Vox Cosmica Arianna Savall
Album info
Album-Release:
2014
HRA-Release:
28.10.2014
Label: Carpe Diem Records
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Arianna Savall, Petter Udland & Ensemble Hirundo Maris
Composer: Johansen Hildegard von Bingen
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Responsorium: O tu suavissima virga 15:14
- 2 Antiphona: Karitas habundat 05:57
- 3 Meditation I 04:54
- 4 Sequentia: Planctus David 16:00
- 5 Meditation II 04:09
- 6 Responsorium: Ave Maria 10:26
- 7 Meditation III 04:33
- 8 Antiphona: O quam mirabilis 07:57
- 9 Meditation IV 04:27
- 10 Antiphona: O virtus Sapientie 06:21
Info for Vox Cosmica
Music of Hildegard von Bingen and new compositions by Petter Udland Johansen, performed by Arianna Savall and her Ensemble Hirundo Maris. The new album of Arianna Savall, Petter Udland Johansen and their Ensemble Hirundo Maris is a new and outstanding approach to the music of Hildegard of Bingen. it is entirely devoted to the beauty, emotion and spiritual depth of the music of this great composer, philosopher and mystic and conveys the magic of her music in a truly affecting manner.
The songs of Hildegard on this alternate with musical meditations newly written by Petter Udland Johansen to complement the emotional and atmospheric impact of the program.
Hirundo Maris:
Arianna Savall, Voice, Medieval Harp, Italian Triple Harp, Lyra, Tibetan singing Bowl
Petter Udland Johansen, Voice, Hardingfele, Lyra, Fiddle, Monochord
Andreas Spindler, Flutes, Fiddle, Romain Bells, Colascione, Tromba Marina, Voice
Anke Spindler, Nyckelharpa, Fiddles, Viola da Gamba, Voice
David Mayoral, Santur, Percussion, Romain Bells, Voice
Hildegard of Bingen was one of the most prominent women in medieval Europe. Her political, spiritual and artistic legacy has remained unique to this day. For good reason, she is still known to a wide public almost a thousand years after her death. The interest in Hildegard gained momentum after Pope Benedict XVI proclaimed her a Doctor of the Church. It is therefore to be welcomed that a young generation of musicians is exploring her works. Thanks to the Sequentia ensemble, Hildegard’s entrancing music has made it into the pop music charts since 1980. Initially, the aim was mainly to unveil the treasure of Hildegard’s compositions. As time has passed, not only has a great deal of knowledge about early music reading and performance practice been acquired, but also young musicians nowadays feel much more relaxed about developing their own views and interpretations of masterpieces, thus making valuable contributions from both a philological and musical standpoint.
This is precisely what we should expect when Arianna Savall, Petter Udland Johansen and their Hirundo Maris ensemble delve into Hildegard’s music. Vox Cosmica, the name of the CD, says it all, for Hildegard was convinced that the cosmos was a single sonorous whole held together by the harmony and love of a creator. His holy principles are transformed by Hildegard into sounds. Caritas and Sapientia are not sung,: instead, they raise their voices themselves. What better expression of those principles than Arianna Savall’s clear, warm, sensual and unpretentious soprano voice?
Her counterpart is is Petter Udland Johansen’s characterful tenor. Vox Cosmica wisely goes beyond Hildegard of Bingen’s feminine spirituality to create a male antipode in Peter Abelard’s Laments of David. In both his tragic love for his pupil Héloise and his theology based on reason, Abelard is an antipode, if not the antipode of Hildegard: not only in his life and teachings, but also in the few intensely personal compositions that have survived. Whereas Hildegard refers to the great whole and the ideal, Abelard focuses on the specific and the individual. Hildegard knows no pain, while Abelard sings of it alone – and Petter Udland Johansen certainly brings that pain to its most heartfelt expression.
The musicians of Hirundo Maris, David Mayoral, Anke and Andreas Spindler, move effortlessly and knowledgeably through the complex manuscripts of both the medieval abbess and the love-stricken theologian. Yet they do not forget their own origins or our musical present. They join together Hildegard’s main chants to create touching units, contrasting them with Abelard, and threading it all together with musical meditations by Petter Udland Johansen. These meditations are intensely moving, shifting the timeframes almost imperceptibly from medieval music to the present, neither detaching from Hildegard’s material in a modernistic manner nor ingratiating in a cosy, stereotypical way to produce an esoteric feel-good atmosphere. Thus, rather than providing a contrast to medieval sounds, present-day music is allowed to flow logically from the latter. The aim is nothing less than a new unity of past and present, which in fact is timelessness. In this way, Hildegard’s and Abelard’s messages easily cross space and time, being felt in a very direct, emotionally authentic way. As to us, we can ask ourselves what remains foreign and what touches us. With their Vox Cosmica project, both challenging and distinctive, Hirundo Maris are in step with the most outstanding cross-over projects of our times. (Thomas Höft, Cologne, 28th September, 2014)
Arianna Savall
born in Switzerland, studied in Basel and Terrassa. She began studying early music performance practise with Rolf Lislevand at the Toulouse Conservatory in 1992. Between 1996 and 2001 she returned to Schola Cantorum Basiliensis for postgraduate studies in singing with Kurt Widmer and historical harp studies with Heidrun Rosenzweig, and in 2006/7 studied Spanish baroque harp with Andrew Lawrence-King in Barcelona. She made her debut as singer of baroque opera in Basel in 2000 performing the “Opera Seria” of Florian Leopold Gassmann. This was followed in 2002 by a highly successful Barcelona production of Moneverdi’s “Orfeo” directed by Jordi Savall, with Arianna as Eurydice. Her recordings with the Savall family and with Hespèrion XXI ensemble have received numerous awards. Arianna’s own albums for Alia Vox include “Bella Terra” (2003) and “Peiwoh” (2009), the latter also with contributions from Hirundo Maris’s Petter Udland Johansen and David Mayoral.
Petter Udland Johansen
was born in Oslo, where he received his first voice and instrumental training. He graduated from the Norges Musikhøyskole, studying voice with Ingrid Bjoner and Svein Bjørkøy in 1996 and from Basel’s Schola Cantorum with Richard Levitt in 2000, making also additional studies with the tenor Hans Peter Blochwitz. His operatic and concert repertoire of classical music includes the works of Bach, Monteverdi, Mozart, and Mendelssohn as well as songs by Schubert, Grieg, Wolf, Mahler and Brahms. He has worked with conductors including Rinaldo Alessandrini, Jordi Savall, Pep Prats, Christer Løvold, Tom and Tobias Kjellum Gossmann. Groups with which he has given concerts and recordings include Sagene Ring, Capella Antiqua Bambergensis, Pratum Musicum, La Morra, Ferarra and Lucidarium. Together with Christer Løvold and Mark B. Lay, he founded the vocal trio Pechrima.
Booklet for Vox Cosmica