Many thanks for your generosity, JAAP.

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Ildebrando Pizzetti - Songs (Hanna Hipp; Emma Abbate)


Information

Composer: Ildebrando Pizzetti
  1. Sera d'inverno
  2. L'annuncio
  3. Cinque Liriche: I. I Pastori
  4. Cinque Liriche: II. La madre al figlio lontano
  5. Cinque Liriche: III. San Basilio
  6. Cinque Liriche: IV. Il clefta prigione
  7. Cinque Liriche: V. Passeggiata
  8. Épitaphe
  9. Antifona Amatoria di Basiliola
  10. E il mio dolore io canto
  11. Incontro di Marzo
  12. Due canti d'amore: I. Adjuro vos, filiae Jerusalem
  13. Due canti d'amore: II. Oscuro è il ciel
  14. Scuote amore il mio cuore
  15. Tre Canti Greci: I. Augurio
  16. Tre Canti Greci: II. Mirologio per un bambino
  17. Tre Canti Greci: III. Canzone per Ballo

Hanna Hipp, mezzo-soprano
Emma Abbate, piano

Date: 2018
Label: Resonus

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review

Ildebrando Pizzetti’s songs have fallen into near-obscurity of late, so this recital, released to mark the 50th anniversary of his death and forming the third instalment of Emma Abbate’s survey of 20th-century Italian vocal music, is an important addition to his discography. He remains a difficult figure for many, partly because of the often uncompromising austerity of his style, and partly because of his association with the Italian far right, about which we could do with greater biographical information than we currently possess. He was, however, a composer of considerable stature: you can’t easily overlook the best of his work, which has remarkable force.

Abbate and mezzo Hanna Hipp give us 17 of his 31 liriche (he used the term as the Italian equivalent of Lieder or mélodies), composed between 1903 and 1956. Anyone acquainted with Pizzetti’s best-known work, the 1958 opera Assasinio nella cattedrale, will find themselves in familiar territory with regard to his rather lofty textual approach. He was finicky as to what he set, preferring poets he considered major writers, whether ancient or modern, though it is hard, on occasion, to share his enthusiasm for some of his contemporaries. Debussy’s influence is apparent in his fondness for melodic lines derived from speech patterns, rising and falling syllabically as time signatures shift continuously, a compositional method heard most strikingly in ‘I pastori’ from the Cinque Liriche of 1916. Like many of his generation, however, he was drawn to early music: both plainchant and Monteverdian ariosi lurk behind the beautiful Due Canti d’amore and the ‘Antifona amatoria di Basiliola’, an excerpt from his incidental music for Gabriele D’Annunzio’s 1908 play La nave.

Many of the songs are notably bleak or stark in mood: Hipp and Abbate deliver them with considerable intensity. Hipp’s gleaming sound and declamatory fire impress in the anguished ‘La madre al figlio lontano’ from the Cinque Liriche, in which a mother waits in vain for her absent son’s return. One admires her lyrical restraint in the sexually ambiguous ‘Paseggiata’, which closes the same set, and the suggestive, but sparing way she uses her chest register in ‘Scuote amore il mio cuore’, a turbulent yet ravishing setting of Sappho. Abbate, meanwhile, breathes life into piano-writing that is frequently sparse but in which every shift of rhythm or colour speaks volumes. The accompanying booklet prints texts and translations consecutively rather than side by side, which can be annoying. The main article, meanwhile, is excerpted, not always ideally, from A Singer’s Guide to the Songs of Ildebrando Pizzetti, a doctoral thesis by Mark Whatley, associate professor at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. You can however, download the full thesis as a PDF: it’s well worth reading it before you listen.

-- Tim Ashley, Gramophone

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ildebrando Pizzetti (20 September 1880 – 13 February 1968) was an Italian composer of classical music, musicologist, and music critic. Along with RespighiMalipiero and Casella, Pizzetti was part of the "Generation of 1880", first Italian composers in some time whose primary contributions were not in opera. He taught at the Florence Conservatory (director from 1917 to 1923), directed the Milan Conservatory from 1923, and was Respighi's successor at the National Academy of St Cecilia in Rome from 1936 to 1958; Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco was among his students. Pizzetti also wrote several books on the music of Italy and of Greece.

***

Hanna Hipp is a Polish lyric mezzo-soprano.

***

Emma Abbate is a London-based Neapolitan pianist.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

1 comment:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Skip Ad' (or 'Get link').
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    http://lyksoomu.com/ICux
    or
    https://uii.io/s25MWo
    or
    https://exe.io/68kXxmy

    ReplyDelete