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Format : 1 CD Durée totale : 01:01:47
Enregistrement : 01/04/2018 Lieu : Noceto Pays : Italie Prise de son : Stereo
Label : Tactus Référence : TC520003 EAN : 8007194106930 Code Prix : DM019A
Année d'édition : 2019 Date de sortie : 01/01/2019
Genre : Classique
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Anonyme (15e siècle)La Historia del Beato San Martino O derata O bella rosa Verbum caro Jay pris amour O crux, fructus salvificus Petrus Hedus (1427-1504)O croce sancta O vergene gentile Ave Maria, verzene coronata Robert Cascio (20e siècle)Borombetta Innocentius Dammonis (1460-?)L'amor a mi venendo Marchetto Cara (1465-1525)Salve sacrato legno Vincenzo Capirola (1474-1548)Qui tollis peccata mundi Padoana al francesse Josquin des Prés (1440-1521)Fortune destrange, pauper sum ego Joan Ambrosio Dalza (?-1508)Calata ala spagnola ditto terzetti Capella Musicale di San Giacomo Maggiore de Bologne
Teresa Parigi, chant Antonio Lorenzoni, chant, flûte, cialamella Anna Mosconi, chant, rebec, basse de viole Giovanni Tufano, chant, oud, percussions Roberto Cascio, récitant, psaltérion, luth, direction
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 Within this recording for the first time is brought to light the reading of the “Historia del Beato San Martino”, a devotional text of the beginning of the sixteenth century which narrates in a fresh and popular language the events of San Martino of Tours, through a colorful account of his life in a dialectal, proverbial and domestic jargon, which plunges us into the typical mixed atmosphere of divine and profane of the end of Humanism and beginning of the Renaissance. The reciting voice of Roberto Cascio is flanked by the instrumental ensemble of the Cappella Musicale di San Giacomo Maggiore in Bologna. The choice of music was based on the particular period of Italian music prevalent at the end of the 1400s and the beginning of the 1500s, and, in particular, on the widespread devotional-laud genre and the use of spiritual camouflaging (in fact, the melodies derived from the secular repertoire, which, in turn and very often, came from the many French composers who, at that time, frequented the most important Italian courts).

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