Time 19:00
The Palace on the Isle in the Royal Łazienki Museum in Warsaw
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Baroque – an era in which art and music brim with a wealth of forms, refined symbolism, and above all, a love of dramaturgy. The latter is particularly visible in vocal-instrumental music – in the perfect synthesis of word and sound observable not only in operas, but also in cantatas, duets, arias, and songs. “Music be the food of love” – this is the Shakespearean quote that opens Henry Purcell’s highly expressive song to words by Henry Heveningham. It is therefore no surprise that one of the favourite themes of seventeenth-century composers was precisely this emotion and its various shades.
The concert will open with a famous declaration of love – the madrigal Amarilli, mia bella by Giulio Caccini (1551–1618), one of the Florentine doyens of the new style in music. This accomplished singer and teacher paid particular attention to the intelligibility and emotional expression of the poetic text. These ideas were also implemented by Claudio Monteverdi (1567–1643), who reached for even more evocative means. His Lament of Arianna seems to contain within itself the entire inexpressible despair of a lover abandoned by Theseus. Both composers pointed the way in thinking about music for subsequent generations of creators. A splendid example of this is Clori vezzosa e bella, a cantata by Alessandro Scarlatti (1660–1725), in which a shepherd in love with a beautiful nymph expresses his devotion, grateful for the suffering brought about by his passion. The hero’s exaggerated emotions are emphasized with sophisticated devices reminiscent of some of the most tragic moments of dramatic works. And yet, the dance-like character of the gigue in the final aria leaves no doubt that Scarlatti is playing with convention and treats the shepherd’s exaltation with appropriate irony. The close relationship between music and text is equally easy to discern in L’Amante povero by Antonio Caldara (1670–1736). Already at the beginning of the first aria, the composer highlights the words scherzo (joke) and gioco (play) with a suggestive melisma, and later on in the love monologue, he applies, with no less mastery, a whole array of rhetorical devices. The concert will conclude with music by Georg Friedrich Handel (1685–1759). Separated by a radiant overture, the duets Alma mia! from Admeto, the last opera performed during the composer’s lifetime, and Tu caro, caro sei from Sosarme delight with the effortless elegance of their harmonious dialogue.
PROGRAM
Giulio Caccini – Amarilli, mia bella
Henry Purcell – If music be the food of love
Claudio Monteverdi – Lamento d’Arianna, SV 22
Alessandro Scarlatti – Concerto grosso in G major R. 533.8
Allegro | Adagio | Allegro | Adagio | Vivace
Alessandro Scarlatti – Clori vezzosa e bella H. 134
Recytatyw: Clori vezzosa e bella
Aria: Volgi lo sguardo e vedi
Recytatyw: Vivo penando è ver
Aria: Sì, mio ben, sì ancor vorrei
Antonio Caldara – L’Amante povero
Aria: Fatto son della fortuna
Recytatyw: Povertà mi tormenta
Aria: Di gemino nume son vittima
Antonio Caldara – Sonata da camera a due violini in D major
Preludio. Adagio | Allemande. Allegro spiritoso | Giga. Allegro
Georg Friedrich Handel – Alma mia! from the opera Admeto HWV 22
Georg Friedrich Handel – Ouverture from the opera Admeto HWV 22
Georg Friedrich Handel – Tu caro, caro sei from the opera Sosarme HWV 30
PERFORMERS
MARTA BOBERSKA SOPRANO
ANETA ŁUKASZEWICZ MEZZOSOPRANO
THE PERIOD INSTRUMENTS ENSEMBLE OF THE POLISH ROYAL OPERA CAPELLA REGIA POLONA
KRZYSZTOF GARSTKA HARPSICHORD, CONDUCTOR
Duration: approx. 1 h 10 mins



