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Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Vorrei spiegarvi, oh Dio!, K418 (1783) [6:45]
Exsultate, jubilate, K165 (1773) [15:30]
L’ameró, saró costante, K208 (1775) [7:03]
Basta, vincestí . . . Ah, non lasciarmi, K486a (1987 [6:44]
Un moto di gioia, K579 (1887) [1:39]
Chio mi scordi di te . . . . Non temer, amato bene, K490 (1887) [9:10]
Misera: Dove son?, K369 (1887) [6:42]
Kathleen Battle (soprano)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/André Previn
rec. April and August 1985, Studio 1, Abbey Road, London
WARNER CLASSICS 9 93345 2 [54:14]
The initial issue of this recording back in 1986 received a Grammy
Award, and hearing it again now, it is easy to understand why. Kathleen
Battle is a marvellous Mozart soprano, while André Previn and
the Royal Philharmonic give her warm and sensitive support. The purity
of her voice in the earlier pieces, the celebrated motet Exsultate,
jubilate and the aria L’ameró, saró costante
from Il rè pastore, seems near-ideal, the virtuosity
completely in sympathy with the priorities of the musical line.
The other pieces all come from the following decade, the 1780s, when
Mozart was living in Vienna and working with some of the finest performers
of the day. The numerous concert arias he composed there were intended
either to be inserted into the operas of other composers, or to be
performed separately in order to display the most characteristic features
of a particular singer's artistry. There is a different tale to be
told in connection with each aria, and Kathleen Battle’s performances
are wonderfully judged in these later and more sophisticated compositions
too.
In truth there is no reason to criticise the musical aspects of this
reissue. However, the supporting presentation, involving a complete
lack of supporting documentation, undermines the excellence of the
music-making. Not only are texts and translations lacking, there are
no notes whatever to give any supporting information. There is merely
a listing of the tracks on the outside cover which is repeated on
the flimsy insert. True, there are a couple of introductory sentences
on the outside back cover, but these manage to give the altogether
misleading impression that Mozart originally wrote all these particular
concert arias for the castrato voice. What a shame to undermine such
first rate music making with such poor presentation - what is particularly
lazy is that most of the insert is given over to pictures of other
issues in the series.
Terry Barfoot
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