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La Morra – The Lion’s Ear (24/88 FLAC)

La Morra - The Lion's Ear (24/88 FLAC)
La Morra – The Lion’s Ear (24/88 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Performer: La Morra
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Ramée
Catalogue: RAM1403
Release: 2016
Size: 1.06 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

01. Mantovano: Lirum bililirum
02. Piacenza: (Rostibolli) Gioioso
03. Bruhier: Vivite felices
04. Canova da Milano: Ricercar (Ness #4)
05. Canova da Milano: De mon triste desplaisir (After Jean Richafort)
06. Canova da Milano: Fantasia “De mon triste”
07. Pesenti: Che farala, che dirala
08. anon.: Spem in alium
09. anon.: Se mai per maraveglia
10. Pisano: O vos omnes
11. Craen: Ecce video celos apertos
12. Genet: Jerusalem, convertere
13. Cavazzoni: Ricercada
14. Cavazzoni: Lautre yor per un matin (After Anonymous)
15. anon.: Fortuna disperata
16. Isaac: Fortuna disperata / Sancte Petre
17. Isaac: Quid retribuam tibi, Leo?
18. Pope Leo X: Cela sans plus
19. Mouton: In omni tribulatione
20. Canova da Milano: Ricercar (Ness #10)
21. Cavazzoni: O stella maris (After Anonymous)
22. Pope Leo X: Canon di papa Lione x a 3 voci
23. Josquin: Salve Regina

In 1512, Giovanni di Lorenzo di Piero de’ Medici (1475-1521) was the eldest surviving male member of the senior line of the celebrated Medici family of Florence, the eldest surviving son of the mythic Lorenzo “il Magnifico.” Giovanni had inherited his family’s refined interest in and zealous support of the arts: literature; painting, sculpture, and architecture; and music. But of all of these, Giovanni – perhaps due in part to his poor eyesight – favored music, for which his passion was legendary among contemporaries. The musical life of Leo’s court was unimaginably rich and vibrant, as innumerable eyewitness accounts confirm.

Our CD aims to bring that world acoustically to life, to revive the soundscape of the Leonine court and illustrate the range of practices typifying Leo’s own musical experiences. It is intended as a tribute to a rare and extraordinary patron of music (himself a composer and musician), who occupied that singular position at the very summit of the universal ecclesiastical hierarchy.

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