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Dido & Aeneas
Henry Purcell

Christopher Monks / Armonico Consort

Dido & Aeneas

Price: € 19.95
Format: CD
Label: Signum Classics
UPC: 0635212041727
Catnr: SIGCD 417
Release date: 24 April 2015
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Label
Signum Classics
UPC
0635212041727
Catalogue number
SIGCD 417
Release date
24 April 2015
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
NL

About the album

The Armonico Consert and soloists perform Henry Purcell’s evergreen chamber opera Dido & Aeneas, the work based on Virgil’s epic, the Aeneid. Armonico Consert is one of the largest and most innovative organizations of its kind in the UK, existing to inspire audiences with its unique programs.

About Armonico Consert: “... the whole thing seems suffused with light reflected from Manahan Thomas’ voice, and Steele-Perkins’ effortlessly projected trumpet.” (BBC Radio 3 CD review of Let The Bright Seraphim, SIGCD289) “... a disc of unending delight.” (Gramophone review of Naked Byrd Two, SIGCD235).

Track 42 is the beloved When I am laid in earth.

Purcells opera prachtig uitgevoerd met verbazingwekkende selectie solisten
Henry Purcells kameropera Dido & Aeneas, waarin het verhaal van Virgilius’ epos Aeneas muzikaal verteld wordt, is hier uitgevoerd door het Armonico Consort met een verbazingwekkende selectie aan solisten. Armonico Consort is één van de grootste en meest innovatieve organisaties in zijn soort in het Verenigd Koninkrijk en is opgericht om het publiek te inspireren met zijn unieke programma’s.

Het verhaal van de opera gaat over Aeneas die de stad Troje ontvlucht en afreist naar Carthago, waar Dido koningin is en hem in haar paleis ontvangt. Ze wordt verliefd op de held, maar haar geluk wordt verstoord door een tovenares en haar heksen die een storm opwekken, waardoor Aeneas, die aan het strijden is, van het leger wordt afgezonderd en Dido terug naar de stad vlucht. Aeneas wordt vervolgens misleid door iemand vermomd als Mercurius, die hem het bevel van Jupiter geeft om terug te keren naar Italië. Aeneas zou daar een nieuwe stad stichten en neemt het bevel aan. Dido beschuldigt hem van schijnheiligheid en als hij toch in Carthago wil blijven, stuurt ze hem alsnog weg waarna ze sterft van liefdesverdriet.

Christopher Monks is pianist, dirigent en de artistiek leider van Armonico Consort. Hij is gespecialiseerd in muziek uit barok en de renaissance, maar is ook thuis in enorme koorwerken. Hij heeft in vele grote concertzalen in het Verenigd Koninkrijk gestaan en werkte ook in het buitenland. Zijn concerten en opnames leverden hem zeer hoge waarderingen op en worden elke week op nationale en internationale klassieke radiostations gedraaid. Dit album met het bekende operawerk Dido & Aeneas, dat hier prachtig wordt uitgevoerd, is een fascinerende bijdrage aan Monks succesvolle serie opnames.

Track 42 bevat het prachtige When I am laid in earth.

Artist(s)

Armonico Consort

Armonico Consort is a critically acclaimed choir, instrumental ensemble and music charity.  It is renowned for inspiring audiences through passionate performances, providing imaginative singing opportunities for young people and helping people living with dementia through the power of music.   Armonico Consort began life in 2001, set up by Christopher Monks and a group of university colleagues with a shared passion for music from the Renaissance to Baroque, coupled with the imagination to find new and unusual ways to present concerts. Audiences seemed to love their engaging and innovative approach, and most concerts in the first years sold out.    “That gave us the confidence, energy and self-belief to do more; to take more risks with our programming and keep on experimenting” says Christopher.   The ideas kept flowing, as...
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Armonico Consort is a critically acclaimed choir, instrumental ensemble and music charity. It is renowned for inspiring audiences through passionate performances, providing imaginative singing opportunities for young people and helping people living with dementia through the power of music. Armonico Consort began life in 2001, set up by Christopher Monks and a group of university colleagues with a shared passion for music from the Renaissance to Baroque, coupled with the imagination to find new and unusual ways to present concerts. Audiences seemed to love their engaging and innovative approach, and most concerts in the first years sold out. “That gave us the confidence, energy and self-belief to do more; to take more risks with our programming and keep on experimenting” says Christopher. The ideas kept flowing, as did the titles (many of them created down the pub…) including the concert programmes Naked Byrd, Supersize Polyphony, Too Hot to Handel, Monteverdi’s Flying Circus and Baroque around the Block. Although their horizons have broadened to encompass contemporary repertoire and new commissions, Armonico’s signature concerts continue to feature choral masterpieces, rarely heard gems and new musical discoveries from the Renaissance and Baroque, performed in imaginative ways by some of the world’s finest singers and period instrument players. “I’m particularly proud of Supersize Polyphony where we perform 40 and 60-part works by Tallis and Striggio in the round, surrounding the audience, interpolated by the timeless chants of Hildegard of Bingen,” Christopher continues. It was this particular programme which earned the group their first 5 star reviews, from The Times and BBC Music Magazine, and there were plenty more to follow. Most recently Armonico Consort has become the world’s leading authority on the choral works of Francesco Scarlatti – a forgotten member of the famous dynasty. Their recording of his Dixit Dominus and Messe a 16 has been named “Spectacular - the classical music find of the century” by Le figaro, Paris, and the first modern performance of his only surviving oratorio Daniele described as “an exemplary resuscitation” by The Times. Armonico’s education programme – AC Academy – was fundamental from the outset and now encompasses after-school choirs and an in-school Choir Creation programme which has established almost 300 choirs and trained teachers as choir leaders, reaching over 250,000 young people. The programme offers high quality performance opportunities in venues across the country, including the Royal Albert Hall where Armonico’s biggest project to date, It Takes a City for 2000 voices and orchestra, was premiered in 2022.
“Many of these young people have been with the group since the age of 7 and are now singing as AC Academy Scholars alongside the professional singers. It is so rewarding to see how the opportunities we have created have changed them not just as musicians, but as humans, and this drives much of what we create,” Christopher says. The Choir Creation programme has recently expanded through partnerships with Westlands Entertainment Venue Yeovil, and overseas in Kenya, and with Foundaçion Azteca Mexico where the training of new choir leaders will help create the country’s first high level symphony orchestra and chorus. The mental and physical well-being benefits of singing are well established, and Armonico Consort witnessed this first hand through creating a workplace choir for its sponsors Phillips 66 in 2016. New research suggests Baroque music is extremely effective at unlocking memories for those affected by dementia and, with training from the Alzheimer’s Society, Armonico’s Communities programme now includes singing sessions in care homes and the first of what will soon be many community choirs, Warwick Memory Singers. Throughout 2024, Armonico tours the 'Forgotten Scarlatti' – Francesco Scarlatti’s choral masterpieces in brand new editions by Dr Geoffrey Webber – and presents a new semi-staged version of Purcell’s The Fairy Queen. The summer also sees the return of AC Academy Does the Royal Albert Hall, a biennial celebration of the Choir Creation programme involving thousands of children. It will include a bespoke musical work by children with special educational needs, feature guest dancers from BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing, and what may well be the world’s largest ever performance of Orff’s Carmina Burana with 2500 singers.

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Christopher Monks (conductor)

Rachael Lloyd

Rachael Lloyd trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and made her professional debut with Glyndebourne Touring Opera in 2005 singing the role of Shelley in the world premiere of Jonathan Lunn’s opera Tangier Tattoo. Since then she has also sung the role of Meg Page in Verdi’s Falstaff for the same company and Cornelia in Handel’s Giulio Cesare for Glyndebourne Festival Opera. As a recitalist Rachael was invited to Lille Opera house to sing Schumann’s Fraueliebe und Leben and Elgar’s Sea Pictures which she has also performed at St John’s, Smith Square in London. Recent concert performances include the alto solos in Handel’s Messiah at the Royal Festival Hall, Trois poemes de Stephane Mallarme with the London Philharmonic...
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Rachael Lloyd trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and made her professional debut with Glyndebourne Touring Opera in 2005 singing the role of Shelley in the world premiere of Jonathan Lunn’s opera Tangier Tattoo. Since then she has also sung the role of Meg Page in Verdi’s Falstaff for the same company and Cornelia in Handel’s Giulio Cesare for Glyndebourne Festival Opera. As a recitalist Rachael was invited to Lille Opera house to sing Schumann’s Fraueliebe und Leben and Elgar’s Sea Pictures which she has also performed at St John’s, Smith Square in London. Recent concert performances include the alto solos in Handel’s Messiah at the Royal Festival Hall, Trois poemes de Stephane Mallarme with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and a series of Viennese concerts and Rossini’s Stabat Mater with Ulster Symphony Orchestra in Belfast. Other recent operatic highlights include Mrs Anderssen in Stephen Sondheim’s A Little Night Music at the Chatelet in Paris, Dido in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas for Theater Thuringen in Gera, Germany, Maddalena in Verdi’s Rigoletto for Iford Arts and Amastris in Handel’s Xerxes for English Touring Opera. Last year Rachael also made her Royal Opera House debut as Kate Pinkerton in Puccini’s Madam Butterfly
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Composer(s)

Henry Purcell

Westminster Abbey is not just the place where British monarchs were crowned, it's also the place where many English great men were burried. Among those was also Henry Purcell. This final resting place had a double meaning for him: firstly, with his status as a composer he deserved a spot in the abbey, but secondly this was also the location where he worked during the reign of Charles II and William & Mary.  Most people will recognise the last aria of Purcell's beloved opera Dido and Aeneas: 'Remember me, but ah! forget my fate.' More abstract, but less trenchant are his brilliant Fantasias (for viola da gamba) which Purcell composed in the early 1680s. These are small, at times daringly expirimental works, which...
more

Westminster Abbey is not just the place where British monarchs were crowned, it's also the place where many English great men were burried. Among those was also Henry Purcell. This final resting place had a double meaning for him: firstly, with his status as a composer he deserved a spot in the abbey, but secondly this was also the location where he worked during the reign of Charles II and William & Mary. Most people will recognise the last aria of Purcell's beloved opera Dido and Aeneas: "Remember me, but ah! forget my fate." More abstract, but less trenchant are his brilliant Fantasias (for viola da gamba) which Purcell composed in the early 1680s. These are small, at times daringly expirimental works, which he carefully dated. Yet, Purcell mostly developed himself as a composer of vocal music, with numerous odes, 'welcome songs', motets (anthems), songs for domestic use (both sacred and secular, both monophonic and polyphonic) and music for theatre.


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Press

Play album Play album
01.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626: Overture
01:50
02.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Belinda & Chorus - “Shake the cloud from off your brow”
01:03
03.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Dido - ?Ah! Belinda, I am press?d with torment?
03:11
04.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Belinda & Dido - “Grief increases by concealing”
00:29
05.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Chorus - “When monarchs unite, how happy their state”
00:17
06.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Dido & Belinda - ?Whence could so much virtue spring??
01:37
07.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Belinda, Second Woman & Chorus - “Fear no danger to ensue”
01:27
08.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Belinda, Aeneas, Dido - “See, your royal guest appears”
00:43
09.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Chorus - ?Cupid only throws the dart?
00:38
10.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Aeneas - “If not for mine, for Empire’s sake”
00:21
11.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Belinda - “Pursue thy conquest love”
00:48
12.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Guitars’ Chaconne
00:46
13.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: Chorus - “To the hills and the vales”
01:09
14.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act I: The Triumphing Dance
01:17
15.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Prelude for the Witches (Sorceress & First Witch) - “Wayward sisters”
01:42
16.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Chorus - ?Harm?s our delight?
00:15
17.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Sorceress - “The Queen of Carthage, whom we hate”
00:26
18.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Chorus - ?Ho ho ho, ho ho ho!?
00:10
19.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: First & Second Witches, Sorceress - ?Ruin?d ere the set of sun??
01:03
20.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Chorus - “Ho ho ho, ho ho ho!” (Reprise)
00:09
21.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: First & Second Witches - ?But, ere we this perform?
01:08
22.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Chorus - “In our deep vaulted cell”
01:33
23.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 1: Echo Dance of Furies
01:06
24.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Ritornelle
00:46
25.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Belinda & Chorus - “Thanks to these lonesome vales”
02:49
26.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Second Woman - “Oft she visits this lone mountain”
01:47
27.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Aeneas & Dido - “Behold, upon my bended spear”
00:27
28.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Belinda & Chorus - “Haste to town”
00:49
29.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act II Scene 2: Spirit & Aeneas: “Stay, Prince! and hear great Jove’s command”
02:32
30.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: The Sailor’s Dance I
00:35
31.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: Drunken Sailor & Chorus - “Come away, fellow sailors”
01:01
32.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: The Sailor’s Dance II
00:41
33.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: Sorceress, First & Second Witches - “See, the flags and streamers curling”
01:00
34.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: Sorceress - “Our next motion”
00:32
35.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: Chorus - “Destruction’s our delight”
00:37
36.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 1: The Witches’ Dance
01:15
37.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 2: Dido, Belinda & Aeneas - “Your counsel all is urged in vain”
03:33
38.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 2: Chorus - “Great minds against themselves conspire”
01:20
39.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 2: Dido - “Thy hand, Belinda, darkness shades me”
00:58
40.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 2: Dido - “When I am laid in earth”
03:37
41.
Dido & Aeneas, Z. 626, Act III Scene 2: Chorus - “With drooping wings”
03:15
show all tracks

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