Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Classical 27 September, 2021

Cecilia Bartoli Announces New Album "Unreleased"; Most Successful Female Classical Singer Alive To Release Unheard Showcase Album

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
785 entries in 22 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
471 entries in 20 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
848 entries in 25 charts
Blinding Lights
Weeknd
1851 entries in 33 charts
Shape Of You
Ed Sheeran
1190 entries in 30 charts
Somebody That I Used To Know
Gotye & Kimbra
1148 entries in 32 charts
Abracadabra
Lady Gaga
70 entries in 23 charts
Bad Dreams
Teddy Swims
242 entries in 19 charts
Tu Falta De Querer
Mon Laferte
211 entries in 3 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
685 entries in 29 charts
APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
459 entries in 29 charts
Messy
Lola Young
183 entries in 22 charts
That's So True
Gracie Abrams
335 entries in 21 charts
Camino Por La Selva
Luli Pampin
171 entries in 3 charts
Cecilia Bartoli Announces New Album "Unreleased"; Most Successful Female Classical Singer Alive To Release Unheard Showcase Album
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) On 19 November, Cecilia Bartoli will release an album of dramatic concert arias from the classical period. These notoriously demanding pieces were written by the greatest composers of the classical era for the leading sopranos of their day. The project has been planned for nearly a decade, with the music recorded in 2013 with the Kammerorchester Basel under Muhai Tang. The tracklist was finalized by Bartoli when the pause to her performance schedule during the pandemic allowed the singer to revisit unfinished work:
"I enjoyed being able to attend to so many things that I had left unfinished, postponed or forgotten. At last, I had the chance to rummage through my sound archives in search of hidden gems. Among the numerous long-lost friends that came to light, the recordings on this album are particularly precious to me." - Cecilia Bartoli.

With more than 12 million video and audio products sold, Cecilia Bartoli is among the most successful classical artists of our time. Having recorded exclusively on Decca Classics since 1988, Bartoli has been awarded five Grammys, more than a dozen Echos and Brit Awards, the Polar Music Prize, the Léonie-Sonning-Music Prize and the Herbert von Karajan Prize. She has performed at the world's most prestigious concert halls, opera houses and festivals, works as artistic director of the Salzburg Whitsun Festival, and in January 2023 will become director of the Opéra de Monte-Carlo, the first woman in the history of the opera house to hold the role.

On Unreleased, Bartoli performs dramatic concert arias all written in a period of 23 years, by four composers whose influence on one another is clear, and whose compositions were shaped by the great sopranos they were written for.

Beethoven's Ah! Perfido, written for the celebrated singer Josepha Duschek during the composer's visit to Prague in 1796, may foreshadow some of the music for Beethoven's only ever operatic heroine: Fidelio's Leonore.

Duschek also gave the premier of Mozart's Bella mia fiamma and was the originally intended performer of Ah, lo previdi, later performed by Aloysia Weber. Other tracks on Unreleased feature Mozart arias originally written for other great singers of the 18th century such as the castrato Tommaso Consoli who first sung Mozart's L'amerò sarò costante (in the opera Il Pastore).

Bartoli continues her work to showcase underperformed rarities with Se mai senti. Written by the Czech composer Josef Mysliveček, the aria comes from his 1734 opera La Clemenza di Tito and was composed for Pietro Benedetti (who also premiered early Mozart operas). Mysliveček, starting life as a miller in Prague before travelling to Italy, became Europe's most successful and best paid opera composer by the time he befriended the young Mozart.

Bartoli has previously performed Haydn's Scena di Berenice in concert to great acclaim, with her performance at the 2001 Styriarte Festival described by Gramophone as "one of the best recorded concerts on DVD". This is Bartoli's first studio recording of Haydn's demanding aria first performed by Brigida Bant in London in 1791.

Russian-born Israeli violinist, violist, and conductor Maxim Vengerov features with violin solos on two tracks: L'amerò sarò costante and Ch'io mi scordi di te?
"I would like to thank my dear colleague and friend Maxim Vengerov who has always been such a big inspiration for me and who has joined me in the recording of these two wonderful Mozart arias" - Cecilia Bartoli

TRACKLIST:
Beethoven: Ah! Perfido, Op. 65
Mozart: Ch'io mi scordi di te? K.505
Mysliveček: Se mai senti from La Clemenza di Tito
Mozart: Ah, lo previdi!...Ah, t'invola...Deh, non vicar K.272
Mozart: Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528
Mozart: L'amero, sarò costante from Il re pastore. K.208 (violin solo - Vengerov)
Haydn: Scena di Berenice, Hob. XXIVa:10.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0044820 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0039105415344238 secs