|
 |
| |
Music in the Spanish court around Bárbara de Braganza. Special program around the music in Bárbara de Braganza Spanish court, with works by José de Nebra, Nicolás Conforto, Domenico Scarlatti and Antonio soler.
(Feat. Ensemble AVE FÉNIX)
Per un bacio. The paradoxes of the love, source simultaneously of pleasure and of suffering, sky and hell, hope and fatality, smile and weeping. An exciting repertoiret and seducer from which there was constructed the whole way of understanding the art of the singing that comes until our days. Vocal music of the Italian Seicento.
(Feat. Luca Pianca, lute, and Vittorio Ghielmi, viola da gamba).
Ay, dulce pena!. Tonos Humanos from the Spanish XVIIth century.
(Feat. Ventura Rico, viola da gamba; Juan Carlos Rivera, theorbo; Mike Fentross, baroque guitar; Luz Martin, castanets)
Amor e gelosia. A program around the love and the dislike, the victory and the defeat, the threat and the perfidy.
(Feat. LA TEMPESTAD)
Del Amor. The romantic Spanish song.
(Feat. Michel Kiener, fortepiano and Luz Martin, castanets).
Scarlatti and Scarlatti. Works by Alessandro and Domenico Scarlatti.
(Feat. Ensemble CLAUDIANA conducted by Luca Pianca)
Spaniards in Paris. The first Spanish romantic songs.
(Feat. Michel Kiener, fortepiano and Luz Martin, castanets).
A dónde vas Fernando incauto. Music around 1808.
(Feat. Michel Kiener, fortepiano and Luz Martin, castanets)
Händel: Italian cantatas.
(Feat. Luca Pianca, lute; Vittorio Ghielmi, viola da gamba; and Margaret Koell, harp tripla)
Haydn: on loan arias. Arias from operas by other composers that Haydn conducted in London, realizing sometimes arrangements of the same.
Haydn 2009. Songs, cantatas and arias from operas by Haydn.
Tonos a lo divino y a lo humano. Religious and profane songs of the Spanish XVIIth century.
(Feat. Ventura Rico, viola da gamba; Juan C. Rivera, guitar; Mike Fentross, teorba and guitar; Carlos García Bernalt, organ)
Oh, voice of the universe!. A selection of works for soprano and organ from the XVIIth to XXth century. From Juan Sebastian Bach to Mendelssohn, from Brahms to Hass. (Feat. Silvia Márquez, organ) |
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|