If 
                  you have had the good fortune to visit Amsterdam’s Het Muziektheater where this live recording was made you will know 
                  that it achieves an intimacy and spaciousness unique amongst 
                  modern, state of the art European buildings. In a way this is 
                  not the place, you might think, for the earliest baroque, classically-set 
                  opera known. Yet, this very ‘blue’ production works as a spectacle. 
                  Whether it works acoustically as it were I am not so sure as 
                  the singers do have a vast area to command and of course, this 
                  being Monteverdi, they do not have a large band to support them. 
                  All too often when the singers turn away their voices are momentarily 
                  lost until the levels are smartly adjusted.
                The 
                  introduction goes into some detail about the instruments used 
                  both in the quite involved booklet essay by Stephen Stubbs and 
                  also in his clear demonstration on the first disc. In this we 
                  are given the background to the work, including an interview 
                  with John Mark Ainsley. Stubbs also shows us some of the instruments 
                  including the fascinating thirteen string lirone and how he 
                  uses them; or I should say how he thinks Monteverdi intended 
                  them to be used. He points out that although the score is somewhat 
                  minimalist the composer left fulsome instructions on instrumentation 
                  for certain characters. These include directions on the use 
                  of the regal for the guardian of the river Styx, Caronte. We also see the production 
                  in rehearsal with the director Pierre Audi; clearly a man with 
                  an understanding of the period and the style.
                I 
                  was thinking too how far we have come since the days of say, 
                  Harnoncourt’s ground-breaking recording of 1968 with its rather 
                  nasal-sounding sackbuts and cornetti. There’s also the opening 
                  singer ‘La Musica’, setting the scene. Here the role is assumed 
                  by the soprano Rotraud Hansmann, vibrato and all.
                Having 
                  been to this Amsterdam 
                  theatre myself and also having recently been to see a performance 
                  in the ruined Roman theatre in Arles 
                  in Provence, I was struck by how this production 
                  seemed more like an open-air reconstruction of Greek theatre. 
                  With its vast and open-shaped performing area, how this would 
                  have appealed to Monteverdi and his contemporaries! Their aim 
                  after all was to attempt to recreate the kind of experience 
                  that Greek and Roman theatre might have offered two thousand 
                  years ago.
                The 
                  opera is performed without a break between the acts, except 
                  for changing over the DVD of course. It looks at times, especially 
                  when the female chorus are dancing in Act 1, like a realization 
                  of a Botticeli or Bellini painting. There is a real water-pool 
                  built into the stage which acts as a river. It also serves as 
                  a barrier between the estates of earth and hell. In Act 3 it 
                  even spouts flames.
                In 
                  the light of my above comment I found the opening, with ‘La 
                  Musica’ sung by counter-tenor David Cordier, very arresting. 
                  Equally impassioned is the moving performance of Brigitte Balleys 
                  as the Messenger in Act three as she gives Orfeo the terrible 
                  news of Euridice’s death.
                Any 
                  production of this opera has to hinge around the leading role 
                  of Orfeo who hardly ever leaves the stage. It is not emotionally 
                  demanding but, with its long recitative lines and yards of Italian 
                  to grasp, no singer will take it on lightly. It’s worth remembering 
                  that Orfeo’s long arioso to Caronte in which he persuades him 
                  to allow him across the Styx 
                  takes up the whole of Act 3 (tracks 1-13 DVD 2).  John Mark 
                  Ainsley, who at one time was associated exclusively with early 
                  music, is utterly compelling. He moves like a figure from Renaissance 
                  paintings and characterizes every move with a passion and meaning 
                  which sometimes makes translation unnecessary. I’m not sure 
                  why he decided to be bald but that’s an aside. 
                Euridice 
                  is less of a major role than you might expect, but Juanita Lascarro 
                  is delightfully glowing and wan all at once.
                The 
                  costumes are classically inspired with that for Speranza - Michael 
                  Chance, one of the greatest ever of counter-tenors - being fantastical 
                  and again emphasizing the navy blue colour of the entire concept. 
                  When Speranza vanishes into the floor just the blue is left 
                  behind.
                It’s 
                  worth remembering that this opera was written at a very difficult 
                  time for the composer when he had himself suffered much sorrow 
                  in bereavement. A happy ending would not have suited his ‘mind-set’ 
                  as it were. His wife had died as had a child and also a teenage 
                  singer Caterina Martinelli for whom he had written and who might 
                  have lived at his house. The libretto was written by Alessandro 
                  Striggio but in Act Five he seems to encapsulate Monteverdi’s, 
                  and therefore Orfeo’s desperate state of mind when in Orfeo’s 
                  eulogy on Euridice’s perfection he sings ‘no other has or will 
                  live who is her equal’. Apollo’s appearance is marked by his 
                  emotional distance from Orfeo yet he is a comforter for Orfeo 
                  and for the audience as well who need to be helped out of the 
                  malaise. Apollo reminds us all, so typical of the renaissance, 
                  that “have you not learned that human happiness is only fleeting” 
                  and that Orfeo’s sin was that he was too happy when he first 
                  loved Euridice - a sobering thought indeed.
                Once 
                  Orfeo has come to terms with his sorrow and learned that Eurdice 
                  will be amongst the heavenly stars the opera continues with 
                  the happiest of Moresco’s but Orfeo can only cynically observe 
                  it. 
                The 
                  ending is couched in a certain amount of controversy and Monteverdi’s 
                  conclusion may have been very dark indeed culminating in Orfeo’s 
                  savage death by the Bacchantes. However the solution here works 
                  very pleasingly.
                It 
                  is unfortunate that another DVD of the opera has also just appeared. 
                  This is the version staged by Jacky Lautem and Jean-Claude Malgoire 
                  with the always excellent Kobie van Rensburg as Orfeo. I have 
                  not seen this but a review I have recently read expresses mixed 
                  feelings about the ensemble work and some of the minor characters. 
                  With this performance I would have no such reservations. The 
                  main problem is to decide whether Audi’s production, with its 
                  stylization of gesture and movement, is what you want; every 
                  moment and glance is slow and meticulously rehearsed. This does 
                  not always bring out the inherent drama as seen in the rehearsal 
                  clips but allows the music to speak in primis.
                As 
                  well as the fifteen minute introduction there is also a useful 
                  illustrated synopsis. Frankly, if you want a DVD of Orfeo, this 
                  should be your first option.
                Gary 
                  Higginson