Jaroussky proves 
                  a most eloquent exponent of Vivaldian opera in this astutely 
                  chosen selection of arias. There’s often debate – sometimes 
                  fruitful and sometimes futile – as to what kind of counter-tenor 
                  we are dealing with. With Daniels, Scholl and the like we can 
                  range freely over just what kind of colour they evoke, just 
                  where the voice is strongest, richest and most voluptuous and 
                  penetrating – whether there are mezzo tints or whatever. Jaroussky 
                  is in a sense rather simpler to place. He has a voice that is 
                  most powerful – remarkably even phenomenally so – at the top 
                  of its range. It’s a very feminine voice as well, explicitly 
                  so in timbre, and one capable of the most fluid and athletic 
                  technical control – some of the divisions are taken with rapier 
                  like incision and pitching and unholy assurance. 
                
Yet it’s when he 
                  sings slowly and softly that the full range of his expressive 
                  control becomes apparent. Vedro con mio diletto from 
                  Giustino is sung with limpid diminuendi and followed by subtle 
                  off beat accompaniment by the fine Ensemble Matheus under Jean-Christophe 
                  Spinosi. These qualities are only reinforced by the gorgeously 
                  liquid legato in Mentre dormi amor fomenti. He projects 
                  with surety and never uses texts for anything less than musical 
                  reasons – no vowel elongations or over crisply detonated consonants 
                  for example. Throughout he maintains real beauty of tone.
                
He takes even so 
                  difficult an aria as Frà le procelle with excellent breath 
                  control and pinpoint accuracy. Jaroussky is accompanied by a 
                  violin soloist, presumably Spinosi himself, in Sovente il 
                  sole, the most extensive aria here – it’s slow, full of 
                  colour and sensitive shading and more trademark divisions surmounted 
                  with eye popping ease. Perhaps inevitably one hears that in 
                  Sperai vicino il lido the lower part of the voice is 
                  slightly less resonant than is ideal. Still the clarion top, 
                  so fluted and precisely soprano in orientation, reasserts itself 
                  in Farà la mia spada and evidence that Jaroussky can 
                  fine down his tone and the speed of his vibrato comes in Sento 
                  in seno.
                
In short this is 
                  a most convincing and successful recital – varied and nuanced.  
                  Ensemble Matheus prove ever-sensitive colleagues with instrumental 
                  strands of colour and definition. The texts are in Italian, 
                  German, English and French. Most impressive all round. 
                  
                  Jonathan Woolf