Amazon.com: Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum: George Frideric Handel, Diego Fasolis, Ensemble Vanitas, Roberta Invernizzi, Elena Cecchi Fedi, Gloria Banditelli, Fabian Schofrin, Marco Beasley, Antonio Abete, Furio Zanasi: Music


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Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum
 
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Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum [Import]

George Frideric Handel , Diego Fasolis , Ensemble Vanitas , Roberta Invernizzi , Elena Cecchi Fedi , Gloria Banditelli , Fabian Schofrin , Marco Beasley , Antonio Abete , Furio Zanasi Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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MP3 Download, 23 Songs, 2003 $8.99  
Audio CD, Import, 1999 $14.21  

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Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 1 "We Praise Thee, O God" (Handel) 3:49$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 2 "All The Earth Doth Worship Thee" (Handel) 2:40$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 3 "To Thee All Angels Cry Aloud" (Handel) 2:21$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 4 "To Thee Chrubim And Seraphim" (Handel) 3:28$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 5 "The Glorious Company Of Th'Apostles" - No. 5B "Thine Honourable, True And Only Son" (Handel) 3:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 6 "Thou Art The King Of Glory" (Handel) 2:42$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 7 "When Thou Tookst Upon Thee" (Handel) 3:13$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 8 "When Thou Hadst Overcome The Sharpness Of Death" - No. 8B "Thou Didst Open The Kingdom Of Heaven" (Handel) 2:06$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 9 "Thou Sittest At The Right Hand Of God" (Handel) 2:54$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 9B "We Therefore Pray Thee" (Handel) 1:59$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 10 "Make Them To Be Number'D" (Handel) 2:00$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 11 "Day By Day We Magnify Thee" - No. 11B "And We Worship Thy Name" (Handel) 3:22$0.99 Buy Track
listen13. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 12 "Vouchsafe, O Lord" (Handel) 1:50$0.99 Buy Track
listen14. Dettingen Te Deum, Te Deum Laudamus: No. 13 "O Lord, In Thee Have I Trusted" (Handel) 3:50$0.99 Buy Track
listen15. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Dixit Dominus" (Handel) 5:28$0.99 Buy Track
listen16. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Virgam Virtutis" (Handel) 2:42$0.99 Buy Track
listen17. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Tecum Principium" (Handel) 2:53$0.99 Buy Track
listen18. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Juravit Dominus" (Handel) 2:21$0.99 Buy Track
listen19. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Tu Es Sacerdos" (Handel) 1:42$0.99 Buy Track
listen20. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Dominus A Dextris Tuis" (Handel) 5:35$0.99 Buy Track
listen21. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Conquassabit" (Handel) 1:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen22. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "De Torrente In Via" (Handel) 3:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen23. Dixit Dominus, Psalm 110: "Gloria Patri" (Handel) 6:47$0.99 Buy Track


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Customers buy this album with Handel - Chandos Anthems (Complete) / Dawson · Kwella · Bowman · Partridge · M. George · The Sixteen · Christophers $48.24

Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum + Handel - Chandos Anthems (Complete) / Dawson · Kwella · Bowman · Partridge · M. George · The Sixteen · Christophers

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Product Details

  • Performer: Roberta Invernizzi, Elena Cecchi Fedi, Gloria Banditelli, Fabian Schofrin, Marco Beasley, et al.
  • Orchestra: Ensemble Vanitas
  • Conductor: Diego Fasolis
  • Composer: George Frideric Handel
  • Audio CD (September 14, 1999)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Arts Music
  • ASIN: B00001QEHX
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #58,924 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Dettigent to Have--and a Fine Dixit to Boot, July 10, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum (Audio CD)
When I reviewed the Naxos recording of the Handel Dettingen Te Deum on this Website, I was rather cool about it, saying that the celebratory music lacked excitement and bite. The Arts Music performance led by Diego Fasolis confirms my reaction in spades. The opening "We praise Thee, O God" with its martial flourishes doesn't even sound like the same piece of music on the two recordings, so exciting are both orchestra and chorus under Fasolis. To be fair, Fasolis has the advantage of a crystal-clear and very impactful recording. Though done live and in a church setting (in Milan), the recording is thrilling; chorus and orchestra both emerge in etched detail, and the three trumpets and drums that fuel the ceremony of the piece are resplendently recorded.

The soloists are all fine and blend particularly well, though I notice some few troubles with English diction both among the soloists and in the chorus. (No such problem in the Dixit with its Latin text, of course.) And what a surprise! I now understand why the alto soloist in this work always seems to sound like a bassoon in its ungainly upper register. The music must have been concieved by Handel for a male voice; here, Fasolis consigns the music to a male alto, and the results are much more lipid solos and a better blend by far with the ensemble. Bravo, Signor Fasolis!

The drive and elan that Fasolis gets from his forces appear almost universal, though "Day by day we magnify Thee" seems sluggish to me, one of the only labored bits in the whole performance. But the clarity of the beautiful and beautifully played trumpet solo compensates. This is a wonderful piece, reminiscent of "The trumpet shall sound" from the Messiah.

Dixit Dominus, a work of Handel's salad days in Italy, shows some of its apprentice bearing vis a vis the master's later choral music, but you won't notice in this charged-up performance. Chorus and soloists sign with both fervor and feeling, and the string body is always incisive. The results: a model Dixit; I can't remember hearing it better done. Listen, for example, to the whip-crack attacks by the chorus on "et non poenitebit."

So Handelians, rejoice. Here is your money's worth indeed.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Superb!, May 20, 2011
By 
capezio "capezio" (Vitoria, ES Brazil) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum (Audio CD)
This CD is a great surprise considering the English lead on their country born composers, like Haendel, especially because the artists here aren't Gardiner and the Monteverdi Choir, but a mix of Swiss-Italian singers / ensemble.

Their intrerpretation is full of vigour and English pomp, very well suited for Haendel music. Sampling the tracks on Amazon I found this recording more captivating than Gardiner interpretation of the Dixit Dominus and it captures the spacious acoustics of the Chiesa (church) di San Sempliciano in Milan. It's one of the finest recording I've ever heard. You'll surely be impressed, specially by the Te Deum.

The choir of the Swiss Radio has "just" 175 year of tradition and maybe the oldest chamber choral continuously active actually.

The soloist are either very good and they make a nice balance with the choir and the little ensemble.

It's interesting to hear on the Te Deum some melodies that Haendel will use on "Israel in Egypt" (track 2 borrowed from Stradella), and on "Salomon" (track 4), some years ahead.

The CD case is very well finished and the booklet has detailed information of the composition context, artists and words of the works sung.

A must for all that appreciate Haendel compositions, and enjoy been inside a cathedral just in front his stereo equipment. Recomended.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars DIXIT HANDEL, October 3, 2009
By 
DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Handel: Dixit Dominus / Dettingen Te Deum (Audio CD)
Thus spake Handel. Thirty years ago there were few recordings of the Dettingen Te Deum, and they were all bad. However an LP was issued in France of all places that at least restored Handel's performing intentions, and it paved the way for Simon Preston's fine and idiomatic Westminster Abbey account on DG Archiv in 1984. It was through this recording that it dawned on me that the Dettingen Te Deum is one of the greatest pieces of music that I know, but familiarity bred a craving for even better. In particular I was looking for a richer tone from the chorus at the start, and also for a slightly firmer grip on the instrumental rhythm here and there, particularly in the numerous imitative sequences. My quest has led me to obtain the Academy of Ancient Music version under Stephen Layton, the Naxos issue also containing a smaller and earlier Te Deum - and this superlative effort from Fasolis. I eagerly awarded Preston 5 stars when I reviewed his set some years ago, and I do not un-award the rating now. However what I think I detect, or I hope I detect, from the recent versions is a sense that I am not alone in my idea of the stature of the piece, and that in the new millennium the inspiration is spreading from composer to interpreters.

All these three new sets benefit from better and more vivid recording than Preston got, and that sense is particularly striking at the start of this disc. To put it mildly, Fasolis gives the drums their head, and it recalls to me Tovey's expression `a sledgehammer tattoo'. I lap it up like this, but be warned - you might find it o-t-t. Then the colossal choral entry, the great proclamations separated by a long pause measured by a ticking beat on the violins, has all the tone I was looking for. To cap that, the imitative entries on the trumpet are ideally firm. So far so good.

It stays good, and more than just good. These Swiss artists are obviously professionals in music of this period, and I compliment them also not only on their English but also on their Englishness. At two points, Thou art the King and Day by day, a trumpet solo strides out like a herald leading a procession, the melodies are the English of the English, the work of Purcell's own heir and successor, and this trumpeter knows how to do them. This is martial music too, although never again to quite the extent of that opening sequence. Above all, this is music that relates us here on earth to the realm above, and I beg you, if you read any commentary to the effect that its main characteristic is heartiness, not to fall for such trivialisation. Episodes expressing serene belief, episodes expressing awe, anxiety and anguished supplication, and simple linking sections alternate with the mighty choral climaxes, and not only the quality of the choral tone but also the variety that these climaxes achieve, are the interpreters' real test. `The Father of an infinite majesty' must express nothing less than a vision of infinity: the final `Let me never be confounded' is not exactly triumphal but it is made overwhelming here; and the trickiest bit is track 4. The start seems almost lightweight, as if these trumpeters were the little cherubs consisting of head and wings. It then gathers weight, and we must actually transcend the tableau of the heavenly host themselves who `continually do cry "Holy, holy, holy" continually continually continually continually...' to reach the stupefying `Heaven and earth are full of the majesty of thy glory.' Does it reach my own ideal here? Maybe not quite, but it's getting there.

The filler is the earlier Dixit Dominus, from Handel's Italian period. This is a fascinating work however you ultimately `rate' it. It shows astonishing boldness at times, and although Handel never lost that characteristic it took different forms after he settled in London. Offhand I can't think of anything in the oratorios quite like `conquassabit' here. The performance is excellent - lively and vivid - but the text is a disaster area, so let me help:

. on track 16 for `Diminui' read `Dominus'

. on track 17 the Latin has been reduced to double-Dutch. Read

`Tecum principium in die virtutis tuae in splendoribus sanctorum. Ex utero ante luciferum genui te.' This means `Kingship is Thine in the day of Thy strength among the glory of the saints. I have begotten Thee from the womb before the dawn.'

. on track 20 the Latin should be

`Dominus a dextris tuis confregit in die irae suae reges. Judicabit in nationibus, implebit ruinas.' This means `The Lord at Thy right hand has smitten kings in the day of His wrath. He will judge among the nations and fill ruins.' [I venture to doubt that this Latin can be correct]

. the meaning of track 21 is `He shall shatter heads in the lands of many peoples.'

. on track 23 read `Spiritui' `principio' and `semper' for their printed approximations.

The recording seems to have been done around the turn of the millennium, and I find it excellent, in particular doing justice to the hyperbolical start that Fasolis gives to the Te Deum, but more importantly giving proper value to Handel's totally incomparable choral writing. The liner note is interesting and informative, and I hope I have filled the ruins of the text of the Dixit Dominus with sense and accuracy.
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