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About this concert
Le Poème Harmonique is one of those ensembles you can never get enough of. As soon as the spirited group, led by Vincent Dumestre, takes the stage, something intangible happens: music takes on colour, stories come to life, and time seems to stand still. With their theatrical flair and historical imagination, they immerse the audience in a world that is as sensual as it is compelling.
For this programme, Dumestre and his musicians draw inspiration from 18th-century Venice, where impressive processions and religious festivities defined the cityscape. In a mix of exuberance and stillness, pious folk songs and rediscovered polyphony resound. The highlight is Vivaldi’s enchanting Nisi Dominus, performed here by the brilliant mezzo-soprano Eva Zaïcik. She gives this masterpiece a new lustre in an interpretation that is both intimate and grand.
Programme
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Anonymous
Nisi Dominus
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Francisco Soto de Langa
Giesù diletto sposo
1534-1619 -
Serafino Razzi
O Vergin Santa
(from: Libro primo delle laudi spirituali, 1563)1531-1613 -
Pietro Locatelli
Sinfonia funebre in F minor
Largo – Alla breve ma moderato – Grave – Non presto1695-1764 -
Antonio Vivaldi
Invicti Bellate
1678-1741 -
Serafino Razzi
O Dolcezza
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Antonio Vivaldi
Sinfonia al Santo Sepolcro
Nisi Dominus
Programme subject to change
Musicians
- NTB soprano
- Eva Zaicik mezzo-soprano
- Serge Goubioud, Martial Pauliat tenor
- Igor Bouin baritone
- Orchestra Poème Harmonique
- Louise Ayrton (solo), Camille Aubret, Rozarta Luka, Sandrine Dupe violin I
- Roxana Rastegar, Clara Lemaître, Sophie Iwamura violin II
- Delphine Millour, Mailalen Loth viola
- Lucas Peres, Cyril Poulet cello
- Simon Guidicelli double bass
- Victorien Disse theorbo, guitar
- Lucie Chabard harpsichord, organ
- Vincent Dumestre musical direction
About the performers
Le Poème Harmonique, under the direction of Vincent Dumestre, focuses on vocal and instrumental music of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, and also regularly creates links with other artistic disciplines. For instance, the ensemble has collaborated with actors, dancers and circus artists in large-scale productions such as Le Bourgeois gentilhomme (Molière), Cadmus et Hermione and Phaéton (Lully). Le Poème Harmonique is also praised for its refined approach to the sixteenth-century air de cour genre.