Canticles of Ecstasy: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox album|
{{Orphan|date=June 2014}}
| Thisname album = '''''Canticles of Ecstasy'''''<br />(1993)
 
| Covertype = cover
<!--- Don't mess with this line! --->{{Unreviewed|date=June 2014}}
| artist = [[Sequentia (music group)|Sequentia]]
{{Infobox album | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
| Name cover = ''Canticles of Ecstasy''.jpg
| Typealt = cover
| released = {{start date|1994}}
| Artist = ''Sequentia''
| Recorded recorded = [[St. Pantaleon's Church, Cologne|St. Pantaleon, Cologne]], [[Germany]], 16–21 June 1993
| Cover =
| Releasedvenue = 1993 =
| studio =
| Recorded = [[St. Pantaleon's Church, Cologne|St. Pantaleon, Cologne]], Germany, 16–21 June 1993
| Genre genre = {{hlist| Sacred [[vocal music]], | [[plainchant]], | [[early music]]}}
| Length length = 72:53
| Label label = [[Deutsche Harmonia Mundi]]
| Producer producer = Klaus L. Neumann
| Last album prev_title = ''Oswald von Wolkenstein: Songs''<br />(1993)
| prev_year = 1993
| This album = '''''Canticles of Ecstasy'''''<br />(1993)
| Next album next_title = ''Voice of the Blood''<br />(1994)
| next_year = 1995
}}
'''''Canticles of Ecstasy''''' is an album of sacred [[vocal music]] written in the 12th century by the German [[abbess]] [[Hildegard of Bingen]] and recorded by the [[early music]] ensemble [[Sequentia (ensemblemusic group)|Sequentia]] medieval musical group that was released by the [[Deutsche Harmonia Mundi]] recordrecording label in 1993.<ref>[http://www.allmusic.com/album/hildegard-von-bingen-canticles-of-ecstasy-mw0001812430. Hildegard von Bingen: Canticles of Ecstasy] Retrieved 13 June 2014.</ref>
 
The album is partone of a series of recordings of the complete musical works of Hildegard by the early medieval music expertsspecialists and founders of Sequentia, the late [[Barbara Thornton]] and her husband [[Benjamin Bagby]].
 
It was recorded between 16 and 21 June 1993 in the church of [[St. Pantaleon's Church, Cologne|St. Pantaleon, Cologne]], [[Germany]], “at"at the sarcophagus of the Empress [[Theophanu]]" (d. 990991).<ref>''Canticles of Ecstasy'' CD booklet, pp. 3–4.</ref>
 
The music is from a medieval manuscript written at Hildegard’s ownHildegard's abbey (Rupertsberger “Riesencodex”"Riesencodex" (1180–90) Wiesbaden: Hessische Landesbibliothek, MS 2) and the [[Latin]] texts are from Hildegard von Bingen, ''Lieder'' (Salzburg, 1969).<ref>''Canticles of Ecstasy'' CD booklet, p. 4.</ref>
 
==Track listing==
All vocal compositions ([[responses]] and [[antiphons]]) written by Hildegard of Bingen.
#“O"O vis aeternitatis”aeternitatis" (7:56)
#“Nunc"Nunc aperuit nobis”nobis" (1:53)
#“Quia"Quia ergo femina mortem instruxit”instruxit" (1:49)
#“Cum"Cum processit factura digiti Dei”Dei" (6:32)
#“Alma"Alma Redemptoris Mater”Mater" (2:10)
#“Ave"Ave Maria, O auctrix vite”vite" (8:57)
#“Spiritus"Spiritus Sanctus vivificans vite”vite" (2:15)
#“O"O ignis spiritus Paracliti”Paracliti" (6:17)
#“Caritas"Caritas habundat in omnia”omnia" (2:10)
#“O"O virga mediatrix”mediatrix" (2:25)
#“O"O viridissima virga, Ave”Ave" (3:51)
#Instrumental Piece (3:30)
#“O"O Pastor Animarum”Animarum" (1:18)
#“O"O tu suavissima virga”virga" (11:12)
#“O"O choruscans stellarum”stellarum" (2:37)
#“O"O nobilissima viriditas”viriditas" (6:42)
 
==Personnel==
Line 66 ⟶ 67:
*Barbara Göbel – editing
*Jens Markowsky – final editing
 
==See also==
{{Portal|Classical music|Middle Ages}}
*''[[Ordo Virtutum]]''
 
==References==
<references />
 
{{Hildegard of Bingen}}
{{Authority control}}
 
[[Category:Western plainchant]]
[[Category:Early music albums]]
[[Category:1990s1993 albums]]
[[Category:Hildegard of Bingen]]
[[Category:Theophanu]]