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             Conversazioni I - Cantatas from a Cardinal's Court 
               
              Antonio CALDARA (c1670-1736) 
               
              Clori, mia bella Clori [19:03]  
              Tomaso ALBINONI (1671-1751) 
               
              Senza il core del mio bene [07:53]  
              Alessandro SCARLATTI 
              (1660-1725)  
              Clori vezzosa, e bella [07:11]  
              George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759) 
               
              Toccata in g minor (HWV 586) [01:20]  
              Capriccio in g minor (HWV 483) [01:56]  
              Domenico SCARLATTI (1685-1757) 
               
              Sonata in g minor (K 30) [04:28]  
            George Frideric HANDEL  
              Vedendo Amor (HWV 175) [13:49] 
             Domenico SCARLATTI  
              Sonata in d minor (K 9) [04:05]  
              Sonata in D (K 430) [03:21] 
             George Frideric HANDEL  
              Mi palpita il cor (HWV 132c) [12:47]  
                
              Sounds Baroque (Andrew Radley (alto), Georgia Browne (transverse 
              flute), Joel Raymond (oboe), Jonathan Byers (cello), Andrew Maginley 
              (lute), Julian Perkins (harpsichord))/Julian Perkins  
              rec. 8-10 December 2009, St Jude's Church, Hampstead, London, UK. 
              DDD  
                
              AVIE AV2197 [76:37]   
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                  This disc is devoted to the chamber cantata as written in Italy 
                  around 1700. The repertoire is huge: Alessandro Scarlatti alone 
                  composed at least 600, and probably many more. This bears witness 
                  to the popularity of the genre and the almost insatiable demand 
                  for compositions like those represented here. Of the other composers 
                  on the programme, Caldara and Handel both contributed considerably 
                  to the genre. Whereas Handel's chamber cantatas are among the 
                  most popular and are frequently performed, Caldara's output 
                  is still hardly explored. That makes the inclusion of one of 
                  his cantatas particularly welcome.  
                   
                  That is even more the case as the scoring is rather unconventional. 
                  The largest part of these chamber cantatas was for solo voice 
                  and basso continuo. In some cases one or two instruments were 
                  added, mostly violins. Caldara's cantata contains two parts 
                  for a treble instrument, and these are transverse flute and 
                  oboe. That suggests it was written later in his career, as in 
                  his early years these instruments were not very common, certainly 
                  not in Italy. It also doesn't adhere to the structure we know 
                  from Alessandro Scarlatti's cantatas and which was followed 
                  by most composers: two pairs of recitative and aria. Caldara's 
                  cantata begins with a sinfonia in three short sections, which 
                  is followed by three pairs of recitative and aria.  
                   
                  The content of most of these cantatas is conventional as they 
                  all deal with aspects of love, often focusing on the unhappy 
                  or frustrating side of it. Some mythological figures regularly 
                  turn up, in this case Clori who appears in the cantatas by Caldara 
                  and Scarlatti and in Handel's Mi palpita il cor. The 
                  two cantatas by Handel are the most dramatic, with a graphic 
                  description of the feelings of the protagonist. In Vedendo 
                  amor there is even some dramatic development, making it 
                  a kind of pocket-opera.  
                   
                  Considering the number of recordings of Handel's chamber cantatas 
                  it is almost tragic that exactly these cantatas come off best 
                  in these performances. Andrew Radley has a nice voice and a 
                  feeling for the dramatic. Mi palpita il cor is done quite 
                  well, and so in particular is the second half of Vedendo 
                  amor. He almost makes me forget his incessant vibrato. This 
                  aspect is a little puzzling as he regularly sings a long note 
                  with hardly a trace of it. Why use it elsewhere? The recitative 
                  'In quel bosco' from Vedendo amor is really well done, 
                  but still rhythmically too strict. This is something I have 
                  noticed in particular in the cantatas by Caldara, Scarlatti 
                  and Albinoni: the recitatives are not sufficently speech-like 
                  and the interpreters fail to deliver the rhythmic freedom composers 
                  expected of them.  
                   
                  In these cantatas there is some general blandness, I'm afraid. 
                  That is regrettable from a musical point of view, but even more 
                  because these cantatas are little-known. In order to convince 
                  audiences that this is really good music, they should receive 
                  first-class performances. But they don't. Too many elements 
                  of the text are not fully explored. Just one example: the B-part 
                  of the opening aria of Albinoni's cantata Senza il core del 
                  mio bene is too flat: words like "tormenti e pene" 
                  (torments and pains) should be given more weight by colouring 
                  the voice and using a messa di voce, for instance. The 
                  flute and oboe parts in Caldara's cantata are also not very 
                  engaging. In short, the first part of this disc is too one-dimensional. 
                   
                   
                  The title of this disc refers to the places where cantatas like 
                  these were performed: the palaces of the aristocrats which regularly 
                  held conversazioni (gatherings) with music. One of these 
                  is Cardinal Ottoboni about whose activities Suzanne Aspden writes 
                  in the liner-notes. This could suggest that all the music on 
                  this disc was performed at his palace, but that is not the case. 
                  Mi palpita il cor, for instance, was written after 1710 
                  when Handel was already in London, and Albinoni probably never 
                  was in Rome. Handel was, and so was Domenico Scarlatti. The 
                  famous duel on harpsichord and organ between these two apparently 
                  took place during one of the conversazioni at Ottoboni's 
                  palace in 1708 or 1709. This has been taken by Julian Perkins 
                  as an opportunity to play keyboard works by both composers as 
                  intermezzi in the programme. He suggests Scarlatti's Sonata 
                  in g minor (K 30), one of only five fugues in Scarlatti's 
                  oeuvre and nicknamed The Cat's Fugue, is a parody of 
                  Handel's Capriccio in g minor. Julian Perkins plays these 
                  pieces well, although the tempo of the Sonata in d minor 
                  (K 9) seems a little too slow.  
                   
                  Lastly, it needs to be said that Mi palpita il cor exists 
                  in four versions: two for soprano (one with basso continuo and 
                  one with an additional oboe) and two for alto. Here we encounter 
                  a version for alto, but it is one which does not exist. The 
                  first (HWV 132c) is for alto, transverse flute and bc, the second 
                  (HWV 132d) for alto, flute, oboe and bc. If the disc should 
                  end with a piece in which all players participate, you would 
                  expect to hear the latter. But they perform the former, in which 
                  the flute part in the last aria is replaced by the oboe. This 
                  is a most curious decision which I don't understand.  
                   
                  On balance this is mixed baggage. The cantatas by Handel and 
                  the keyboard pieces are done well enough, but the lesser-known 
                  part of this disc is rather disappointing.  
                   
                  Johan van Veen  
                  http://www.musica-dei-donum.org  
                  https://twitter.com/johanvanveen  
                   
              
  
             
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