Stabat mater for 2 sopranos, tenor, bass, chorus & orchestra
There's no doubting Gioachino Rossini's sincerity in his Stabat Mater -- he himself was so moved by the piece that he couldn't bear to attend the work's dress rehearsal or any of its first performances -- but still, his setting of the Latin text is, strictly speaking, only a sacred work. With its heightened drama, its passionate lyricism and its histrionic virtuosity, it is actually an emotional work, a work in which the composer takes the Latin text as an opportunity to demonstrate its feelings on the subjects of grief and ...
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There's no doubting Gioachino Rossini's sincerity in his Stabat Mater -- he himself was so moved by the piece that he couldn't bear to attend the work's dress rehearsal or any of its first performances -- but still, his setting of the Latin text is, strictly speaking, only a sacred work. With its heightened drama, its passionate lyricism and its histrionic virtuosity, it is actually an emotional work, a work in which the composer takes the Latin text as an opportunity to demonstrate its feelings on the subjects of grief and death. As this profoundly serious 1982 performance led by Carlo Maria Giulini proves, this doesn't mean Rossini didn't honestly feel his feeling: it means that he objectified them by transforming them into art. With the clarion twin sopranos Katia Ricciarelli and Lucia Valentini Terrani in the duet "Quis est homo," the rugged bass Ruggero Raimondi in the aria "Pro peccatis suae gentis" and particularly the heroic tenor Dalmacio Gonzalez in the showpiece aria "Cujus animam gementem,"...
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