Cappella Pratensis & Joshua Rifkin
Vivat Leo! Music for a Medici Pope
SACD hybride | Challenge Classics | 0608917236620 | CC 72366 | 10-10
Godiamo ci il Papato, poichè Dio ci
l’ha dato. ‘Let us enjoy the papacy, since God has given it to us’ – thus, according to a contemporary report, Giovanni de’ Medici, the second son of Lorenzo the Magnificent, on becoming pope in March 1513. Enjoy it he did. In the eight years of his reign, Leo X, as Giovanni now became known, lived extravagantly, holding banquet after banquet, hunt after hunt, and sometimes parading a white elephant through Rome. His costly enthusiasms extracted their price, of course; within two years of taking the throne, he had turned a handsome surplus left him by his predecessor into a deficit, and before long he had to raise funds by such dubious tricks as selling indulgences on a grand scale – provoking what would eventually become the Reformation. Yet Leo did not exhaust the papal treasury on frivolous things alone. A man of extensive humanistic learning, he supported notable scholars and poets, including Pietro Bembo; commissioned major works from Raphael; and initiated significant building projects. Above all, Leo loved music. He knew it from the inside, possessing sufficient technical knowledge to compose in five voices. He staffed the papal choir – the body responsible for music at liturgical services – with some of the most eminent singers and composers of his day, and he maintained a
private body of musicians that similarly included several highly prized singers, composers, and instrumentalists.
Much of the music heard at Leo’s court
has vanished. We don’t know what his lutenists performed, nor can we retrieve the improvisations of his wind players. But we have an impressive record of the sophisticated polyphony sung around him: several manuscripts and printed books produced at his court or in its immediate orbit preserve works of both his own composers and others favoured by him and his musicians. A particularly vivid image of Leo’s musical world comes from the so-called Medici Codex, a collection of 53 motets possibly meant at first for Leo’s private use but ultimately presented to his nephew Lorenzo de’ Medici, Duke of Urbino, as Lorenzo returned with his new bride, the
French princess Madeleine de la Tour d’Au-vergne, to Italy in the late summer of 1518. With the exception of the first and last pieces, all the music on this recording comes from the Medici Codex. (source: linernotes written by Joshua Rifkin)
Viel von der Musik, die am Hofe von Giovanni de' Medici (zum Papst gewählt im März 1513 als Leo X.) gespielt wurde, ist heute verloren. Ein besonders lebhaftes Bild von Leos musikalischer Welt findet sich aber im sogenannten Codex Medici, einer Sammlung von 53 Motetten. Mit Ausnahme des ersten und letzten Stücks stammt die Musik auf dieser CD aus dem Codex Medici. Seit mehr als 20 Jahren geht Cappella Pratensis einen eigenen Weg und testet die Grenzen einer historischen Aufführungspraxis aus, diesmal in Partnerschaft mit Joshua Rifkin, der die Musik der vorliegenden CD bestens kennt. Für die erste CD bei CHALLENGE CLASSICS erhielt Capella Pratensis mit Obrechts 'Missa di Sancto Donatiano (FL 72414) im Februar 2010 einen DIAPASON d'Or.
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1Gaude Felix Florentia11:02
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2Virgo Gloriosa Christi, Margareta03:12
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3Saluto te, sancta Virgo Maria06:15
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4Videns dominus civitatem desolatem04:20
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5Nesciens mater virgo virum03:21
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6Per lignum salvi02:23
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7Exalta regina Gallie03:01
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8Nymphes des bols04:32
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9Miserere mei, Deus14:19
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10Omnis pulchritudo Domini04:35
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11Inviolata, integra et casta es07:52
Cappella Pratensis - Vivat Leo - Tijdschrift Oude Muziek - nummer 1 2011
19-04-2011Cappella Pratensis - Vivat Leo! - Luister - Maart April 2011
14-01-2011Cappella Pratensis - Vivat Leo - 50plusser.nl - oktober 2010
13-01-2011Cappella Pratensis & Joshua Rifkin - Vivat Leo! Music for a Medici Pope - Klassik.com Januari 2011
21-12-2010 08-12-2010 30-11-2010 30-11-2010 05-11-2010Cappella Pratensis - Vivat Leo - 50plusser.nl - oktober 2010




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