Showing posts with label Marco Beasley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marco Beasley. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Whitsun 2009 - Saturday Night

Before he began the third encore of the evening Marco Beasley (left) shyly said "I'm no opera singer," and then accompanied by Guido Morini on the harpsichord, launched into a lovely, quiet and emotional O Sole Mio. I will quite readily admit I had tears in my eyes - there are people who claim to be opera singers who don't have half his voice or ability to communicate. And it concluded a concert that only confirmed in my mind the incredible talents of Beasley, Morini and their group Accordone.

Last year they celebrated the street music of Napoli, this year the programme was a short "opera" using the life of the extraordinary Don Raimondo de'Sangro, the 18th century Napoletano nobleman, inventor, alchemist, philosopher and polymath as its inspiration. Morini (right) created music to Beasley's libretto that reflected the 1700s but did not ignore modern sonics. Ranging from the liturgical to the lyrical Morini called on period instruments, Bearsley's emotive tenor and dancer/singer Vincenzo Capezzuto to pay tribute to a man often thought to be in league with the devil, thence the title La Tentazione del Male (The Temptations of Evil.) De'Sangro's writing were used as part of the text and as where musings on the works of art he had created for his family chapel - including the miraculous Veiled Christ picture below.
Giuseppe Sanmartino's Veiled Christ was created in 1753 for di Sangro's family chapel in Napoli. The delicacy and power is a miracle of the sculptor's art. One of the wonderful things to be seen in Napoli.


This was the premiere of the work and though there was much to enjoy I would like to have heard it in another venue before passing further judgment. Beasley comes more alive when freed from the constraints of a music stand and the design of the Mozarteum Grand Hall meant that much of Capezzuto's choreography was lost to anyone sitting on the ground level. But several sections stand out as exceptional - the lyrical call to the moon, the dance elegy to the Veiled Christ and two of the tarantella inspired pieces. And every piece was imbued with the two creators obvious admiration for their fellow Napoletano.

Frankly I thought it rather daring of Accordone to premiere this work here as the Salzburg audience can be very conservative but they are audience favorites at the Festival and the almost full house gave them a warm response and demanded three encores. I've already mentioned the final one but the second was a moment of pure inspiration. Beasley announced a lovely serenata La Bella Noeva as the encore, Capezzuto appeared and began dancing. Then he circled the small orchestra and took the hand of cellist Elisabetta De Mircovich and led her over to Beasley. He placed her hand in his and after a moment her voice joined his and gazing at each other they sang of love and the joys of life. It was pure musical magic. And if that wasn't enough to make the eyesight a little blurred then as I said the next encore did the trick.
Members of Accordone, Marco Beasley and Vincenzo Capezzuto respond to the applause of last night's audience at the premiere of La Tentazione del Male.

This was the third appearance for Accordone at the Whitsun Festival, sadly they won't be back next year and I can only hope to get to see them again in Italy in the near future. They have added a dimension to the Festival theme of Napoli, a City of Memories, showing that it is very much a city that is alive and treasures its memories and traditions.

Photos of Beasley and Morini from the Accordone website.

31 maggio - Pentecoste

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Mercoledi Musicale

We just have to reconcile ourselves that this is Neapolitan week here. What better way to feature my second favorite city in Italy then with its music. And if its going to be Neapolitan music than who better than Marco Beasley and Guido Morini of Accordone to sing it.




Tomorrow? No, tonight I will away!
Not far, only I can't bear it here any longer:
So speaks one all alone at sea,
to the ever-constant... deep-blue sea!

The monastery of St. Clara
is anchored in my heart,
yet why do my thoughts every evening
return to Naples, how it was before,
to Naples, how it is now?
The fontanelle of Capodimonte...
it breaks my heart
to hear the city's in trouble,
but what's the trouble,
but what's the reason?
No, it's not true!
No, I don't believe it...
but die in longing for Naples...

M. Galdieri/A. Barberis



04 fabbraio - San Giovanni de Britto

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Mercoledi Musicale

As I mentioned Laurent and I were quite taken with the concert by Marco Beasley, Pini di Vittorio and Accordone in Salzburg. The variety of music available on their discs is an eclectision's delight. (Is that a word - what else could you call someone with eclectic taste???)

Here's Beasley singing Stephano (Stefano) Landi's Canto la cicalet.



The beautiful video was created by Danensago on his YouTube site.

21 maggio - Santa Guilia

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Salzburger Zeitung - Sunday Morning's Concert

Via Toledo - Music of the Streets

Grosser Saal - MozarteumThis was perhaps the most interesting concert of the Festival. Given amidst the pseudo-baroque decorations of the Gosser Saal(at the right) in the Mozarteum, the church and conservatories gave way to music that had grown from the streets of Naples and the surrounding countryside. Six men sat in a semi-circle, some with baroque guitars, others with lutes and one with two tambourines and a boron drum; another stood at a combination portive organ and harpsichord. A tambourine rattled and then a single voice - Italian actor and singer Giuseppe Di Vittorio - rose in a passionate love cry - Cori miu (My Heart.) Marco Beasley, De Vittorio, Guido Morini and Accordone joined forces to present an exciting programme of tarantellas, love songs and working songs from the Medieval to the modern.

Marco BeasleyBeasley is a short stocky bald man, he looks like he could be a Neapolitan dock worker. The son of an English father and a Neapolitan mother, he’s devoted his career to the music of his native city in all its forms - classical, church, folk. He has a powerful tenor voice and a commanding presence but remains firmly grounded on and of the earth. Giuseppe De VittorioDe Vittorio is tall, craggy and handsome in a world-beaten way – when he stands eyes closed, head thrown back, hands held in an almost priestly manner he embodies all the raw passion and sexuality of the south.

The instrumentalists occasionally rose to join in song or to add percussive vocal effects. When not singing Beasley or Di Vittorio would pick up the rhythm with bone castanets. Percussionist Mauro Durante took centre stage and stopped the show with a solo that was worthy of Gene Krupa except he did it all with one large tambourine not a trap set.
Via Toledo
The 60 minutes programme flew by – often one number leading into another without break – but the sold-out audience called them back for three encores before they were willing to let them go, gather up their belongings and head out for Mother’s Day brunch.

And again here'a bit of what we heard: Marco Beasely and Accordone doing a tarantala:



They are scheduled back for next year's Festival with a programme tantalizingly titled The Temptation of Evil!

As a sidebar Laurent and I came away with four CDs by the various artists involved and there are at least two more I'm planning on getting.

18 maggio - Santi Trinità