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Home  >  Early Music Vancouver Events  >  Tormento Seicento – Amanda Forsythe & Opera Prima

Friday, January 22, 2027 | 7:30 pmChrist Church Cathedral

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Tormento Seicento – Amanda Forsythe & Opera Prima

Artists: Amanda Forsythe, soprano, and Opera Prima, directed by Cristiano Contadin

Pre-concert Chat: TBA

Runtime: approximately 80 minutes

“In many ways, the music of the early Baroque period bears a stronger relationship to jazz improvisation than to the late Baroque composers,” writes soprano Amanda Forsythe in her program notes. “Musicians of the early Baroque were masters of improvisation and they invented melodies and harmonies with skill and confidence. The goal of this period in music was expression—the singer was at an advantage, with the text and melody notated, but the heart of this operation was the Basso Continuo, the musicians that interpreted the figured bass line.”

“Amanda Forsythe’s heartfelt dissonances, elegantly supported by the ensemble, cascade one onto the next, evoking a sense of longing that transcends time and place. This style of music hits directly at the heart and is a gentle—and at times forceful—reminder of the complexities of love and the human spirit, and the performers brought this fully to life.

– Jonathan Salaman (La Voce di New York)

Generously sponsored by Eric Wyness.


PROGRAMME:

Claudio Monteverdi (1567 – 1643)

Sinfonia per strumenti dall’ VIII libro di madrigali

Luigi Rossi (1697 – 1653)

Mio ben Aria per S e bc.

Tarquinio Merula (1595 – 1665)

Ballo detto Eccardo per 2 vl e bc

Domenico Mazzocchi (1592 -1665)

Sdegno campion audace aria x S e bc

Cipriano de Rore/ Girolamo Dalla Casa ( ? – 1601)

Anchor che col partire madrigale diminuito per la viola bastarda e bc

Barbara Strozzi (1551 – 1618)

Che si può fare aria per voce e bc

Gasparo Sartorio (1630 – 1680)

Perché quando apersi a l’aure vitali aria per voce e bc

Francesco Cavalli (1602 – 1676)

Dammi morte aria per voce e strumenti da “Artemisia”

Giovanni Kapsberger (1580 – 1651)

Canario per tiorba sola

Benedetto Ferrari (1603 – 1681)

Cantata spirituale per S e bc

Monteverdi

Voglio di vita uscire per S e bc

Merula 

Ballo detto Pollicio per 2 canti, basso e bc

Kapsberger 

Arpeggiata per arpa sola

Giulio Caccini (1551 – 1618)

Amarilli, mia bella Amarilli

Anonimo (XVII sec.)

 inglese Amarilli, mia bella Amarilli

Maurizio Cazzati (1616 – 1678)

Ciaccona a 3 con il balletto della ciaccona per violino, cornetto e bc.

Rossi 

La bella più bella aria per S e bc

Andrea Falconieri (1585 – 1656)

Passacalle a 3 per 2 canti, basso e bc

Ferrari 

Amanti io vi so dire aria per voce, 2 vl e bc


Amanda Forsythe, Soprano

The American soprano Amanda Forsythe, celebrated for her performances on both sides of the Atlantic, is a regular soloist with the highly acclaimed baroque ensembles Les Talens Lyriques, the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra, the Boston Early Music Festival, the Handel and Haydn Society, Boston Baroque, Tafelmusik, Apollo’s Fire, Opera Prima, Pacific Musicworks, Early Music Vancouver, and the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra.

She sang Euridice on the recording of Charpentier’s La descente d’Orphée aux enfers with the Boston Early Music Festival which won the GRAMMY AWARD for Best Opera Recording. Her début solo album of Handel arias “The Power of Love” with Apollo’s Fire was recently followed with the highly praised “Heavenly Bach”.

She toured with the outstanding French countertenor Philippe Jaroussky, performing works based on the Orfeo myth, and subsequently recorded the role of Euridice in a new edition of Gluck’s Orfeo for the ERATO label. Her discography includes more than 25 albums and DVDs, many of them premiere recordings.

Equally at home on the concert platform and on the opera stage, in recent seasons Amanda Forsythe’s major concert engagements have included performances with the Boston Symphony, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, The Philadelphia Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, The Hong Kong Philharmonic, The New York Philharmonic, among others.

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Opera Prima Ensemble

A newly established ensemble directed by Cristiano Contadin, was created to bring historically informed concerts and recordings of the Renaissance and Baroque period to life. The heart of the project lies in exploring the repertoire of the viola da gamba in its various styles, and approaching all music with pleasure and enthusiasm, as if each work for this instrument was newly-composed. If, through passionate communication, we can touch the hearts of the public, then the language of early music will be easy to understand.

The first recording by Opera Prima, “The Complete Telemann Trio Sonatas and Concertos”, for the Brilliant Classics label, received critical acclaim at the national and international level, and was proclaimed by Classic Voice Magazine as CD of the month in February 2015, while Musica Magazine confirmed Cristiano Contadin as “a first-rate artist for the sweetness of the sound, the stylistic relevance and the absolute mastery of the instrument”.  Opera Prima has performed concerts at festivals in Italy, Greece, Suisse, Slovenia, Estonia and United States. Recent Opera Prima recordings include Dowland’s Lacrimae (awarded “Disc of the Month” by Musica magazine and praised by Fanfare as “a fabulous performance”),Torna Vincitor, an all-Graun disc of cantatas and viol concerto with Amanda Forsythe soprano (chosen by Opera News as the Critic’s Choice in March 2021), a 2023 recording of Tartini (Klassik Heute claims Opera Prima “deliver[s] a buoyant orchestral sound with sensitively executed solos and decisive ensemble direction by Contadin, who also captivates as a soloist with temperament, empathy and sensitivity”), and just recently, a disc of Handel’s Roman cantatas with soprano Amanda Forsythe. 



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Cristiano Contadin, Director

Cristiano Contadin is an Italian viola da gamba player and the founder of the Opera Prima Ensemble, a chamber music group of internationally-acclaimed soloists devoted to the baroque repertoire. As a gamba soloist and continuo player, he collaborates with ensembles in Italy and abroad, including I Barocchisti, Les Musiciens du Prince, Il Suonar Parlante, Accademia Bizantina, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, La Venexiana, Odhecaton, Orchestra Sinfonica “G.Verdi” (Milan), Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala (Milan), Cantar Lontano, and the Boston Early Music Festival.

With the “Quartetto Italiano di Viole da Gamba”, “Il Suonar Parlante”, and as a soloist, he aims to cultivate a repertoire that embraces ancient as well as modern viol consort music. He has performed works by contemporary composers and jazz artists such as Kenny Wheeler, Uri Caine, Don Byron, Ernst Reijseger, Markus Stockhausen, and performed in the Italian premiere of George Benjamin’s Written on Skin with the Orchestra Haydn of Bolzano. 

Mr. Contadin teaches Viola da Gamba and chamber music at the Conservatory B. Marcello in Venice. He has given lectures and master-classes at the Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre of Tallinn, the Conservatorio Superior de Musica de Vigo and of Salamanca, Mozarteum of Salzburg, at the Longy School of Music of Bard College, at Harvard University and Wellesley College in Boston. Mr. Contadin plays an anonymous Venetian bass viol from the 18th century.

Here are links to three 

videos- one is a general promo for the concert and the other is a complete song. I’m also including a link to our pre-concert interview with BEMF.



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Een Romantische Johannes Passion

Historical Performance has been steadily looking toward the nineteenth-century as a source of inspiration, and Orchestra Lagrandt wants to lead the charge into Romantic orchestral performance practice. As an orchestra of ambitious musicians in their twenties from 25 different nations, we aspire to represent the voice of the new generation in Historical Performance.

Een Romantische Johannes Passion is an ongoing project to reimagine the Johannes Passion of J. S. Bach in a late nineteenth century style. The first Passion revivals in the Netherlands took place in Rotterdam in 1870, featuring large symphonic orchestrations, and a radically different musical language than that of the HP and modern classical worlds. In our initial performance with the Tangram Chamber Choir, we pushed the boundaries of what Romantic Bach might have sounded like: exploring changes in orchestration, stoic tempi, rubato, phrasing, nineteenth- century bowing practices, and even portamento. We plan to establish this project as an annual tradition every Easter season, reworking the arrangement each time in the spirit of Romantic spontaneity.


One of the wonderful things about the Historical Performance movement is that we are able to use forgotten practices, this time hailing from the nineteenth century, to present such a beloved and well known-work in a new light.

The world is familiar with stories of clever forgers whose life’s mission is to cunningly reproduce the light and shadows of historical masterworks, from Vermeer’s brushstrokes to Da Vinci’s proportional precision… but what if these crimes of craftsmanship were to extend beyond the visual arts? What if the pieces we know to be by Palestrina, Monteverdi or even Johann Sebastian Bach were in fact stylistic copies, artfully composed by a secret circle of music forgers and passed off as the work of the greats? What if those music forgers are at work as we speak? 

This premise inspires our original program The Music Forgery Workshop. Our early music comedy imagines the lives of such a circle of musical criminals, offering a fresh and lively presentation of historical compositions, not as museum artifacts but as living works in progress. The workshop itself is set up on the stage and its members carry forth the plot in music and words. A narrator in the role of a suspicious inspector lends the performance a theatrical flow. The listener is invited into a satire on high society’s art commerce, while the performers make fun of themselves for having devoted their lives to the niche subject of historical music performance. 

Violinist Elizabeth Sommers combines her skills and experience in traditional music with expertise in the performance and improvisation of medieval and Renaissance repertoires. Multi-instrumentalist Eliot X. Dios (keyboards, bagpipes and flutes) works wholeheartedly to employ storytelling techniques developed through the history of literature and cinema in his early music concerts. Composer Gunnar Haraldsson (violin, guitar) seeks to translate the forms and intentions of early composition for a modern audience. Halldór B. Arnarson (keyboards, voice) has devoted his career to bringing musical craftsmanship from the era of counterpoint to the attention of the public and comedy to the early music scene. Singer and storyteller Ásta S. Arnardóttir brings the storyline to the public with personal immediacy, and through her character work defines the different veins of the show, sometimes hilarious and sometimes serious. 

The story is narrated by the character of the Inspector, acted out by the members of the MFW, and told in rhyming Icelandic verse in one musical pillar of the show, a madrigal composed by our very own 

Halldór in the style of Monteverdi. The show has an entertaining educational dimension. The audience is exposed to a broad sweep of historical and musical information in a condensed form, necessary to understand the musical humour, while dramatic rhythm and scenographic effects prevent overwhelm. We also place particular emphasis on theatrical illusion and synchronisation. One example appears in the opening scene, in which the inspector is seen watching television. On stage, this becomes a complex exercise in coordination: each time the inspector presses a button on the remote control, the musicians instantly switch pieces, creating the impression of rapidly changing television channels. 

This opening scene establishes the tone of the entire show, comical and satirical in its storytelling and diverse in its musical language. It not only introduces the wide range of musical styles that appear throughout the performance, but also functions as the plot’s inciting incident, as the inspector hears a news report about the discovery of a previously unknown concerto by Vivaldi. 

Another important scene takes place when one forger is alone on stage in low light, perusing books on medieval music, while the musicians perform and sing offstage, sounding his audiation as he reads. This intimate moment evokes the sleepless nights spent studying facsimiles and learning historical compositional techniques, by which the forger acquires the inspiration and the expertise necessary to his art, and reveals a hidden side of musical performance: the immense amount of study and preparation that precedes the moment on stage. This setting also creates space for visual and musical comedy, as seen in the trailer video, where a 14th-century melody is played backwards because Halldór is unknowingly reading the facsimile upside-down, only realising the mistake when the music begins to sound absurd. 

Fun and friendship are at the heart of the whole project, though the link between music and crime is an important historical consideration. Classical music was often used as the demonstration of a monarch’s power, music teaching as a cover up for secret affairs, and pieces were published under another’s name for profit. Such examples of “inappropriate practices” carry an exciting and attractive element for the audience which the MFW seeks to exploit. Under this light-hearted surface lies a more serious layer of questions concerning our present-day existence, such as excessive materialism in high society and the threat posed on human craftsmanship and skill by the rise of artificial intelligence. 

Please Note:

The main applicant and creative/intellectual driver of the project must be 30 or under (on May 15th).

The average age of all musicians must not be older than 32, and the maximum age of supporting musicians must be no more than 35 (on May 15th.)