Porpora & Leo: Maestri a Sant'Onofrio
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Item Number: 21706708
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SKU: NX.GB5203-2

By Ensemble Animantica, Giorgio Dellarole, Lucia Schwarz, Magdalena Vasilescu, Marco Farolfi, Massimo Barrera, Matteo Bellotto, Michele Andalo, Michele Vannelli, Paola Nervi, Raffaele Giordani, and Svetlana Fomina. By Leonardo Leo and Nicola Porpora. Classical. CD. Bongiovanni #GB5203-2. Published by Bongiovanni (NX.GB5203-2).

The College of Music of Sant'Onofrio, one of the wonders of baroque Naples, was founded in the late 1500s as a foundling institution to train orphans and abandoned children to work as artisans. Within a few years, its educational policy had shifted to musical training and singing and during the 1600s it was home to the finest composers in the city. They transformed the rigidly austere musical geometry of northern Europe into something wholly new, as though infusing the darkness of the north with the immense, intensely bright light of the south. Nicola Porpora was just such a composer. In 1710 the 24 year-old Porpora presented his opera Berenice in Rome with great success. While in the city, Haendel himself saw it and went to congratulate its composer. Porpora wrote a great deal of music for religious purposes and opened a singing school which Farinelli also attended. Leonardo Leo is the other great composer from Sant'Onofrio. Almost a decade younger than Porpora, a combination of overwork and delicate health killed Leo at the relatively young age of fifty. He had already produced a number of new operas by 1738 when his reputation for music earned him the commission of a lifetime to write an opera to celebrate the wedding of Charles III and Maria Amalia of Saxony. Leo put everything else to one side and took as his subject the wedding of Psyche and Cupid. Yet despite the success of his opera for the imperial wedding, Leo continued to write music - both sacred and opera, whether serious or comic. Unsurprisingly, his name was a household word throughout Europe.