Puccini: I Canti - Orchestral Songs & Works Charles Castronovo, Munich Radio Orchestra & Ivan Repušić

Cover Puccini: I Canti - Orchestral Songs & Works

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
05.01.2024

Label: BR-Klassik

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Vocal

Artist: Charles Castronovo, Munich Radio Orchestra & Ivan Repušić

Composer: Giacomo Puccini (1858-1924)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Giacomo Puccini (1858 - 1924): I Canti:
  • 1 Puccini: I Canti: A te 03:36
  • 2 Puccini: I Canti: Salve Regina 04:27
  • 3 Puccini: I Canti: Ad una morta! 03:16
  • 4 Puccini: I Canti: Mentía l’avviso 04:21
  • 5 Puccini: I Canti: Storiella d’amore 05:01
  • 6 Puccini: I Canti: Sole e amore 01:54
  • 7 Puccini: I Canti: Avanti, Urania! 01:22
  • 8 Puccini: I Canti: Inno a Diana 02:07
  • 9 Puccini: I Canti: E l’uccellino 01:15
  • 10 Puccini: I Canti: Terra e mare 01:20
  • 11 Puccini: I Canti: Canto d’anime 01:29
  • 12 Puccini: I Canti: Dios y Patria 02:37
  • 13 Puccini: I Canti: Casa mia, casa mia 00:41
  • 14 Puccini: I Canti: Sogno d’or 02:13
  • 15 Puccini: I Canti: Inno a Roma 03:20
  • 16 Puccini: I Canti: Morire? 02:34
  • Preludio sinfonico, SC 32 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew):
  • 17 Puccini: Preludio sinfonico, SC 32 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew) 08:28
  • Capriccio sinfonico, SC 55 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew)
  • 18 Puccini: Capriccio sinfonico, SC 55 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew) 11:38
  • Crisantemi, SC 65 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew)
  • 19 Puccini: Crisantemi, SC 65 (Arr. for String Orchestra by Lucas Drew) 06:38
  • Total Runtime 01:08:17

Info for Puccini: I Canti - Orchestral Songs & Works

Giacomo Puccini hat nur wenige Werke für Singstimme mit Klavierbegleitung geschrieben. Elf Lieder wurden zu seinen Lebzeiten veröffentlicht; weitere waren über ein Jahrhundert lang verschollen. 2010 konnte eine erste kritische Edition der insgesamt sechzehn Vokalkompositionen vorgelegt werden, von denen mehrere in enger Beziehung zu Puccinis Opern stehen und bereits während seines Studiums in Mailand entstanden waren. Diese Ausgabe regte den Arrangeur Johannes X. Schachtner an, die wie Klavierauszüge wirkenden Begleitsätze für Orchester zu bearbeiten. Anfang Februar 2023 hat der US-amerikanische Tenor Charles Castronovo zusammen mit dem Münchner Rundfunkorchester unter Leitung von Ivan Repušić diese sechzehn Lieder zum ersten Mal eingesungen. Bereits seit einer konzertanten Aufführung von Mozarts La clemenza di Tito 2006 arbeitet Charles Castronuovo mit dem Münchner Rundfunkorchester zusammen. In der Saison 2023 / 24 kehrt er als „Artist in Residence“ des Klangkörpers nach München zurück. BR-KLASSIK präsentiert nun die CD Giacomo Puccini – „I Canti“. Puccinis Klavierlieder stehen ganz in der italienischen Tradition des 19. Jahrhunderts. Die meisten italienischen Opernkomponisten – von Rossini, Donizetti und Bellini bis Verdi – haben auch Lieder geschaffen. Anders als das deutsche Kunstlied stehen diese immer in enger Beziehung zum Belcanto, dem „schönen Gesang“, und geben damit einem unwiderstehlichen Melos das Primat vor der zumeist schlichten, doch von reizvollen Harmonien getragenen Begleitung; und kaum einmal verleugnen sie das dramatische Gespür des Opernkomponisten. Den Arrangeur faszinierte bei seiner Arbeit mehr und mehr, wie jene Lieder, die zu ganz unterschiedlichen Anlässen entstanden sind und keinen inhaltlichen Zusammenhang besitzen, dennoch die hochspannende Chronik eines Komponistenlebens transportieren: Vom jugendlichem, fast unschuldigem Liebeslied „A te“ bis zu Puccinis letzten Liedern mit dem eindrucksvollen „Morire?“; aber auch mit kleinen Albumblättern, wie der nur wenige Takte umfassenden Vertonung des italienischen Sprichworts „Casa mia, casa mia“. Einige Lieder erlauben auch einen Blick in die Werkstatt des Komponisten Puccini, der sich in seinen Opern aus früheren Werken bediente. So wurde eine Melodie aus dem Lied „Mentía l’avviso“, das Teil seiner Abschlussprüfung am Konservatorium von Parma war, einige Jahre später zu der berühmten Arie „Donna non vidi mai“ des Des Grieux in seiner Oper Manon Lescaut. Ergänzt werden die sechzehn mit Orchesterbegleitung arrangierten Lieder durch Orchesterwerke Puccinis, die während seiner Studienzeit am Mailänder Konservatorium entstanden und den musikalischen Geist der Zeit widerspiegeln, die den jungen Komponisten prägte – mit den melodischen Einflüssen seines Lehrers Amilcare Ponchielli aber auch mit dem Eindruck, den die Musik Richard Wagners bei ihm hinterließ. Auch Themen aus diesen Stücken kehren in seinen Opern wieder. Im „Preludio sinfonico“ schimmert unverkennbar die Wagner-Begeisterung Puccinis durch. Im „Capriccio sinfonico“ breitet sich ein ganzes Reservoir späterer Opernmelodien aus – als auffälligste ist fast notengetreu der Beginn von La bohème vorweggenommen. Puccinis für Streichquartett komponierte Trauermusik „Crisantemi“ entstand vor seinem ersten durchschlagenden Erfolg mit Manon Lescaut, wo Melodien daraus wiederkehren. Puccini schrieb das Stück in Gedenken an Herzog Amadeo von Savoyen, der am 18. Januar 1890 gestorben war, und der morbide Duft der Friedhofsblumen durchzieht den dreiteiligen Andante-Satz.

Charles Castronovo, Tenor
Münchner Rundfunkorchester
Ivan Repusic, Dirigent




Charles Castronovo
Acclaimed internationally as one of the finest lyric tenors of his generation, Castronovo has also sung at most of the world’s leading opera houses such as the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, Vienna State Opera, Berlin State Opera, Paris Opera, Bavarian State Opera, Munich, Theatre Royale de la Monnaie, Brussels, and many others including at the Salzburg and Aix en Provence Festivals. His repertoire spans from the great Mozart tenor roles in Don Giovanni, Cosi Fan Tutte and Die Zauberfloete, to Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor, Nemorino in L’Elisir D’Amore and Alfredo in La Traviata. In recent seasons Castronovo has also won wide acclaim for his performances as the title role in Faust, Romeo in Romeo et Juliette, the Duke in Rigoletto, Rodolfo in La Boheme and Tom Rakewell in The Rakes Progress. He starred in the title role of Daniel Catan’s Il Postino opposite Placido Domingo in the work’s world premiere in Los Angeles, as well as Paris and Santiago.

Charles Castronovo began his 12/13 season with his debut in Amsterdam in a concert performance of Les Pecheurs de Perles at the Concertgebeouw, after which he returned to the Opera de Paris as Tom Rakewell in The Rake’s Progress. Castronovo subsequently appeared at the Metropolitan Opera as Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni. He sang Gennaro in Lucrezia Borgia for the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, role that he will also sing at the Theatre Royale de la Monnaie and then will sing La Traviata for the Staatsoper Berlin. Castronovo will appear at the Royal Opera Covent Garden in two productions during the current season: as Tamino in Die Zauberfloete and in his first performances of Ruggero in La Rondine opposite Angela Gheorghiu. Future plans also include his first Des Grieux in Manon in Toulouse, Faust opposite Anna Netrebko in Baden Baden, a new production of Maria Stuarda at the Royal Opera Covent Garden opposite Joyce di Donato. He will appear in several works in Munich; among them Die Zauberfloete, L’Elisir D’Amore, La Boheme, at the Deutsche Oper Berlin in a new production of La Rondine, and as Lensky in Eugene Onegin and Nemorino in Vienna. Castronovo is also scheduled for his debut at the Gran Teatro del Liceo in Barcelona as Alfredo.

Born in New York and raised in California, Castronovo began his career as a resident at the Los Angeles Opera. He was invited to join the Metropolitan Opera's Lindemann Young Artists Development Program and in the autumn of 1999 made his debut at the Metropolitan as Beppe in the opening night performance of I Pagliacci. In the first years of his career Castronovo built his repertoire with debuts as Tamino in Die Zauberfloete and Fenton in Falstaff in Pittsburgh, as Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni and Ernesto in Don Pasquale in Boston, and as Ferrando in Cosi Fan Tutte in Portland ,where he also sang his first performances of Nemorino in L’Elisir D’Amore. His debut as Alfredo in La Traviata took place with the Minnesota Opera. as Belmonte in Die Entfuehrung aus dem Serail with the Colorado Opera, and as Elvino in La Sonnambula for the Michigan Opera Theater. Castronovo made his European stage debut at the 2000 Savonlinna Festival in Don Giovanni. He subsequently debuted in Germany at the Berlin State Opera in the same work under Daniel Barenboim, in France as Fenton at the Theatre du Capitole in Toulouse, and in Great Britain at the London Proms of 2002 in Ravel's L'Heure Espagnole. In the 2003/2004 season he made his debuts at the San Francisco Opera, Paris Opera and Vienna State Opera as Tamino; in September of 2004 at the Royal Opera, Covent Garden in September of 2004 as Ferrando. This was followed by his Italian stage debut as Alfredo at the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa. Other significant debuts included Alfredo at the Hamburg State Opera and at the Megaron in Athens, Fenton at the Theatre Royale Monnaie in Brussels . Ferrando at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. A regular guest at all these theaters, Castronovo has since been heard as Alfredo in Vienna, London, Berlin and Aix en Provence, as Nemorino in Paris, Vienna, Nice and Berlin, as Belmonte in Munich and Rome, as Tamino in San Francisco, as Don Ottavio in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Munich. He made his debut at the Salzburg Festival as Belmonte in Entfuerung.

In the summer of 2005 Castronovo sang his first Nadir in Les pêcheurs de perles at the San Francisco Opera, and has also also sung Nadir in Washington and San Diego. Several other new roles entered his repertoire in recent seasons; the title role in La Clemenza di Tito at the Bayerische Rundfunk in Munich, Rodolfo in La Boheme for the Michigan Opera, the Duke in Rigoletto in Bordeaux, and Faust in Pittsburgh. In the summer of 2008 he sang his first Tom Rakewell in a new production of The Rake’s Progress at the Royal Opera, Covent Garden; his debut as Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor in followed in 2009 in Brussels. In 2011 he sang his first Gennaro in Lucrezia Borgia opposite Edita Gruberova in Munich, as well as first Romeo in Romeo et Juliette for the Dallas Opera. Castronovo also added the title role in Berlioz’s Damnation de Faust to his repertoire in Nice. In June of 2012 he sang his first Nerone in Monteverdi’s L’Incoronazione di Poppea at the Teatro Real in Madrid. Among his other engagements in the past season were La Traviata in Aix en Provence and Vienna opposite Nathalie Dessay, Romeo in Romeo et Juliette at the Los Angeles Opera in November of 2011, and Cosi fan Tutte the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. He made his long awaited debut at the Chicago Lyric Opera as Tamino in December of 2011.

Castronovo has also participated in revivals of more rarely performed works. He starred as Mylio in the revival of Lalo’s Le Roi D’Ys at Toulouse, opened the 2010/2011 season at the Paris Opera as Vincent in Mireille and debuted at the Festival de Montpellier in July of 2012 in Massenet’s Therese. He also recorded Mercadante’s Virginia for Opera Rara and sang Rossini’s Ermione in Santa Fe. A frequent soloist on the concert stage, he has appeared with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic as well as in concerts in China, Japan, Russia, Sweden and Denmark.

Other roles in Castronovo’s developing repertoire include Massenet’s Werther, Offenbach’s Hoffmann, the title role in Donzietti’s Roberto Devereux and Oronte in Verdi’s I Lombardi.



Booklet for Puccini: I Canti - Orchestral Songs & Works

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