I can be fairly brief in welcoming the return of
this old friend, a well-established classic, now at mid-price (target
price around £17.50 in the UK).
Be careful which version you buy: some dealers still have the 2003 release
at a higher price. Robert Hugill welcomed that earlier release in terms
which I can only endorse and urge you to read -
review.
Just about my only grumble concerns the lack of texts for an opera that
is not exactly standard repertoire - there seems to be only one rival
recording, on DVD and blu-ray, with Christophe Rousset directing Les
Talens Lyriques (Opus Arte); the Kuijken recording on DHM which Robert
Hugill mentions seems not to have returned to the catalogue. If you
prefer the spectacle of video, I understand that the Rousset is in ‘traditional’
costume and recorded in the appropriate setting of the Drottningholm
Court Theatre.
I haven’t seen the Opus Arte recording; it has received strong
but not universal praise - reservations in some quarters about the stylised
dancing which sometimes afflicts productions of baroque opera - but
I hardly think that it could excel the Erato reissue in any respect
except the visual. Don’t be put off by the presence of so many
bass voices in the cast list - although the Zoroastre who gives his
name to the opera is indeed Zoroaster, the founding Magi of the Persian
religion of Zoroastrianism, and figures as Zarathustra in Richard Strauss’s
Nietzsche-inspired tone poem, there’s plenty of love rivalry and
magic in the plot and plenty of singing from the
dessus voices
and Mark Padmore’s
haute-contre (high tenor rather than
counter-tenor) to balance against them. Even the basses can be
mellifluous - Nathan Berg as the villain sounds suitably villainous,
but Eric Martin Bonnet, equally villainous as the subterranean voice
of the demon Ariman, sounds quite beautiful as Oromasès, King of the
Genies. Listen to Bonnet and Padmore together on CD1, tracks 22-24.
Mark Padmore justly heads the cast-list but there are no vocal weaknesses
in this production. As Robert Hugill rightly says, however, it’s
the sure hand of William Christie - one of my musical heroes - and the
thoughtful accompaniment of Les Arts Florissants that hold the whole
together.
If you enjoy Rameau’s better-known instrumental music and Handel’s
operas, you should readily warm to this performance of
Zoroastre.
Speaking of Handel, it’s William Christie’s recording of
his
Orlando that gets my vote, too: Erato 2564 677430, 3 CDs,
if you can find it separately, or in 6-disc set, 2564696532, with
Alcina
for around £20.
Should you have any doubts and have access to the invaluable Naxos Music
Library, you can try
Zoroastre there, apart from the appendix
to CD3 containing the dances omitted from the live performance and the
original 1749 ending of Act V. Don’t, however, judge the recording
quality from the streamed version; as heard on CD the sound is very
good.
A strong contender at the new lower price, though I must repeat that
grumble about the lack of texts - I understand they were included with
the original release; surely it would have cost very little extra just
to reprint that booklet.
Brian Wilson
A strong entry at the new lower price.