Editorial Reviews However, Juditha also abounds in reflective numbers, something at which Vivaldi excels. Perhaps the most striking examples are the ethereal "turtle dove" aria ("Veni sequere fida"), with our heroine beautifully accompanied by a chalumeau (a precursor of the clarinet), the tranquil "Vivat in pace," and the sublime "Umbrae carae", here lyrically sung by Marina Comparato. The all-female lineup (five solo characters plus, on this particular recording, an all-female chorus) is a strong one. And, vitally, the soloists are well-differentiated, each with immediately recognizable timbres. Magdalena Kozena is fruity in the title role: not the kind of voice you'd necessarily associate with this repertoire, but it does turn a potentially smug heroine into one of real flesh and blood. Maria José Trullu is an opulent Holofernes, while Anke Herrmann's Abra is attractively mellow voiced. Downers? Just one--the recorded sound, which is too echoey. Overall, though, this is a fine performance of a great work and one that deserves a place on the shelves of every lover of Baroque music. --Harriet Smith
Amazon.com
Vivaldi may be best remembered for his virtuosic concertos but, as anyone familiar with his famous D major Gloria will know, he also had a real ear for vocal sonorities. His only surviving oratorio, Juditha Triumphans, has until recently been a well-kept secret. The biblical story of Judith overcoming Holofernes and his army (beheading him herself--no shrinking violet she) was popular with both librettists and composers, offering plenty of opportunities for exuberant tub-thumping. And these Vivaldi seizes eagerly, the opening rabble-rousing chorus (here preceded by a sinfonia reconstructed by Vivaldi scholar Michael Talbot) setting the tone in truly martial fashion.
From International Record Review - subscribe now
The tenth volume of Opus 111's Vivaldi edition, which aims to record all 450 works from the Foà and Giordano manuscript collections now in Turin, is the 1716 oratorio Juditha Triumphans. This is Vivaldi's best-known large-scale choral work today (and his only extant oratorio) and has been recorded quite a few times in the last half-century: by Angelo Ephrikian, Alberto Zedda, Ferenc Szekeres, Vittorio Negri, Nicholas McGegan and Robert King; these last two are on period instruments.The work... read more
Vivaldi - Juditha Triumphans / Kozená · Herrmann · Trullu · Camparato · Carraro · de Marchi [Box set]
Vivaldi Edition: Juditha Triumphans, Music, Antonio Vivaldi, Alessandro de Marchi, Academia Montris Regalis, Magdalena Kozená, Marina Comparato, Coro di Camera Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Anke Herrmann, Maria José Trullu, Tiziana Carraro, Martino Faggiani, Choral, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Opera / Operetta / Oratorio, Oratorio
Music Review:
Music Review
The Sound of Young New York and Toronto
The Rhythm of the Saints [Extra tracks] [Original recording remastered]
Time Waits: The Amazing Bud Powell
Str8 off tha Streetz of Muthaphu**in Compton [Clean]