Roberta Mameli - 'Round M- Monteverdi Meets Jazz (2010)
Artist: Roberta Mameli
Title: Round M- Monteverdi Meets Jazz
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Glossa
Genre: Jazz, Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 61:01 min
Total Size: 273 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Round M- Monteverdi Meets Jazz
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Glossa
Genre: Jazz, Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 61:01 min
Total Size: 273 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Madrigals, Book 8 (Madrigali, libro ottavo), "Madrigali guerrieri, et amorosi"
2. Ohime ch'io cado, ohime (arr. A. Lo Gatto)
3. Cantade (arr. for jazz ensemble): Cantade: Usurpator tiranno (arr. for jazz ensemble)
4. Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Book 2, Op. 13
5. Bizzarrie poetiche poste in musica, Book 3, Op. 4
6. Madrigals, Book 7 (Concerto settimo libro de madrigali) (arr. for jazz ensemble)
7. Si dolce e'l tormento (arr. for jazz ensemble)
8. Trasfigurazione della ninfa
What happens when you bring the worlds of jazz and Monteverdi together? Is there a musical meeting-point where the two can exist? Claudio Cavina has believed in this possibility for some time, witness some very ‘modern’ moments in his recent Glossa recordings of the Scherzi musicali and L’incoronazione di Poppea.
Yet, this is not La Venexiana playing jazz: Cavina and his musicians do not change a note of the original scores. Instead they bring all their experience and expertise of playing Monteverdi’s madrigals, sacred music (the 1610 Vespers being their current performing focus) and operas to bear on a group of ‘ballads’ from the 17th -century, but in the company of a select quartet of improvising jazz musicians on saxophone, accordion, double bass and drums and all with the warm, soaring, story-telling vocal tones of Roberta Mameli shining through as protagonist.
The clue lies in the album’s title, with the musicians tipping their hats and paying hommage to jazz standards. And Cavina says that within Monteverdi’s music, “there is something modern, something new and innovatory which encourages one to dare, to go further.”
Just listen to the results…
Yet, this is not La Venexiana playing jazz: Cavina and his musicians do not change a note of the original scores. Instead they bring all their experience and expertise of playing Monteverdi’s madrigals, sacred music (the 1610 Vespers being their current performing focus) and operas to bear on a group of ‘ballads’ from the 17th -century, but in the company of a select quartet of improvising jazz musicians on saxophone, accordion, double bass and drums and all with the warm, soaring, story-telling vocal tones of Roberta Mameli shining through as protagonist.
The clue lies in the album’s title, with the musicians tipping their hats and paying hommage to jazz standards. And Cavina says that within Monteverdi’s music, “there is something modern, something new and innovatory which encourages one to dare, to go further.”
Just listen to the results…