'

"Even outside Dresden these performances did not remain unnoticed. Johann Sebastian Bach's predecessor in the position of Thomaskantor, Johann Kuhnau, pointed out Lotti's exemplary stylistic separation of opera and church music, and praised the 'admirable gravity, strong and perfect harmony and art, in addition to the exceptional charm' of Lotti's work which he had heard in the Dresden court church.

"As far as we can see, Lotti seems in later years to have written works above all in the old church style originating from Palestrina. Perhaps with Lotti in mind, the Dresden Kapellmeister Johann David Heinichen sarcastically remarked in the foreword to his 'Generalbaß in der Composition' ('Thorough bass in Composition'): 'I have observed in other places various notable examples, that when formerly renowned theater composers in their old age had lost all their fire and inventiveness, they then finally started to become good church composers and, contrary to their former habit, to work hard on counterpoint. One could deduce various things from this.'

"Soon after Lotti's death his church music, like that of most of his contemporaries, began to disappear from the repertoire. Only in Venice were a few of his stile-antico compositions, which were less tied to a particular period, still occasionally still performed into the early nineteenth century. Thus, in 1770 Charles Burney, the writer on music who toured in Italy and France, heard in the Venetian church of San Giovanni e Poulo 'a mass sung in four parts, without other instrument than the organ. [...] The composition [...] consisting of fugues and imitations in the stile of our best old church services. [...] Upon the whole this seems to be the true stile for the church: it calls to memory nothing vulgar, light, or prophane [sic]; it disposed the mind to philanthropy, and divests it of its gross and sensual passions.'

"Burney's report marks a turning point in the history of Lotti reception: Had Lotti struck the right note for the ears of his contemporaries with his works in concertante style, the music historiography emerging toward the end of the eighteenth century saw in him above all a representative of stile-antico composition, a view that especially in Germany continued to be propagated in the early years of the nineteenth century. A central role was played by the rediscovery and publication of an eight-part 'Crucifixus' by the prominent music theorist Adolf Bernhard Marx in the 'Allgemeine Musikalische Zeitung' in 1819. Marx combined the publication of the work with the intention, proposed in a manifesto-like manner, of promoting along with Lotti's easily accessible 'Crucifixus' the acceptance of stile-antico compositions, after previously published works in this genre by Palestrina, Sarti, and Fux had not been particularly well received with the public. The publication received great attention, as a result of which musical historiography, which often displays a tendency toward typification and quick historical classification, for a long time failed to take notice of a substantial part of Lotti's sacred music œuvre. Accordingly, the most extensive edition of selected works up to now, which appeared in 1930 in the series 'Denkmäler Deutscher Tonkunst', contains works exclusively in the old style.

"Since to the present day the full breadth of Antonio Lotti's sacred music has hardly been explored in its full breadth, and in particular a catalogue of his works is lacking, the context and date of origin of the 'Missa Sapientiae' lie in obscurity. Yet the work, accompanied by independent instrumental parts and fashioned in the modern sacred-music style appears to have been quite well known by Lotti's contemporaries, as shown by the wide dissemination of preserved sources and the unusual fact that prominent composers such as George Frideric Handel, Jan Dismas Zelenka, and Johann Sebastian Bach owned copies of this Mass.

"George Frideric Handel, who probably knew Lotti personally from his time in Venice and from a sojourn in Dresden, copied the Mass incompletely and without the text, as is the case in almost all his copies of works by other composers. In this way, Handel collected a store of so-called borrowing material from which he could take rhythmic models, thematic ideas or even whole sections of movements for his own compositions. Indeed, many fruits of this collecting activity can be found in his works. For example, the chorus 'Blest be the hand' ('Theodora', HWV 68) clearly comes from the 'Domine Deus', 'Agnus Dei', and the instrumental sections in the chorus 'Virtue will place thee' ('The Choice of Hercules', HWV 69) is taken from the 'Gloria in excelsis'. One could list further examples, including some in 'Jephta' (HWV 70).

"In contrast to Handel, Jan Dismas Zelenka, whose official duties in Dresden included the procurement of musical repertoire for the Catholic court church, copied Lotti's Mass ca. 1730 for performance purposes. In so doing, he adapted the work to the usage in Dresden in that he provided for a more colorful wind instrumentation. Thus, for example, he strengthened the string tutti over longer stretches with oboes, added a group of woodwinds to the interplay of the high strings and continuo in the 'Laudamus te', and transformed the oboe part into a trumpet part in the 'Gloria in excelsis'. The name 'Missa Sapientiae' also originates with Zelenka, who gave Mass compositions by other composers nicknames of this sort, apparently to be able to tell them apart more easily. Strictly speaking, the name 'Missa Sapientiae' therefore refers not to Lotti's original work, but to Zelenka's Dresden version of it, which is also to be heard on this recording.

"At the beginning of the 1730s, Johann Sebastian Bach, who like Zelenka had a large music library at his disposal, started collecting Latin sacred music by Italian composers. While doing so, he selected works of older masters as well as those of his own contemporaries, among these Lotti's 'Missa Sapientiae'. This copy of the Mass traces directly back to Zelenka's version, and was made in part by Bach, in part by a scribe. Whether Bach performed the 'Missa Sapientiae' in Leipzig is not known, at least no set of parts has been preserved. Moreover, the use in the 'Gloria in excelsis' of a variant of the eighth psalm tone not usual in the Protestant north may speak against a performance of the work in Leipzig. The reason for Bach's increased interest in Latin church music was his own productions of Masses which began at this time. They commenced with a 'Missa in B Minor' consisting of a 'Kyrie' and 'Gloria' - dedicated by Bach in Juli 1733 to the new Prince Elector of Saxony and Polish King Friedrich August II in the hope of acquiring a position at the Dresden court and future commissions. In later years, the Mass was completed to become the famous, large 'B-Minor Mass'.

"Lotti's 'Missa Sapientiae' was probably of interest to Bach in various respects: Lotti, as is generally known, numbered among the composers of whom the prince elector was particularly fond, and the Mass offered an opportunity to study a typical example of the Venetian tonal language. Moreover, the 'Missa Sapientiae' came quite close to the intended dimensions of the 'Missa in B Minor': In spite of the limitation to the 'Kyrie' and 'Gloria', both works call for a large instrumental ensemble, and the choir is expanded from four to five or six voices in individual passages. The division of the movements are similar in many respects, even if the 'Domine Deus' in Lotti is divided into three individual movements. In the first of these individual movements, 'Domine Deus, Rex coelestis', a violin (or alternately a flute in Zelenka's version) and a muted oboe concertize alongside the solo soprano, and are thus at least atmospherically reminiscent of Bach's corresponding setting. A conspicuous analogy in the instrumentation is found in the 'Quoniam tu solus', which in both cases features a soloistic brass instrument. Completely different from the 'Missa Sapientiae', Bach allows the 'Qui tollis' to develop in flowing transition out of the 'Domine Deus', whereas Lotti sets a clear caesura at the end of the 'Domine Deus', 'Agnus Dei' with a concluding fugue. Lottis link the following movements 'Qui tollis' and 'Qui sedes' in that he musically fashions the analogous text 'miserere nobis' nearly identically, and only a crass harmonic tension of the first section is not taken up again later. The choral writing of the 'miserere nobis' section is enveloped by the instruments in a delicate, typically Venetian carpet of sound that Bach unmistakably echos in the 'Crucifixus' of the 'B-Minor Mass'." (Thomas Krümpelmann. From the liner notes.)

"When Johann Sebastian Bach submitted his application for the position of Kantor at Leipzig's Thomaskirche, he already must have sensed that there was a considerable discrepancy between the supposed and the real performing ability of the choir of St. Thomas'. Indeed, Bach saw himself forced to strengthen the choir parts with trombones in his two audition pieces, the cantatas BWV 22 and 23. It can be assumed that this was due not to reasons of timbre, but primarily to insecurities in the performance. The abilities of the municipal musicians, too, were far from adequate, something that Bach realized only with time. After assuming his office at the end of May 1723, Bach went to work with great élan; perhaps he wanted to prove himself to those critics who viewed his appointment with skepticism. Almost all the works of his first year's cycle of cantatas are distinguished by their exceptional difficulty in comparison to the compositions of his predecessor Johann Kuhnae and those of his two co-candidate Georg Philipp Telemann and Christoph Graupner, who had been favored by the town council.

"Among the festive compositions of the year 1723, the 'Magnificat' occupies an outstanding position. For a long time, it was thought that the work was composed for Christmas 1723, since the score of the work, originally in E-flat Major, contains four interpolated Christmas movements. However, examination of the autograph score shows that the movements related to Christmas were later additions. It would seem obvious that the performance on 25 December 1723 was not the first; yet, since the composition was written in Leipzig - unequivocally proven by the paper of the score - it follows that the E-flat Major Magnificat, BWV 243a, was intended for the feast of the Visitation on 2 July 1723. On this day, which was solemnly celebrated in Leipzig - like the feast of the Purification on 2 February and the feast of the Annunciation on 25 March - the reading is song of praise to Mary from the Gospel of St. Luke; the work was not intended for the main church service, but rather for the vespers service in which the 'Magnificat' could be performed in Latin. This feast, five weeks after his assumption of office, was Bach's first chance to demonstrate his special talents - and the new Thomaskantor did not pass up the opportunity. Instead of the usual four-part vocal setting, the choral movements have been expanded to five parts; Bach found models for this in the library of the Thomasschule, since his predecessors Johann Schelle and Johann Kuhnau likewise preferred five-part writing with three high voices for festive compositions. It remains uncertain, though, how Bach was able to conceal the dearth of capable sopranos among the pupils of the Thomasschule.

"The biblical song of praise to Mary is - as in numerous other compositions of the time - broken down into its individual statements, which are set as chorale movements and arias. Unusual in Bach's way of treating the text is at all events the splitting off of the concluding words 'omnes generationes' in the 'Quia respexit', and their assignment to the choir. In this manner Bach emphasizes the generations who praise Mary. In spite of the brevity of the sentence fragment, he creates a choral section important for the balance of the work. The choice of text means that none of the arias are in the otherwise still pre-dominant da-capo form. Contrasts are achieved through the choice of new, closely related keys, various compositional techniques, and a varied instrumentation. The unity of the work is established by the use of the music of the opening chorus again for the doxology, the song of praise to God.

"By virtue of an old Leipzig tradition, which can be traced back to the beginning of the seventeenth century, the 'Magnificat', the song of praise to Mary, could be extended on Christmas by inserted movements related to the feast. In comparison to the better-known D-Major version, which recent research has shown to have been first performed on 2 July 1733, the E-flat Major version sounds fresher and, particularly in the trumpet parts, more radical, although at the expense of extreme technical demands. Perhaps the Leipzig town musicians or their superior had told the Cöthen court Kapellmeister, 'who at the beginning could not reconcile himself with the transition from Kapellmeister to Kantor', that they could play anything. Several years later Bach expressed himself about their abilities with great reservation: In the 'Entwurff einer wohlbestallten Kirchen Music' ('Plan for a well-appointed church music') of August 1730 it is tersely stated that decency prohibits him 'however from reporting anything approaching the truth about their qualities and musical skills.'

"The high range of the vocal parts, which was typical of Bach's Cöthen works, also seems to have caused problems at the performances in Leipzig. It is conceivable that Bach therefore had in mind a considerably lower pitch than was usual in Leipzig. The so-called French chamber pitch [...] is a whole tone lower than today's normal pitch and a semitone lower than the pitch usual during Bach's time [...]. The lower pitch adopted for the recording lends the strings and winds a more mellow timbre, which underscores the individual chracter of the E-flat Major version.

"In Bach's time, the pitch level was not standardized, and could therefore be chosen as required. As a result, the organ, which is fixed at a specific pitch level, had to transpose; and with many wind instruments there were several idiosyncracies that had to be taken into consideration, which could explain some of the differences in the instrumentation of the two versions. The revision of this work, which Bach undertook during the period of national mourning after the death of August the Strong, was intended to make the piece easier to perform by means of the transposition from E-flat to D Major, and above all with the simplification of the demanding and, when played on natural trumpets in E-flat, exceedingly difficult trumpet parts. Nevertheless, this revision resulted in a repertoire work no less brilliant." (Ulrich Leisinger, tr. Howard Weiner. From the liner notes.)

Performer: Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble, Balthasar-Neumann-Chor, Thomas Hengelbrock

1. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Kyrie. Kyrie Eleison
2. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Kyrie. Christe Eleison
3. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Kyrie. Kyrie Eleison
4. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Gloria In Excelsis
5. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Laudamus Te
6. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Gratias Agimus Tibi
7. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Domine Deus, Rex Coelestis
8. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Domine Fili
9. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Domine Deus, Agnus Dei
10. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Qui Tollis Peccata Mundi
11. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Qui Sedes
12. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Quoniam Tu Solus Sanctus
13. Antonio Lotti - Missa Sapientiae: Gloria. Cum Sancto Spiritu
14. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Magnificat Anima Mea
15. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Et Exultavit
16. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Von Himmel Hoch
17. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Quia Respexit
18. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Omnes Generationes
19. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Quia Fecit
20. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Freut Euch Und Jubiliert
21. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Et Misericordia Eius
22. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Fecit Potentiam
23. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Gloria In Excelsis
24. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Deposuit Potentes
25. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Esurientes Implevit
26. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Virga Jesse Floruit
27. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Suscepit Israel
28. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Sicut Locutus Est
29. Johann Sebastian Bach - Magnificat, BWV 243a: Gloria Patri Et Filio