Basilica di San Vitale 24 June 2019 - Pulvis et umbra sumus | GoComGo.com

Pulvis et umbra sumus

Basilica di San Vitale, Ravenna, Italy
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7 PM
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Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Ravenna, Italy
Starts at: 19:00
Duration:

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Festival

Ravenna Festival 2019

Ravenna is located on north central Italy, in Emilia-Romagna County. The city holds two music and opera festivals. The first and the longer one  takes place between mid June till mid July and the second  the shorter one is held in November.

Programme
Carlo Gesualdo: Moro lasso al mio duolo
Carlo Gesualdo: Canzon francese del Principe
Giovanni Maria Trabaci: Consonanze stravaganti
Carlo Gesualdo: Illumina faciem taum
Scipione Stella: Partite sopra la Romanesca
Giovanni Maria Trabaci: Durezze e ligature
Carlo Gesualdo: Ave Regina
Paolo Baioni: Morbo Crudele Avea Rapito
Juan Bautista Cabanilles: Jacaras
Overview

Palestrina: buildings of the spirit

Renaissance composers did not write either for specific voices or for certain instruments, thus leaving extensive freedom of interpretation. Hence, we can say that the repertoire for viola da gamba practically includes all music that was written at the time. Considering its timbre, viol was considered the instrument that was capable of imitating the human voice more than any other. A characteristic that, especially referred to the creation of consorts, made all viols be often assigned to the performance of vocal polyphonic music, both as a double for the voice and as an exquisitely instrumental ensemble.
On this occasion we propose a tribute to one of the greatest polyphonists and composers of sacred music of the time: Prince Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa. A noble Neapolitan, Gesualdo, nicknamed Prince of Musicians, was a remarkable innovator and precursor of modern music, besides being the author of astounding polyphonic scores.
The consort of viols proposes some of its most famous vocal polyphonic compositions, alongside the instrumental pages of authors of the same period who were acclaimed in the Neapolitan area.
Finally, the composition by Paolo Baioni is a contemporary tribute to the ensemble of ancient instruments.

Venue Info

Basilica di San Vitale - Ravenna
Location   Via San Vitale, 17

Consecrated by Archbishop Maximianus between 547 and 548 AD, the Basilica of San Vitale is proof of Ravenna’s importance during the age of Emperor Justinian. 

An absolute masterpiece of Early Christian and Byzantine art, in 1996 it was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List. The prestigious American online magazine, Huffington Post, described San Vitale as “one amongst the 19 most important holy places in the world”. The church has an octagonal plan and is formed by two bodies; the inner one is surmounted by a dome supported by eight marble-covered massive pillars. Its architectural values are essentially tied to the chromatic qualities of its mosaics that cover the walls, the presbytery, and the apse, filled with biblical, symbolic, and historic references. The political values of the building are tied to these mosaics as well, with the emperor and empress depicted at the foot of Christ. There are also religious ties in the constant reaffirmation of the truth in Orthodox worship, sanctioning the defeat of Arianism in the city with the end of Theodoric’s government. Still, these are known wonders in every latitude. But also the Basilica’s floors hold many, lesser known, surprises. There’s the simple 8-pointed North Star, repeated multiple times and not only on the floor. Then there’s the so-called “labirinto dell’anima” (labyrinth of the soul). It is embedded in the floor of the presbytery, right in front of the altar; composed of seven spirals, it was once considered a symbol of sin, while passing through the labyrinth represented the way to purification and finding the way out was an act of re-birth. Hence, this is a place of a thousand splendours, where, ever since the eighteenth century, oratorios, sonatas, symphonies and motets resounded and still resound. Then in 1961 the Basilica became the permanent location of the International Organ Music Festival, the first and oldest festival of this kind in Italy. San Vitale has served Ravenna Festival, from the start, as a fundamental reference point within a journey tied to spirituality.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Ravenna, Italy
Starts at: 19:00
Duration:
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