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SEEN AND HEARD
INTERNATIONAL RECITAL REVIEW
Handel, Grieg, Wolf, Poulenc,
Barber, Bizet:
Danielle de Niese, soprano; Ken Noda, piano; presented by Cal Performances,
Hertz Hall, University of California at Berkeley. 8.2.2009 (HS)
Danielle de Niese, best known for her glittering stage presence in Handel
operas, opened her recital Sunday in Berkeley, California, with two arias from
Handel’s Semele. Singers like to start with the familiar before venturing
out into foreboding territory, but it was not a good sign that the silvery,
mercurial coloratura that serves her so well on the opera stage seemed to desert
her here. She lent a coy sexiness to “Endless Pleasure, Endless Love” and
“Myself I Shall Adore” but the music, despite vibrant playing from pianist Ken
Noda, never lifted off. By all rights, these songs should have catapulted the
program into high gear, but they deserved the tepid response they got from the
half-filled house.
The problem, which she never quite overcame, was getting the voice in focus.
Here, and throughout the program, she seemed to be oversinging, pushing the
sound rather that letting it float untethered. Hertz Hall, with 600 seats, is
not so big that she needed to do that. And indeed, she did her best singing when
she throttled back in softer passages. Singing loud, the lyric voice took on a
hard edge that kept the music from gathering momentum. Otherwise, she showed
such fine musical values, understanding of the texts, attention to pace and
rhythm, that it was doubly disappointing that the sound missed the mark.
Wearing gowns by the Vienna-based designer Thang de Hoo, the slim singer with
the exotic features of her Sri Lankan and Dutch heritage cut a glamorous figure
on stage. She also displayed the acting knowhow that has earned her plaudits for
her operatic performances. Noda, musical assistant to James Levine at the
Metropolitan Opera, gave her all the musical support she could want.
To her credit, she chose a program that went well beyond the tried and true.
After the Handel, she moved on to Grieg and a selection of songs from
Haugtussa. The song cycle, brimming with countryside atmosphere, needed a
lighter, softer approach than de Niese delivered. She was better in five Hugo
Wolf songs, especially the yearning of Vergborgenheit. Her acting chops
stood her in good stead for the final song in the set, a rousing run through
Ich hab’ in Penna einen Liebsten wohnen, breathlessly accounting for a
roster of lovers in locations over northern Italy.
The second half opened with a set of Poulenc songs from Fiançailles pour rire
(Whimsical Betrothal), which despite some shaky French pronunciation caught the
humor and humanity in them. The most telling moment had nothing to do with
singing and everything to do with the text. At the end of “Violon”
(Violin), the piano plays an extensive imitation of a Romantic violin interlude.
Listening raptly, de Niese sighed melodramatically as the music ended, and
draped herself over the piano, drawing smiles and chuckles.
Her stage presence showed itself again in three of Barber’s James Joyce songs,
the tricky language coming through clearly and the dramatic twists at the end of
“Solitary Hotel” and “Nuvoletta” emerging naturally. Humor was the leavening in
the second of two Bizet songs, “La coccinelle,” in which a youthful lad
misses a chance to kiss his girl because of an unfortunate fascination with a
ladybug on her neck, and two encores by American composers. The first, “I Hate
Men,” from Cole Porter’s Kiss Me Kate, made perfect use of the stridency
in her voice that got in the way earlier, and the second, William’s Bolcom’s
Latin-tinged “Amor,” played perfectly off her striking looks.
Harvey Steiman
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