Schola Cantorum Basiliensis Hayes Players - Hayes: 6 Cantatas - Orpheus and Euridice (2013) Hi-Res

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Title: Hayes: 6 Cantatas - Orpheus and Euridice
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Glossa
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC 16/24 Bit (44,1 KHz / tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 89:10 min
Total Size: 416 / 866 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Aria: At Ross how alter'd is the scene
2. Recitative: But oh, when age, life's winter comes
3. Aria: Vivace ma non presto: Virtue, the charmer sweet replies
4. Recitative: Why, Lysidas, shou'd man be vain
5. Aria: Allegro moderato : Can splendid robes or beds of down
6. Recitative: Go search the tombs where monarchs rest
7. Aria: Andante: So glides the meteor
8. Aria: While I listen to thy voice, Chloris
9. Recitative: Peace, Chloris, peace
10. Aria: Larghetto: for all we know
11. Recitative: Love into Chloe's chamber came
12. Aria: Amoroso: And now Amyntor young and gay
13. Recitative: The transport o'er
14. Aria: Allegro: But waking is it thus
15. Recitative: O goddess most rever'd above
16. Aria: Allegro assai: Give me numbers strong and sweet
17. Recitative: Trophies to chastity
18. Aria: Andante: Tell not me the joys that wait
19. Aria: Larghetto: Daughter sweet of voice and air
20. Recitative: Listen Nymph divine and learn
21. Aria: Allegro assai: See each eye, each ravish'd ear
22. Recitative: Echo should they fail to move
23. Aria: Vivace: Learn her ease and elegance
24. Overture
25. Aria: Tempo do minuetto
26. Recitative: When the fair consort in th'Elysian choir (Alto)
27. Aria: Come, come my charmer (Alto)
28. Recitative: The poet ceas'd (Tenor)
29. Aria: Thy vain pursuit fond youth (Soprano)
30. Duet: With streaming eyes (Soprano, Alto)
31. With streamin eyes (Chorus)


Beyond the dominating presence of Handel in English music from the 18th century there are to be found many enticing surprises, such as those contributed by William Hayes (1708:1777). His cycle of cantatas from 1748 provides original and humorous musical stories, graced by instrumentations unusual for the time and flecked with touching musical episodes. Hayes’s choice of keys and orchestration develop from one work to the next, whilst the subject matter and texts employed in the works reflect, in a highly particular way, the individual milieu of Hayes in his teaching capacity at the University of Oxford.

One strikingly mature composition comes in the shape of 'Orpheus and Euridice: an Ode' (1735). It is hard to imagine that this was composed for the occasion of Hayes receiving his BMus at Oxford. Entirely set within the scene of Euridice’s unsuccessful departure from Hades, Hayes lays out for our listening an exciting psychological study of the two lovers as their emotional states veer between desire and devastation...

Anthony Rooley and his carefully:chosen group of singers and instrumentalists linked to the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis here give us, following on from their dazzling 2010 reading of 'The Passions', a fresh new incursion into the previously little known compositional world of William Hayes, in this way contributing to Hayes’s deserved placement once again as one of the leading contemporaries of Handel.


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