Cappella Romana

Cappella Romana is a vocal ensemble founded in 1991 in Portland, Oregon. Its name, meaning "Roman Chapel", refers to the medieval Greek concept of the Roman oikoumene (inhabited world), which embraced Rome and Western Europe, as well as the Byzantine Empire of Constantinople ("New Rome") and its Slavic commonwealth centered at Moscow.[1] It has become especially known for its exploration of Eastern Orthodox vocal music. It has collaborated with notable museum exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art[2] in New York and the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. The ensemble's 2002 performance of Ivan Moody's Passion and Resurrection was acclaimed by Los Angeles Times music critic Chris Pasles as "sung gorgeously" and "like jeweled light flooding the space".[3]

In 2010 it became a participant in the research project 'Icons of Sound: Aesthetics and Acoustics of Hagia Sophia, Istanbul', a collaboration between Stanford University's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) and Department of Art & Art History.[4] Cappella Romana completed a residency at Stanford again in 2013, which included further experiments with CCRMA, lecture demonstrations, and a live performance in Stanford's new Bing Hall, featuring a medieval Byzantine chant sung in the virtual acoustic of Hagia Sophia before a sold-out audience.[5]

For their 2019 album of music in the medieval Byzantine tradition, Lost Voices of Hagia Sophia, advanced digital sound-sampling techniques were employed to capture the acoustics of the immense Hagia Sophia. The ensemble's singing of Byzantine chants thus recreates the ambiance as the music would have been heard there a millenium ago.[6] The New York Times said the album "... brings to life the stately mystery of Byzantine cathedral liturgy, bathed in the glittering acoustics of the space for which it was written — even though it was recorded in a studio in California".[4]

The ensemble is directed by Alexander Lingas,[7] a musicologist of Byzantine music at City University, London. Guest artists with similar interests regularly appear with the ensemble, including Ioannis Arvanitis, Stelios Kontakiotis, Ivan Moody, and Vladimir Morosan.

Passion Week, Maximilian Steinberg's 1923 choral work based on Russian Orthodox liturgical texts for Holy Week in Old Church Slavonic, was given its world premiere in 2014 by Cappella Romana in Portland, Oregon.[8] In preparation for the premiere, Cappella Romana's music director, Alexander Lingas, had traveled to St. Petersburg in order to examine Steinberg's manuscripts. His research resulted in a new edition of the previously lost work, published by Musica Russica.[9] This edition was also used for the first ever recording of the work by Cappella Romana and in performances of the work by other choirs throughout the world.

Discography

  • 2019 Lost Voice of Hagia Sophia
  • 2012 Angelic Light: Music from Eastern Cathedrals (Valley Entertainment)[10]
  • 2011 Mt. Sinai: Frontier of Byzantium[11]
  • 2011 Choral Settings of Kassiani
  • 2009 Peter Michaelides: The Divine Liturgy
  • 2009 Byzantium in Rome: Medieval Byzantine Chant from Grottaferrata
  • 2009 Byzantium: 330-1453 (Royal Academy of Arts)
  • 2008 Kontakion on the Nativity of Christ
  • 2008 The Divine Liturgy in English in Byzantine Chant
  • 2006 The Fall of Constantinople
  • 2005 Epiphany: Medieval Byzantine Chant
  • 2005 Lay Aside All Earthly Cares: Orthodox Choral Works in English
  • 2004 Music of Byzantium (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
  • 2003 The Akáthistos Hymn by Ivan Moody
  • 2000 When Augustus Reigned: Christmas Music from the Byzantine Tradition
  • 2000 Tikey Zes Choral Works
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See also

References

  1. Cappella Romana
  2. Music of Greece CD - The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Met Museum Store
  3. Pasles, Chris (October 14, 2002). "Moving 'Passion' lovingly voiced". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 30, 2020.
  4. da Fonseca-Wollheim, Corinna. "How a Historian Stuffed Hagia Sophia's Sound Into a Studio". New York Times. Retrieved July 30, 2020.(subscription required)
  5. "Cappella Romana: Time-Travel to Constantinople", San Francisco Classical Voice, February 1, 2013.
  6. Harnett, Sam (February 22, 2020). "Listen: The Sound Of The Hagia Sophia, More Than 500 Years Ago". Weekend Edition Saturday. NPR. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
  7. "Dr. Alexander Linges, Professor in Music", Staff Directory, City University of London.
  8. 'Passion' and Resurrection, The Wall Street Journal, April 14, 2014.
  9. "Steinberg: Passion Week", Musica Russica.
  10. "Angelic Light: Music from Eastern Cathedrals". Valley Entertainment. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  11. "Recordings". Cappella Romana. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
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