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Stefano LANDI (1587-1639) La Morte D’Orfeo(1619) [132:27] Francesco USPER (end,
sixteenth century-1641) Sonata a 8 [4:09] Dario CASTELLO (c.1590-c.1630) Sonata decima a 3 [5:26] Giovanni GABRIELI (c.1554-1612) Canzon VIII a 8 [5:23] Biagio MARINI(1594-1663) Canzon nona a doi Chori [3:25]
Akadêmia:
Aurore Bucher (soprano); Bertrand Dazin (counter-tenor);
Guillemette Laurens (mezzo); Dominique Visse (alto);
Cyril Auvity (tenor); Jan van Elsacker (tenor); Vincent
Lesage (tenor); Geoffroy Buffière (bass); Emmanuel
Vistorky (bass)/Françoise Lasserre
rec. 3-11 January, 2006, l’église Notre-Dame du Liban, Paris,
France. DDD ZIG-ZAG
TERRITOIRES ZZT070402 [74:06 + 76:50]
Orpheus was present, so to speak, at the birth
of opera: for obvious reasons his was seen as a very suitable ‘story’ around
which first to stitch together then to stretch outwards the intermedi of
late sixteenth century Italian drama and music. By 1600 both
Peri and Caccini had written and performed a Euridice;
in 1608 came Belli and Chiebrera’s Orfeo Dolente;
Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo was
performed the year before.
Public appetite for the new medium and spectacle, the new
musical idiom and its singers meant that any successor was
likely to be popular. Landi, though, was only 13 when Peri’s
work made its impact. Born in the more conservative Rome,
he moved north in 1618, publishing a book of madrigals in
Venice, where he was significantly influenced by the more
adventurous Venetian composers. He held positions at Padua
and it is probably for a wedding in that city that he wrote La
Morte D’Orfeo in the following
year. By 1620, though, Landi was back in Rome, where he lived
and worked for the rest of his short life under what seems
like sympathetic aristocratic patronage.
Unlike
other contemporary treatments of the Orpheus myth, though,
Landi’s La Morte D’Orfeo on this
splendid and recommendable release from Akadêmia on Zig-Zag
starts when Eurydice is already dead; it deals with the death
of Orpheus, not with their relationship nor the first part
of the myth and the descent into the underworld.
What
you will hear is thus much less sprightliness than in Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo.
Here is much more sombre and doleful music; the pace is duly
restrained. Yet the atmosphere is neither manic nor
fateful. Landi’s is a very human tragedy with much parody
to lighten the seriousness.
La
Morte D’Orfeo is
also a work that respects the Florentine pastoral traditions
from which the new genre of opera sprang at the turn of
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in central and
northern Italy… a division into five acts, a choral ensemble
at the end of each, the grafting of lighter, comic characters
into the story and a modernisation of Greek myth into a
renaissance idiom. Above all, Landi achieves a felicitous
and highly musical resolution of tensions between (local
audiences’ familiarity with) Greek myth and contemporary
literary styles, such as monologue, descriptive and emotion-rich
ariosi and reflective and declamatory passages; many of
these conventions are also developed (subverted, even)
for musical and dramatic effect: Landi was his own person!
Tempting though it may be to compare La Morte
D’Orfeo with the other works
of the time – especially Monteverdi’s Orfeo, that
would be unwise. So to do would be to miss the humour that
Landi brings, the delicacy and subtlety of his often understated
blend between melodic and tuneful ideas and the way he never
misses an opportunity for character development – listen
to the dialogue between Orfeo, Charon, Mercury and the eight
lines Eurydice has in the whole opera in the second scene
of Act V, for example. It is Monteverdian in its searing
penetration. Yet much more restrained… rarely the same sprung
rhythms of Monteverdi; never the dissonances. And – at least
in this realisation – some interesting wind instrument colours
from the likes of a sackbut and a dulcian.
The Akadêmia Ensemble
under its director Françoise Lasserre sets out to achieve
a blend of humanism derived from Platonism and Italian renaissance
traditions.
For them this means asceticism and exhilaration through scrupulous
respect for the text in the interests of providing an emotionally
uplifting musical experience.
On
first listening, La
Morte D’Orfeo might appear stronger on the ascetic
than on the exhilaration. Until – that is - one allows the
grace, gentleness and simple restrained parody which Landi
brings to his version of the myth (he probably wrote his
own libretto). Then the experience has a more profound impact;
because it’s so reserved: just listen to the ending of the
entire work… very soft and yet characterful. Its nuances,
its melody and its chords stay with one for hours.
In
their realisation, Akadêmia and Lasserre have added a number
of instrumental pieces – in the absence of a prologue by
Landi a sonata by Usper; and various battaglie and sonate by
Landi’s contemporaries, as was the Venetian custom at the
time. They are not distracting and do not hold up one’s sense
of action and dramatic development.
With
the exception of some very minor unidiomatic Italian phrasing
in the first few numbers, the singing is excellent. Above
all, they perform lyrically and without infusing spurious
characterisation into their roles. Cyril Auvity (Orfeo)
is particularly strong.
The
instrumentalists clearly know and love this work – as we
will come to do thanks to their persuasive, highly sensitive
and utterly non-demonstrative playing. Akadêmia works as
a whole, a cohesive team; their intention to expose, and
revel carefully in, a highly perfumed and colourful corner
of a very special garden has been well met in this gem of
a performance.
It’s
a good, clear recording, well-presented with a useful booklet,
though the text of the libretto is a little small. Probably
the best way to approach La Morte D’Orfeo is not as
a historical curiosity to set alongside Landi’s contemporaries’ treatment
of the Orpheus myth, but a beautiful, compelling work full
of clarity and delight in its own right.
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