Padilla: Music of the Mexican Baroque
Facts
Padilla: Music of the Mexican Baroque
Music Price: $13.98
As of Jan 6 3:23 EST (details)
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| Studio | Rubedo Canis Musica |
| Release Date | June 15, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 707651990123 |
| Buy this item | $13.98 at Amazon.com As of Jan 6 3:23 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours,
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Tracks
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Sanctus
- Agnus Dei
- Salve Regina
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User Reviews
Average user review: 
(6 reviews)
I work in Mexico, and have been to the cathedral where Padilla first transferred his notes into a vocal symphony. The context of the late colonial / early historic period in Mexico was a tearful time in the history of this country, and Padilla seems to have captured the beauty and depth of religious passion that prevailed at this time. This modern recording brings back to life the times of colonial Mexico, that have literally not been heard for hundreds of years. Ruttenburg did a supurb job with his vocalists, and with the high fidelity recording.
May 30, 2007 |  | A Mislabled CD... "Mexico"???? In the mid 17th century???? |  |
"Mexican Baroque"?????? The conductor (Rutenberg) refers to Padilla as the "Monteverdi of Mexico"... that is laughable! Mexico was not a country until 1821. Padilla arrived in "Nueva EspaƱa" or "New Spain" (part of what is now modern day Mexico) in 1622. Padilla was Spanish and he composed the music heard on this CD in what was then a Spanish colony. Sounds like Rutenberg is trying to rewrite history ie. prop up Mexicans to make it sound like they have a rich cultural history or something to that effect. Funny.
September 8, 2006 |  | Flowering of the Mexican Baroque |  |
To the uninitiated, the quality of choral music composed and performed in Mexico during the first half of the 18th century is astounding. Spanish-born composer Juan Gutierrez de Padilla was thoroughly versed in the "a cappella" style of the High Renaissance before moving to Mexico. Once there he may have felt like Haydn during his years in Eisentadt: voluntarily exiled to musical backwaters where he was free to experiment and nurture his unique musical personality. Careful listenings to this excellent recording reveal some exquisite compositional characteristics of the nascent Baroque, but the overall impression is late Renaissance, in all its glory. Conductor/producer Peter Rutenberg has shaped Padilla's music -- much of it for double choir -- beautifully. Phrases are finely modulated and dynamics enhance their direction. The straight-tone intonation of the Los Angeles Chamber Singers' Cappella is spot on: you could drive a truck through some of their final chords. And the rhythmic interplay between duple and triple -- so important in any performance of Renaissance polyphony -- is carefully interpreted throughout. In all, this fine recording is a welcome introduction, to quote Rutenberg's well-written liner notes, to "the first flowering of Mexico's Golden Age in a garden that was to reach full bloom with the music of Manuel de Zumaya and Ignacio de Jerusalem 100 years later."
January 7, 2000Amazing music. Wonderfully performed. Extra fine musicality and taste
January 6, 2000 |  | Padilla: Music of the Mexican Baroque |  |
if you haven't heard it, you don't know what you're missing. It's exhilarating to hear 8 part a capella music performed so impeccably. My favorite piece is #7 "Circumdederunt...". It is so pristine, gives me goosebumps. Too bad there's no sample to hear.
December 31, 1999More reviews at Amazon.com ...