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Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano), Gerald Finley (baritone), Lucy Crowe (soprano), Patricia Bardon (mezzo-soprano), William Purefoy (counter-tenor), Sarah Tynan (soprano), John Mark Ainsley (tenor), Carys Lane (soprano) & Rebecca Outram (soprano) Choir of the Age of Enlightenment & Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Steven Devine (director) and Elizabeth Kenny (conductor) Chandos’ featured release is a new recording of the first English operatic masterpiece, Purcell’s tragedy Dido and Aeneas. Starring Sarah Connolly, Gerald Finley, with the Orchestra and Choir of the Age of Enlightenment, it is released to commemorate the 350th anniversary of Purcell’s birth. Directed from the keyboard by Steven Devine and Elizabeth Kenny as in recent concert performances, the ensemble presents the opera in a version that incorporates other dance works by Purcell, a version which Sarah Connolly performed at Teatro alla Scala in 2006. There have been two revolutions in scholarly thinking about Dido and Aeneas and both had serious implications for historically inclined performers, and demand a creative response today. The musicological backdrop to this recording results in a performance closer to the court entertainment of Purcell’s day, in which musical dramas evolved from the English theatre tradition. Sarah Connolly, the quintessential Dido of the early twenty-first century, has been the driving force behind this recording. She writes of the project, ‘It seems I have known Purcell’s Dido all my life and feel able to express myself in this music like no other… As a character, Dido fascinates me to the point of obsession’. Connolly has performed with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment on many occasions, including two productions at Glyndebourne – Giulio Cesare and St Matthew Passion – as well as Dido and Aeneas at the Proms, the South Bank Centre and Tetbury Festival. One recent review of Connolly’s Dido had the following to say: ‘It was the sheer depth of emotion Connolly infused in her portrayal of Dido that was truly remarkable. Emotion flowed off the stage from the intensity in her voice and through her actions. Her final aria, one of the most beautiful in English baroque music, brought a tear to the eye in a hall so quiet you could hear a pin drop… a moving portrayal of this tragic heroine’ (MusicalCriticism.com). This impressive performance by an extraordinary group of musicians makes for a significant addition to the catalogue. Sarah Connolly and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment will perform Dido and Aeneas at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in March 2009. | 
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| |  | Schumann - Songs of Love and Loss
Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) & Eugene Asti (piano) The British mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly, twice nominated for a Grammy, here performs a collection of songs by Robert Schumann, which combines two song cycles from the extremely prolific song year 1840 with several songs from the composer’s last years. She is accompanied by Eugene Asti. Sarah Connolly fell in love with Schumann’s songs in her youth. She has sung them since her early days as a performer and in the booklet she and Eugene Asti write, ‘at the heart of Schumann’s music on this recording lie a profound melancholy and a personal and completely honest, open-hearted empathy for the poetry, which is totally disarming. All the stories and situations depicted in these songs were so much a part of the composer’s own life experience that we just cannot help but be touched and moved by them. Perhaps it is for these reasons that our love for Schumann is especially great, and we feel privileged to be able to share this extraordinary music with you’. It is often claimed that Schumann’s late songs, which include the first seven on this CD, show a composer in decline – a charge that is refuted by such wonderful Lieder as the Wilhelm Meister settings and ‘Nachtlied’ (Goethe), ‘Der Einsiedler’ (Eichendorff), ‘Aufträge’ (L’Egru), ‘Mein schöner Stern!’ (Rückert), ‘Requiem’ (Dreves), the Lenau settings of Op. 90 and the Gedichte der Königin Maria Stuart, all of which are as fine as anything Schumann wrote in 1840, his great ‘song’ year. The album’s key work is the rarely recorded Gedichte der Königin Maria Stuart, songs on five poems attributed to Mary, Queen of Scots. They were his last Lieder and the most austere that Schumann ever wrote. He composed the set in 1852 during a period of deep depression and offered the work as a Christmas present to his wife, Clara. It is also matched here by ‘Requiem’, setting a translation by Leberecht Blücher Dreves of an old sacred Latin text. This requiem, from Op. 90, was one of four that Schumann composed in the last years of his creative life, and it seems likely that the proliferation of such settings around 1850 had symbolic import – ‘requiems, after all, are written for oneself’, as Schumann once confided to a friend. “Sarah Connolly's beautifully sung Frauenliebe und-leben often called to mind Janet Baker's early recording with Martin Isepp… Connolly, like Baker, gives the cycle a more melancholy, introspective cast than most. Connolly is magnificently desolate and accusatory in the final song of bereavement, with a graphic sense of withdrawal from the world before the healing keyboard postlude.” Gramophone Magazine, November 2008 “By placing the poignant invocation of 'Mein schöner Stern', emblem-like, at the top of this artfully programmed Schumann recital, Sarah Connolly reveals much of the composer's fervent inwardness - something she and her accompanist, Eugene Asti, capture so well throughout.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2008 **** | 
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Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano), Carolyn Sampson (soprano), Susan Gritton (soprano), Mark Padmore (tenor) & David Wilson-Johnson (baritone) RIAS Kammerchor & Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Daniel Reuss Handel was 63 years old when he composed Solomon, one of his final masterpieces.The plot is simple with Act
1 dealing with the inauguration of the newly completed temple, and ends with Solomon beckoning his Queen
toward the cedar grove, where one suspects it is not just the 'amorous turtles' that 'love beneath the pleasing
gloom'. Act II is based around the well known story of two women arguing over who is the mother of the
new-born baby, and Solomon's sharp thinking to find a solution and Act III portrays the visit of the Queen of
Sheba (also known as the Queen of Egypt and Ethiopia), and her amazement at the glory and splendour of
Solomon's court.With a relatively small and diverse cast of characters (Solomon, Queen of Sheba, two
Harlots, Zadok the Priest and a Levite) it falls to the chorus, as builders and inhabitants of this 'golden' city, to
emphasis the grandeur and splendour of Solomon's kingdom and to literarily provide the pillars of the whole
piece.These grand choruses, seven of which are in eight voice parts, add to the texture and opulence of the
oratorio mirroring the glory of the court and religious intensity.
This 'perfect marriage of music and English words', as Winton Dean has called it, caused the composer serious
financial difficulties in 1749 on account of the exceptional forces it required - but today, under the baton of
Daniel Reuss, with an unbeatable British cast, finds a performance totally devoted to its noble cause! “…sleek playing from the Berlin period instrument players, though the choir sounds too slim-line for the big moments. As Zadok, Mark Padmore moves around most of the notes with skill. Sarah Connolly is articulate as Solomon, her carefully measured tone combining warmth with dynamism. Susan Gritton is graceful as Solomon's queen and striking as the First Harlot... But Daniel Reuss's conducting is slack, allowing tempos to drag.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2007 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Simon Wright | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Sarah Connolly (mezzo) & Dietrich Henschel (baritone) Orchestre des Champs-Élysées, Philippe Herreweghe "Sarah Connolly, with her glowing, supple mezzo and unaffected directness, is well-nigh ideal" The Daily Telegraph | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | The Exquisite Hour
Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) Eugene Asti "a hugely impressive disc, testifying to the versatility and range of a singer who has already drawn comparisons with Janet Baker" The Guardian | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Turnage: | Twice Through the Heart Premiere recording, Blackheath Concert Halls, 16 Apr 07 Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) Hidden Love Song Premiere recording and performance, Queen Elizabeth Hall, 30 Jan 06 Martin Robertson (soprano saxophone) The Torn Fields Premiere recording, Watford Town Hall, 11 Feb 07 Gerald Finley (baritone) |
London Philharmonic Orchestra, Marin Alsop This latest release documents premiere recordings of works by Mark-Anthony Turnage,
the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s Composer in Residence.
Ten years after its rst performance at the Aldeburgh Festival, Marin Alsop conducts a
studio performance of Turnage’s remarkable work for mezzo-soprano and chamber
ensemble, Twice Through the Heart. The piece is a collaboration with poet Jackie Kay
and explores the real-life story of an abused woman imprisoned for the murder of her
husband. The music is lyrical but abrupt, painful but often quiet and reective; one of
the composer’s most nely crafted, intensely moving and technically accomplished
works. ‘It’s almost made for Sarah’s [Connolly] voice’, says Turnage, ‘she gets very close
to the heart of it’.
The Torn Fields was also recorded in the studio, and is sung by baritone Gerald Finley, for
whom Turnage wrote the work in 2000-02. This often nightmarish, vivid glimpse of the
destruction of war using poetry from 1914-1918 is another example of the composer’s
extraordinary ability to create vocal lines that embody their texts. Turnage has himself
commented on the huge challenges he experiences when writing vocal music, but
concedes that ‘writing for Gerald Finley makes it easier…he is, in my view, one of the
greatest baritones around’.
Sandwiched between these works is a recording made live at the world première of
Turnage’s Hidden Love Song in January 2006. The soloist, Martin Robertson, is another
close friend and regular collaborator with Turnage, and this performance reveals the
sensitive, delicate nature of Turnage’s musical gift to his wife Gabriella Swallow. “Played with arching smoothness by Martin Robertson…Ultimately the piece is a love song, and a beautiful one.” The Guardian “Finley magnificent in the Turnage anti-war settings that crown a fine disc.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2008 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Camilla Tilling, Sarah Connolly, Timothy Robinson & Neal Davies Gabrieli Consort & Players, Paul Mccreesh The Times (London) was one of many publications to praise the ensemble's special rendering: 'McCreesh propels his period-instrument band and incisive choir with feverish energy. There's never a dull moment. Yet he also has the imagination and control to conjure up delectable oases of calm' “McCreesh and his forces provide a fine blend of vigour and sensitivity, revealing the music's power and constant ingenuity.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2008 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Bridge - Orchestral Works Volume 6
Bridge: | Blow out, you bugles, H 132, for tenor & orchestra Adoration, H 57 Where she lies asleep, H 114, for tenor and orchestra Love went a-riding Thy hand in mine, H 124, for tenor and orchestra Berceuse, H 9, for soprano and orchestra Mantle of blue, H 131, for high voice and orchestra Day after day, H 164, for mezzo-soprano and orchestra Speak to me,my love!, H 164ii, for mezzo-soprano and orchestra Berceuse,H 8 Chant d'espérance,H 18ii Serenade,H 23 The Pageant of London, H 98, suite for orchestra A Royal Night of Variety,H 184, epilogue for orchestra |
Philip Langridge (tenor), Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Richard Hickox Most items are premiere recordings “Sarah Connolly sings Bridge's orchestral songs beautifully” BBC Music Magazine, Proms Issue 2005 BBC Music Magazine
Choral & Song Choice |
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| |  | Heroes and Heroines: Handel Arias
Sarah Connolly The Sixteen, The Symphony of Harmony and Invention, Harry Christophers | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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