636943483725

Carmina Burana

Oni Wytars Ens:Unicorn Ens

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Format: CD

Cat No: 8554837

Release Date:  01 September 2002

Label:  Naxos / Naxos Classics

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  636943483725

Genres:  Classical  

Composer/Series:  Carmina Burana

  • Description

    Carmina Burana The collection of medieval Latin and Middle High German poems and songs known as Carmina Burana takes its name from the monastery of Benediktbeuren in Upper Bavaria, preserved in a manuscript that dates, it is thought, from about 1230, with additions from later in the century. The collection was probably compiled not at Benediktbeuren but by at least three different scribes either in Seckau (Styria) or in Carinthia. The manuscript was taken from the Abbey in 1803 and deposited in Munich (Codex Latinus Monacensis clm 4660/4660a), to be edited and published under its present title in 1847 by the Munich librarian Johann Andreas Schmeller. Some parts of the manuscript are damaged and rearranged. The miniature of the wheel of fortune, for example, was later used as a frontispiece. With the few poems in Middle High German most of the texts of Carmina Burana are in Latin. Musical notation is preserved for some of the poems, but this is in the form of heightened neumes, relatively inexact notational symbols for pitch or rhythm, although this practice was already obsolete by the mid-thirteenth century. For the reconstruction of melodies it has been necessary in some cases to have recourse to contemporary repertoire in other notation of musicians at Notre Dame and the important St Martial repertoire at Limoges, while secular German settings may be derived from surviving Minnesinger works by the German troubadours. To find melodies for the remaining texts recourse may be had to parallel manuscripts. The widespread medieval practice of matching an existing text with a melody or of coupling a new poem with a known melody is known as Contrafactum. Medieval musicians were past-masters at this, so that scarcely two identical versions of a song, either in text or in melody, can be found. Similarly in the writing of personal names what is written down is what was heard or thought to be heard. A greater part of the texts from the eleventh and twelfth centuries are of French origin, by writers who are mainly anonymous. Those who are known include Walter of Châtillon, Peter of Blois, Philip the Chancellor, Walter von der Vogelweide, the Archpoet, Gottfried of St Victor, and Marner, who alone is given by name in an a superscription in the collection. Walter of Châtillon was born in Lille in 1135 and was a respected scholar and cleric. He studied in Paris, had contact with Henry II of England and worked in Rome, Bologna and Rheims. In his poems he condemns the corruption of the Church and of secular princes and denounces the greed of the clergy, as, for example, in Fas et Nefas. Peter of Blois studied in Tours and Bologna and was until 1168 tutor to Friedrich II in Palermo. As a result of an intrigue he left Italy to work at the English court of Henry II. After the latter’s death he remained in the service of the Queen, Eleonore of Aquitaine. He was the author of a political song to raise a part of the ransom for the impri

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Bache, bene venies
      • 2. Axe Phebus aureo
      • 3. Clauso Cronos
      • 4. Katerine collaudemus
      • 5. Fas et nefas
      • 6. Tempus transit gelidum
      • 7. Ich was ein Chint so wolgetan
      • 8. Ecce torpet probitas
      • 9. Exiit diluculo
      • 10. Vite perdite
      • 11. Procurans odium
      • 12. Celum, non animum
      • 13. Tempus est iocundum

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