top
Sibilar gli angui d’Aletto (Rinaldo)
Georg Friedrich Händel

Sibilar gli angui d’Aletto (Rinaldo)

Sergio Foresti / Abchordis Ensemble / Andrea Buccarella

Label: Challenge Classics
Format: Download Album
Barcode: 0608917249927
barcode
Catalog number: CC 72499
Releasedate:
- We are proud to include Sergio Foresti in our roster of artists. Sergio is one of the leading baroque baritones of our days.
- In his first disc for Challenge Classics, he sings a subtly thought-out selection of arias written for Giuseppe Maria Boschi
- Boschi was the most famous baritone in London at the time of Haendel and Bononcini
- The recital is made of mostly unknown arias and is characterized by a widest range of moods and atmosphere that makes the listening always engaging
- Foresti is accompanied by a stunning first-rate baroque orchestra Abchordis Ensemble
- To complete the presentation of a top-class release, we highlight the higher quality of both the recording and the production.
Giuseppe Maria Boschi was undoubtably one of the most famous and virtuosic baritones of the 18th century. He had a brilliant and intense career on a par with those of renowned contemporary castrati and sopranos, including Farinelli, Senesino, Faustina Bordoni, Margherita Durastanti, Francesca Cuzzoni and Nicolini. He was one of the leading baritones throughout London from 1720 to 1728, sought after by Georg Frederich Händel, Giovanni Bononcini, and Attilio Ariosti. Warrior, father, lover, tyrant: many were the roles to show the nuances of his vocality which, judging by the music written for him, was of exceptional range and well-suited for dramatic roles.
The program of this recording made in honor of Giuseppe Maria Boschi is largely unpublished and constitutes a very small selection of some of the most beautiful pages of music written for him between 1708 and 1728.
 
Sergio Foresti: Nowadays, baroque music is often perceived merely as light, cheerful music. This image is superficial when you consider the abundant variety of the 83 roles written specifically for Giuseppe Maria Boschi. He was indeed a great singer, working with the greatest voices and composers of his time. His voice, his technique, and his ability to express drama in music must all have been spectacular.
This is, above all, theater music. The arias of this program are expressions of interior states of mind. The words have a meaning, as do the ways in which they are set to music by the various composers. The singer had to convey these meanings and add their own ornaments to the music. I have done my best to honor this great tradition.