Additional information
| Artist(s) | |
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| Composer(s) | Antonio de Cabezón, Diego Ortiz, G. Pacchioni, L. De Narváez |
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Physical Release: 20 September 2024
Digital Release: 27 September 2024
| Artist(s) | |
|---|---|
| Composer(s) | Antonio de Cabezón, Diego Ortiz, G. Pacchioni, L. De Narváez |
| EAN Code | |
| Edition | |
| Format | |
| Genre | |
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This Da Vinci Classics album constitutes the second volume of a publication dedicated to what is now known as the Cancionero de Upsala (sic), but which is also designated through several other names – each of which tells a part of its history.
Firstly, Upsala now looks as a misprint, but it was the correct name of the city of Uppsala at the beginning of the twentieth century, before a great spelling reform of the Swedish language. It was in Upsala, or Uppsala, that a Spanish musicologist, Rafael Mitjana, found a collection about which nobody seemingly had written anything in scholarly literature. Mitjana studied it and discussed it in depth, thus binding his name to that of the collection; gradually, with the increasing expansion of musicological studies, it became evident that the Uppsala volume is probably the only surviving copy of this Scotto book.
Scotto was one of the major publishers and printers of music in the sixteenth century. Music printing was still a very recent activity, even though some music printers, such as Ottaviano Petrucci, had achieved results of excellent quality and impressive beauty very soon.
Scotto was based in Venice, one of the liveliest cities in the world at that time; a city where culture, marketing, art, and international relations were blooming. From Venice, items of all kinds could travel worldwide, and it was not impossible at all that music printed there could eventually land in Sweden. From the book’s provenance comes therefore another of its names, i.e. Cancionero de Venecia. It may come as a surprise, however, that – given the high number of songbooks printed in Venice in the second half of the sixteenth century – the name Cancionero de Venecia could have been attributed unambiguously to a particular publication. The point is that, yes, it is true that a great many music books were published in Venice, but not many of them were songs with lyrics in Spanish. In fact, as concerns the Scotto press, this book seems to have been the only one with Spanish texts. Thus, if Canzoniere di Venezia would be too generic an indication (since there were many songbooks in Italian), Cancionero de Venecia is a unique name.
A further geographic specification is contained in still another of the book’s many names, i.e. Cancionero del Duque de Calabria, the Songbook of the Calabria Duke. Who was this Duke of a region of Southern Italy – the region closest to Sicily? It was a Spaniard, actually; i.e., Duke Ferdinand of Aragon (1488-1550), the viceroy and lieutenant general of the Kingdom of Valencia. And this brings us to yet another place, the Spanish city of Valencia, which is the one actually most relevant to the book under observation. Valencia, at that time, had been for nearly a century one of the most brilliant and vibrant cities in Southern Europe, at the expenses of other Iberian regions such as Castille and Catalunya. he city became a meeting point, a crossroad, and a melting pot of influences and people coming from the most diverse zones of Europe; under the rule of the “Duke of Calabria,” it also acquired an international standing from a musical viewpoint. Ferdinand, the heir to the Kingdom of Naples (hence the title “Duke of Calabria”), received an education befitting an Italian Renaissance prince, absorbing a culture that he was finally able to translate into concrete actions in Valencia.
Ferdinand’s life had been very adventurous and picturesque, including exile, imprisonment, freedom granted by Emperor Charles I, and two marriages – after being widowed, he remarried the Marchioness of Cenete, a cultivated woman and follower of Erasmus of Rotterdam. Upon assuming the Viceroyalty of Valencia, he arranged for his mother’s entire library to be brought from Ferrara, where she had resided.
Within such an environment, Ferdinand was keen to establish his court as a haven for literates, artists, thinkers, and the like. He was a true Renaissance man, with unquenchable curiosity and manifold cultural interests. As a contemporary observer stated, there was no musical chapel in Spain at the time comparable to Ferdinand’s, in terms of the quality of the voices, the instrumentalists, and their artistic value. Inspired by Italian chapels, Ferdinand began building his own musical chapel, which quickly became the foremost in the Iberian Peninsula.
Through its various names, we have therefore already sketched a profile of the Cancionero. It is a collection of fifty-four villancicos, i.e. the vocal form typical for the Spanish Renaissance. The lyrics are mostly secular, but there is a non-negligible presence of Christmas carols (twelve). Although the concepts of sacred and secular were different in the sixteenth century in comparison with today’s, Christmas carols were considered as somewhat in between. They could be sung in church during the Christmas holidays, where many of the usual limitations to vernacular singing were lifted; but they were also performed within secular contexts, alongside love songs. The songs are unattributed in the print, but their authorship has been ascribed to musicians who were in close relationship with the Aragonese court – for instance Pere Joan Aldomar, Bartolomeu Cárceres, Mateo Flecha el Viejo (who may have been a chapel master), and Cristobal de Morales.
The uniqueness of this collection derives first of all from its rarity. As said, this collection as such survives in this single copy; but in general there are very few such collections dating from sixteenth-century Spain. Among them are the Cancionero de Medinaceli and Juan Vázquez’s Recopilación de sonetos y villancicos (1560).
Originally, in spite of the many names by which it is currently indicated, the book bore the following inscription: “Villancicos de diversos Autores, a dos, y a tres, y a quatro, y a cinco bozes, agora nuevamente corregidos. Ay mas ocho tonos de Canto llano, y ocho tonos de Canto de Organo para que puedan aprovechar los que A cantar començaren. Venetiis, Apud Hieronymum Scotum, MDLVI”. This translates as “Villancicos by several composers, in two, three, four, and five parts, corrected again. There are furthermore eight tones of plainchant and eight organa from which those who begin to sing will profit. In Venice, at Jerome Scotto’s, 1556”.
As the title reads, one very special feature of the collection is the presence of the eight one-part and eight two-part pieces – the former shaped in a fashion similar to plainsong, in the eight Church modes, and the latter as bicinia, i.e. simple two-part counterpoints allowing for a progressive approach to polyphonic singing. As one critic defines them, these latter are “effectively two-voiced imitative fantasies built on a variety of themes and contrapuntal devices that can be used profitably for singing or instrumental performance”, in the typical “adaptive” approach characterizing the transition from singing to playing in the late Renaissance.
This second CD of the project dedicated to the Cancionero includes in fact a total of sixteen vocal pieces and five instrumental works, some of which are presented here in world premiere. In spite of the fact that the Cancionero has been known and studied for approximately 120 years now, some of its components have been virtually neglected by both scholars and performers until recently. A major impulse toward a greater knowledge of the “fringe” elements of the Cancionero came with the publication, in 2003, of a new scholarly facsimile edition of the book; however, this has not sufficed to shed complete light on the publication in its entirety and to appreciate its full potential in artistic, academic, and musical terms.
Furthermore, the Cancionero did not appear in a void; therefore, very perceptively and usefully, this recording frames it within its context, adding to the recording three more pieces for instruments alone, which can be traced back to the musical experience lived at the Court of Valencia.
The leitmotiv and the red thread adopted by the performers in the selection and ordering of the pieces is the juxtaposition of the two faces of love. Particularly in the Renaissance (and especially thanks to the movement known as Petrarchism), the mixture of delight and pain, pleasure and desire, passion and melancholy in the experience of love was deeply felt, and lyricists and poets played abundantly on this topos. Ultimately, this polarity can be interpreted as the eternal duel between eros and Thanatos, love and death. In spite of these august literary roots, the tone of the lyrics sung in the Cancionero is not excessively elevated. The presence of these themes and subjects in a kind of poetry which is at times folklike and colloquial bears witness to the pervasiveness of this approach, and to how it migrated from “high” literature to daily life. The musical features are those typical for the villancicos on subjects inherent to love.
Two of the pieces in the collection, i.e. No soy yo quien veis bivir and Dime robadora are offered both in two- and in three-part settings; this latter version is obtained by adding a lower part to the pre-existing upper two voices. Thanks to this solution, two new pieces take life, almost as if playing a musical game derived from court entertainment, in a new kind of compositional virtuosity. The performers of this CD chose to unify the two versions of each piece, performing the two-part realization as the first section of a composite piece whose second half is made by the three-part version.
As concerns the instrumental pieces of the Cancionero, four out of the eight bicinia or organa (pedagogically-conceived duos), and one of the eight plainchants are performed here. The didactic intention is evident in both cases, although it regards respectively performance and composition.
The realization and development of a Counterpoint on the Canto llano has been curated by Giorgio Pacchioni, who is one of the world’s leading experts in historical counterpoint. It consists of four sections, among which the original 156 breves of the original work have been divided. Two upper parts, making a canon, are added to that melodic line: each section has its own tempo, its (canonic) “delay”, and its intervallic distance among the two voices.
The application of such compositional devices and strategies is not only what allows for the actual performance and recording of this music, but also it is a powerful witness of its liveliness and fecundity. At a distance of nearly five centuries, the musical material gathered in the Cancionero continues to offer challenges and new perspectives to composers and performers alike, for the delight of the listeners of yesterday, of today, and of tomorrow. Chiara Bertoglio © 2024
Accademia degli Imperfetti: The association Accademia degli Imperfetti has been giving performances and organising educational workshops and courses since 1996. Its productions are characterised by their detailed exploration into how music relates to particular locations and narratives. Sometimes working as artists in residence, their projects have been hosted by civic and state museums in Genoa and Pescara and also by numerous artistic and cultural festivals in Italy and elsewhere. These include: Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto, Festival of the Saracens in Pamparato, Echoes of Cagliari, Giovine Genovese Orchestra, Cusiano Early Music Festival, Salerno Early Music Festival, Antiqua in Piedmont, RomaFestivalBarocco, Los Conciertos del Cervantes in Rome, Foligno’s Segni Barocchi Festival, and the Signes Festival in France.
The association has also collaborated with the France-based contemporary dance company Silenda in producing the soundtracks for their performances ‘Vuota dismisura’ and ‘Courants..Ponts..Courants’. This was a co-production involving the Centre Choréographique National de Caen/Basse Normandie and the Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication. In December 2003 Accademia degli Imperfetti established a series of early music workshops and concerts ‘Il Canto della Memoria’ at the Museo delle Genti d’Abruzzo in Pescara. Since 2013 the association has been working on another project “Musica Antica a Palazzo”, organising concerts, seminars (with speakers including Pedro Estevan) and specialist workshops. One series of workshops, "PerCorsi di Musica Antica", is based in the educational department of the Palazzo Bianco Museum in Genoa, and has led to performances in some of the most significant of the city’s villas, palaces and convents.
Recent concert venues include Albergo dei Poveri and the Palazzo Ducale in Genoa. This Palazzo was the location for ‘Sound Frescoes’, a series of performances whose repertoire was designed to relate closely to the musical frescoes which decorate the walls of the Doge’s Chapel where the concerts were held.
Baltazar Zúñiga: Baltazar Zúñiga was born in Mexico City, from 1998 it has artistic career as soloist in concert and operatic repertoire in Mexico, Italy and Nord Europe. He studied singing at the Superior School of Music of the National Institute of Fine Arts in Mexico City. In 1998 e 1999 Baltazar Zúñiga started his career as an opera singer in Mexico in the role of Tamino in Mozart’s Magic Flute, Count Almaviva in Rosini’s Barber of Seville, during that time he has participated in Japan at the Pacific Musica Festival singing in the most important concerts halls of Sapporo with important conductors as Nicholas Mc. Geegan and Simon Shauten. He moved to Italy to study bel canto and early music repertoire with Gioacchino Zarrelli, Michael Aspinal and William Matteuzzi at “Accademia del Teatro Città di Cagli” and debuted in 2001 at Rossini Opera Festival (R.OF) in the Rossini’s opera “Il Viaggio a Reims” conducted by Antonino Fogliani, continued the debuts of the role of Rinuccio in “Gianni Schicchi” G.Puccini, Ferrando in “Così fan tutte” and Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni W.A.Mozart, Foleville, in “Il Signor Bruscchino” G.Rossini, Lurcanio in “Ariodante” G.F.Händel and th role of Rodolfo of La Bohéme G.Puccini. By 2001 he began a carrer in Italy in operatic repertoire and began to participate as a soloist singing oratorios, symphonic reprtoire and sacred music with important orchestras in Italy. In the same years he began to specialize in early muisc with important musicians as Gustav Leonhardt, Michael Radulescu, Gloria Banditelli and Francesco Cera. In 2007 he won the international competition for the 400 anniversary of Monteverdi’s Orfeo in Mantua singing the role of Orfeo at Theatre Bibiena. Currently He works with european ensembles of early music: Accademia Bizantina, Concerto Romano, Arìon Choir & Consort, Arte Musica, L’Arte dell’Arco, La Stagione Armonica, De Labyrintho, La Capella di Cremona, La Capella di San Petronio di Bologna, Orchestra da Camera di Mantova, I Musicali Affetti, La Venexiana, Collegium Vocale Gent, Ensemble Pygmalion, Ensemble I Gemelli singing in the most important festivals of early music in Europe and America: Bruge, Europalia, Lufthansa Festival, Early Music Festival Istanbul, Early Music Festival Postdam, Ravenna Festival, Salzburg Festival, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Anima Mundi Pisa, Chopin Festival Varsavia, Festival Accademia Chigiana Siena, Festival di Hannover, Emilia Romagnia Festival, Festival Monteverdi di Cremona, Casa della Musica di Parma, Alte Musik Melk and others. He collaborates with conductors: Riccardo Muti, Luciano Acocella, Umberto Benedetti Michelangeli, Gustav Leonhardt, Claudio Cavina, Vito Clemente, Antonino Fogliani, Marc Andrè, Diego Fasolis, Filippo Maria Bresan, Michael Radulescu, Alberto Zedda, Aldo Salvagno, Cinzia Pennesi, Ottavio Dantone, Nicholas Mc.Geegan, Philipphe Herreweghe, Frans Brugen, Francesco Cera, Alessandro Quarta, Enrico Onofri, Sergio Balestracci e Fabrizio Bastianini. He was presented with great succes in theaters and concert hall as Lincoln Center di New York, Auditorium St. John’s London, Konzerthaus Vien, Auditorium Kitara Japan, Teatro de Bellas Artes of Mexico City, Auditorium Köln in Germany, Auditorium Brugge in Belgium, Grand Théatre de Montpellier, Théatre de Tulouse, Théatre de Reims, Grand Théatre de Marseille, Théatre de Bordeaux, Théatre de Tours, Théatre de Avignon, and Théatre des Champs Elysées in France, Teatro Bibiena di Mantova, Teatro Comunale di Bologna, Teatro Rossini di Pesaro, Teatro della Fortuna di Fano, Teatro Lauro Rossi di Macerata, Teatro Comunale di Fermo, Teatro Nichelino di Torino, Casa della Musica di Parma e Teatro Olimpico di Vicenza in Italy.
Antonio de Cabezón
(c1510 - 1566). Composer and organist. Blind from childhood, he was probably educated at Palencia Cathedral under the care of the organist García de Baeza. In 1526 he entered the service of Queen Isabella and on 12 February 1538 he was appointed músico de la cámara to Charles V. On Isabella’s death in 1539 he was entrusted with the musical education of Prince Felipe and his sisters. Between 1548 and 1551 he accompanied Felipe on his travels to Milan, Naples, Germany and the Netherlands, and between July 1554 and August 1555 to London on the occasion of Felipe’s marriage to Mary Tudor. Cabezón married Luisa Nuñez de Mocos of Avila and they had five children. In his will, dated 14 October 1564, Cabezón described himself as ‘músico de cámara del rey don Felipe nuestro señor’.
Cabezón is ranked among the foremost keyboard performers and composers of his time. His music is rooted in the instrumental tradition of Spain and was composed for keyboard, plucked string instruments and ensembles (curiosos minestriles, ‘skilful minstrels’) that probably included string as well as wind players. Some of Cabezón’s compositions appeared in Venegas de Henestrosa’s Libro de cifra nueva (Alcalá de Henares, 1557). However, the greater part of his works were printed posthumously by his son (4) Hernando de Cabezón in Obras de música para tecla, arpa y vihuela (Madrid, 1578; ed. in MME, xxvii–xxix, 1966). Together, these two volumes transmit some 275 works (migajas, ‘scraps’ or ‘crumbs’) by Cabezón. (His collected works are edited by C. Jacobs, Brooklyn, NY, 1967–86.)
Diego Ortiz: (b Toledo, c1510; d ?Naples, c1570). Spanish theorist and composer. He was at Naples by 10 December 1553, when he dedicated his Trattado de glosas to the Spanish nobleman Pedro de Urríes, Baron of Riesi (Sicily). This work appeared simultaneously in Spanish and in an Italian version full of hispanicisms suggesting that Ortiz served as his own translator. If so, he must already have spent an extended period in the part of Italy under Spanish rule.
By February 1558 Ortiz was maestro de capilla of the viceregal chapel maintained at Naples by Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba and Spanish Viceroy from 1556 to 1558. In 1565 he was still maestro de capilla to the conservative Pedro Afán de Rivera, Duke of Alcalá, Alvarez de Toledo’s successor as Spanish Viceroy (1559–71) to whom he dedicated his Musices liber primus. A book of masses promised in the preface to this work never appeared.
The Trattado de glosas, or ‘treatise on the ornamentation of cadences and other types of passage in the music of viols’, is the first printed ornamentation manual for the player of bowed string instruments. It teaches neither how to improvise nor how to add ornamentation at sight, but provides numerous written-out ornaments fitting exactly prescribed time limits. The player is told in book 1 to inspect the dozen or more ornamented variants provided after each simple cadence or passage, to choose the most apt and to write it into his part at the appropriate place. The accidentals shown in the simple cadence are to be retained in whatever ornamented variant the player selects. The second book begins with four solo recercadas (studies) for bass viol, followed by six recercadas on the bass La spagna in which agile tenor-clef counterpoints for violón are accompanied by keyboard harmonizations of the theme. Next come four recercadas (ornamented versions) of Arcadelt’s four-voice madrigal O felici occhi miei for viol and keyboard, followed by four of Pierre Sandrin’s four-part chanson Douce mémoire. Book 2 concludes with eight recercadas for bass viol and keyboard over passamezzo basses. Neither book quotes any distinctively Iberian air. Ortiz’s preoccupation with bowed rather than plucked instruments contrasted with contemporary Spanish preference. The sole 16th-century peninsular manuscript that cites his ornamentation formulae is a Portuguese keyboard source (P-C Mus.242), not a Spanish viol source.
The hymns, psalms, Salves and alternatim Magnificat settings of Ortiz’s Musices liber primus, for four to seven voices, are without exception based on plainsong. Although one setting of Pange lingua gloriosi quotes a Spanish chant, few other native traits are evident in the collection. His use of accidentals (the same note may be unaltered in one verse and sharpened in the next) agrees with Infantas’s treatment of plainsong cantus firmi in Plura modulationum genera (1579). In his dedication Ortiz encouraged the Spanish predilection for accompanying sacred polyphony with instruments. In his preface he referred to Ockeghem, Josquin Des Prez and Mouton as the ‘true doctors of music’, a view in accord with the conservative style of his compositions, which show the distinctive influence of Morales.
A five-part funeral motet, Pereat dies (ed. H. Eslava in Lira sacro-hispana, Madrid, 1869), is not in the book of 1565 and may be by another Ortiz, like the three long six-part motets of I-Rvat C.S.24, copied in 1545. Vicente Lusitano, the probable author of an anonymous treatise (ed. in Collet), mentioned a Missa ‘L’homme armé’ by ‘Ortiz’. Two intabulations in Valderrábano’s Silva de sirenas(1547) are ascribed in that collection not to Diego but to Miguel Ortiz.
13.55€
Physical Release: 24 April 2026 Digital Release: 1 May 2026
Physical and Digital Release: 24 April 2026
Physical Release: 24 April 2026 Digital Release: 1 May 2026