Angelique Ionatos, O erotas (Love)

Posted By: shajarian

Angelique Ionatos - O Erotas (Love)
1992 | ASIN: B0006U6PV2 | MP3 320k + scans 300 dpi | 77 MB + 7 MB


Angelique Ionatos left Greece at the age of fifteen. She went first of all to Belgium, before settling permanenty in France.

For several years now, her work as a composer has been devoted essentially to musical settings of the works of great contemporary Greek poets: Mortoyas, Cavafy, Anagnostakis, Ritsos, and, above all, Odysseus Elytis.

In 1984, she gave the first performance of the latter's Marie des Brumes, followed in 1987 by Le Monogramme. Both works were co-produced by the Théâtre de Sartrouville and the Théâtre de la Ville in Paris, and recorded by Auvidis.

In 1990, she created and recorded Sappho de Mytilène with a new team of musicians, including Christian Boissel for the orchestration. Three of these musicians are with her for O Erotas: Bruno Sansalone, Jean-François Roger and Henri Agnel, to whom she gave the task of orchestration; they are joined by Renaud Garcia-Fons on the double-bass.

The success of the recording of Sappho de Mytilène (Grand Prix de l'Académie Charles Cros, top ratings in the magazines Télérama and Le Monde de la Musique) was coupled with a great success on stage at the Théâtre de la Vile and the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord in Paris. She performed O Erotas at l'Olympia in Paris in March 1993.

Since 1989, she has been an associate artist at the Théâtre de Sartrouville



Biography of Angelique Ionatos at Wikipedia
Discography of Angelique Ionatos



Tracklist:

1 Nées Plighes (Nouvelles Blessures) (3:40)
2 Piano Tin Anixi (Je Prends le Printemps) (3:56)
3 Omorphi Ke Paraxeni Patrida (Belle et Etrange Patrie) (3:58)
4 Mygdalia (L'Amandier) (3:29)
5 Aethries (Jours Sereins) (2:45)
6 Yakinthino (Comme la Jacinthe) (5:37)
7 O Erotas (L'Amour) (3:55)
8 Pehnidia (Jeux) (4:27)
9 Flisvos (Clapotis) (3:20)
10 Ke Tora (Et Maintenant…) (5:22)
11 Ston Paradisso (Au Paradis) (4:32)
12 Tou Manoli (Threne de Manoli) (4:05)
13 Asma Asmaton (Cantique des Cantiques) (5:40)