Camerata Mediolanense

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Camerata Mediolanense
General information
origin Italy , Milan
Genre (s) Neoclassical , Martial Industrial
founding 1994
Website www.cameratamediolanense.it
Current occupation
Singing, keyboard, harpsichord
Elena Previdi
Singing, percussion, keyboard
Trevor ("3vor")
percussion
Manuel Aroldi
Drums
Marco Colombo
former members
singing
Luminitça
singing
Daniela Bedeski

Camerata Mediolanense is an Italian neoclassical band.

history

Camerata Mediolanense was founded in 1994 by the harpsichordist and musicologist Elena Previdi. The band name means "group of chamber musicians from Mediolanum" (Mediolanum is the former Latin name of Milan). The musical spectrum includes traditional Renaissance and Baroque music as well as their electronic-experimental processing.

In 1994, when Camerata Mediolanense was founded, released her debut album Musica Reservata , followed by Campo di Marte in 1996. In 1999, the album Madrigali was released , which also contains some German-language titles ("Der Tod", "Lili Marleen", "Mädchenlied").

In 2006 the compilation ΠANKPATION (Greek: Pankration ) was published.

As "Dame Mediolanensi", some of the previous female voices of Camerata Mediolanense formed in 2007 as a live project (with Luminitça, Daniela Bedeski and Elena Previdi, among others) - with a different setlist and "aesthetically more provocative".

The former singer Daniela Bedeski founded the Rosa Rubea project in 2010 .

After a 14-year hiatus, Camerata Mediolanense published Vertute, Honor, Bellezza (German: virtue, honor, beauty ), a setting of the Renaissance poetry of Francesco Petrarch in 2013 . The visual design was the responsibility of the Italian painter Saturno Buttò , who can also be seen in his studio in the video for Canzone alla Vergine .

Camerata Mediolanense has performed several times since 1999 at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen in Leipzig.

Discography

Studio albums
  • 1994: Musica Reservata  (My Castle Records, own label) (Re-Release 2013, Prophecy Productions )
  • 1996: Campo di Marte  (Discordia) (Re-Release 1999, Triton) (Re-Release 2013, Prophecy)
  • 1999: Madrigali - de Diversi et Excellentissimi Musici  (Triton) (Re-Release 2013, Prophecy)
  • 2013: Vertute, Honor, Bellezza  (Prophecy)
  • 2017: Le Vergini Folli  (Prophecy)
Compilations
  • 2006: ΠANKPATION  (Twilight Records)
  • 2010: MDXXX  (Live) (Creative Fields Records)
Singles and EPs
  • 1997: Amor, Ch'a Nullo Amato Amar Perdona / Vuolsi Così Colà Dove Si Puote (= Inferno I ) (7 ", My Castle)
  • 1999: Francesca, I Tuoi Martiri / La Prima Di Color Di Cui Novelle (= Inferno II ) (7 ", My Castle)
  • 2008: Nessun Maggior Dolore / Noi Leggiavamo (= Inferno III ) (7 ", My Castle)
  • 2011: 99 Altri Perfecti (My Castle)
  • 2013: Vergine Bella (Prophecy)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Interview with Dame Mediolanensi. VerSacrum.com, September 10, 2007 (Italian)
  2. Black Easter Festival: Band portrait Rosa Rubea (English), see also → Rosa Rubea at Discogs (English).
  3. Elena Previdi - Camerata Mediolanense, Interview by Alessandra Cognetta. FemmeMetalWebzine.net, October 2, 2013 (English)
  4. ^ Artistic from Italy: Camerata Mediolanense videographically tune into "Vertute, Honor, Bellezza". Zillo.de, see also → Saturno Buttò at Discogs (English)
  5. WGT - artist line-up 1999 f. (1999, 2001, 2007 (as Dame Mediolanensi ), 2009, 2013)