MUSICWEB LOG – JUNE 
                2007 - Robert Hugill
              Handel operas seem 
                to be doing rather well at the moment. 
                John Eliot Gardiner's recording of Agrippina 
                has reappeared in the Philips classic 
                opera series and I definitely agree 
                that it’s a classic. Any recording which 
                has a cast that includes Della Jones, 
                Alistair Miles, Derek Lee Ragin and 
                Michael Chance can't be all bad. Ragin 
                is singing the mezzo-soprano role of 
                Nerone, now usually sung by a woman. 
                The set is worth getting for this alone, 
                seeing what a real high counter-tenor 
                can do with the part. Ragin is appearing 
                in the English Touring Opera production 
                of Teseo this autumn.
              
              More unusually, Alan 
                Curtis has recorded Floridante. 
                It has a fine case, a rather better 
                one than Curtis's previous Handel opera 
                recording. This recording also enables 
                Curtis to experiment with the edition 
                of the text. Handel doesn't really give 
                much scope for radical changes to the 
                text for editorial purposes, most of 
                his later changes are not improvements 
                but simply making the piece work with 
                whomsoever he had to sing at the time. 
                In the case of Floridante Curtis 
                has reverted to the planned voice range 
                of Elmira, who was intended to be a 
                soprano but had to be recast when the 
                soprano, Margherita Durastantini, was 
                ill. Rather bizarrely he then casts 
                the role as a mezzo-soprano, but Joyce 
                diDonato has a very bright, soprano-ish 
                voice and is a superb singer, so what 
                the hell. The same goes for Agrippina 
                where the title role was also sung by 
                soprano Margherita Durastantini. Nowadays 
                Agrippina is often sung by mezzos, Della 
                Jones on this disc, Sarah Connolly in 
                the recent ENO production. So perhaps 
                Durastantini had a rather low voice. 
                (Handel:Floridante)
              
              My 3rd Handel 
                was even more curious. Handel's Tobit. 
                In fact a pasticcio made by John Christopher 
                Smith and the Revd Morrell after Handel's 
                death. Alas, Morrell's libretto is no 
                better than the ones he did for Handel, 
                but this time he lacked Handel's genius 
                by his side. So its best thought of 
                as a delightful concert. Morrell succeeds 
                in minimising or omitting the most dramatic 
                elements of the story and Smith seems 
                to have been content to go along with 
                these. Whereas in Theodora Handel 
                deliberately went against the libretto 
                to create a work of genius. (Handel 
                & Smith:Tobit:Naxos)
              
              Performance practice 
                in these Handel pieces is relatively 
                standard; though we do not have lots 
                of information we do have a moderately 
                clear idea of the forces with which 
                he was working. The same cannot be said 
                of Bach where the controversy continues 
                about the exact size of performing forces. 
                I generally align myself to the one 
                to a part school but accept that we 
                must be able to make decisions based 
                on available forces. So performances 
                like the St. Matthew Passion by the 
                Cologne Chamber Orchestra are listened 
                to with open ears, as long as they provide 
                imaginative solutions to the balance 
                and other issues. What I can't abide 
                are performances which try to pretend 
                these works are full scale orchestral/choral 
                music. Do try the new re-issue of Paul 
                McCreesh's recording of the St. John 
                Passion with is Gabrieli Consort, just 
                one to a part recorded in a church with 
                an organ from Bach's time, it sounds 
                just right. (Bach:St. 
                Matthew Passion:Naxos)
              
              Most baroque composers 
                used the cantata as a means of keeping 
                their hand in. Small scale vocal/choral 
                pieces were a good way to experiment 
                with techniques that could be used in 
                the bigger works. And, of course, they 
                were highly portable, saleable items. 
                Bach's sequence of church Cantatas were 
                his staple diet but he wrote secular 
                ones as well. I think that, too often, 
                there is a tendency for performances 
                of these to emulate the rather more 
                staid atmosphere of the church ones. 
                Still, a disc like the new Swiss one 
                gives us the opportunity to hear the 
                delightful name-day cantata Der Zufriedengestellte 
                Aeolus. London Baroque have recorded 
                a selection of Rameau and Campra pieces. 
                Whereas the Bach cantata required serious 
                forces and was a one-off. The Rameau 
                and Campra are truly portable pieces, 
                capable of being performed in the houses 
                of patrons and eminently suitable for 
                publication. After all, publishers only 
                published music that the public wanted 
                to buy, and by and large they wanted 
                to buy piece that they could perform 
                at home. (Bach 
                cantatas)
              
              It is amazing what 
                we don't know about Baroque music and 
                performance, how much information has 
                been lost or simply mislaid. Buxtehude 
                started an influential series of evening 
                concerts each Advent in his church in 
                Lübeck. They were enormously influential 
                and he wrote a series of oratorios for 
                them. Amazingly these have not survived. 
                All we have is a single manuscript, 
                that people can't quite agree whether 
                it is by Buxtehude or just in his style. 
                The other possibility is, of course, 
                that what we have is a cack-handed revision 
                by another hand. Anyway, Ton Koopman 
                has chosen it to open the Vocal Works 
                section of the new Buxtehude Opera Omnia. 
                Personally I can't wait for the next 
                volumes. (Buxtehude 
                Oratorio)
              
              Another Philips Classic 
                Opera set cropped up in my in tray. 
                The famous (infamous) Bonynge/Sutherland 
                Il Trovatore. Its a performance 
                where the winds of later operas don't 
                blow as strong as they usually do; this 
                is Verdi seen through the lens of his 
                predecessors. After all the first Leonora 
                was famous for her singing of Bellini, 
                Donizetti and Rossini. It would all 
                work well if you like Bonynge's conducting, 
                I'm still in 2 minds about it. By and 
                large I welcome performers moving out 
                of their standard comfort zone. With 
                singers especially going against your 
                fach can be very rewarding, providing 
                you take care of your voice. One of 
                the best Leonora's that I heard was 
                Rita Hunter, who brought a thrilling 
                power and remarkably accuracy to the 
                role. She was a singer who knew the 
                power of a firm musical line, and this 
                was conveyed in all her roles. Sutherland's 
                sense of line is, inevitably, different; 
                you can feel her treating the music 
                as if it was by an earlier composer, 
                adding flexibility and freedom, highlighting 
                some notes at the expense of others. 
                It is a fascinating performance. As 
                a bonus you get the ballet music 
                that Verdi wrote for the Paris performances 
                of the opera. Not Verdi at his strongest 
                I'm afraid, so not much of a bonus. 
                (Verdi:Il 
                trovatore)
              
              Siegfried Wagner suffered 
                the usual problems of having a more 
                famous father, but having a mother like 
                Cosima can't have been easy. I'm not 
                convinced that he was destined to be 
                an opera composer, I can't help feeling 
                that he'd have done well writing orchestral 
                tone poems and the like. Still, getting 
                a better librettist would have helped. 
                He wrote his own for Der Kobold 
                and he tries just too hard. It has some 
                interested dark themes, but I'm sure 
                that his father (or Richard Strauss) 
                could have made more of the suggestions 
                of child abuse, adultery and the killing 
                of illegitimate children. But the composer 
                it really needed was Webern. Siegfried 
                Wagner's mix of middle period Richard 
                W., Marschner and Weber is not quite 
                what is needed. But, then again, perhaps 
                seeing it in performance would change 
                my ideas, not that there is much chance 
                of that.
              
              The release of 1950s 
                discs from copyright means that we are 
                having a rash of delightful re-issues 
                and compilations. Alto give us some 
                lovely Puccini duets sung by the likes 
                of Victoria De Los Angeles, Jussi Bjorling, 
                Renata Tebaldi, Callas, Giuseppe Di 
                Stefano. Lovely.(Puccini 
                duets)
              
              Into the more recent 
                century for the final batch of discs. 
                I've long admired the music of Judith 
                Bingham and she has been woefully neglected 
                on disc. This new Naxos disc admirably 
                re-cycles live recording made at the 
                Proms by the BBC Symphony Chorus. The 
                results make a fine disc, based on the 
                talents of the BBC Symphony Chorus but 
                I did wish that we might have had something 
                from the BBC Singers. Perhaps we could 
                have more music from the Proms on disc, 
                after all it would be a good way to 
                promulgate the first performances which 
                take place there. (Judith 
                Bingham choral works)
              
              Naxos have also issued 
                a disc of Laurent Petigirard's music, 
                presumably on the back of his successful 
                Elephant Man opera. Petigirard has a 
                background in film and his scores are 
                always admirably written, often gorgeous 
                to listen to. Like the Bingham this 
                disc seems to re-cycle some earlier 
                material and add some new; one of the 
                tracks being recorded way back in 1992 
                in Ljubljana. Still the results make 
                a surprisingly coherent and balanced 
                disc. (Petitgirard:Orchestral 
                works)
              
              Charles Jencks's Garden 
                of Cosmic Speculation is a new landscape 
                garden that I've longed to visit. Now 
                we have a disc of music by Stephen Goss 
                which explores the landscape in sound. 
                I loved it. Like Petigirard, Goss manages 
                to make lovely, pleasurable auditory 
                experiences, but Goss adds in to this 
                strength and rigour of construction. 
                Whereas with Petitgirard I simply loved 
                the sound world, with Goss I felt that 
                there was something underneath, the 
                steel beneath the velvet glove. (Goss:Garden 
                of Cosmic Speculation)
              
              Milken's disc of Jewish 
                operas gives you the chance to hear 
                excerpts from 3 more or less contemporary 
                operas. Its a good way of exposing them, 
                even though the disc left me wanting 
                more. It always amazes me how much music 
                comes out of the USA, and how much we 
                never properly hear. After all, how 
                likely are any of these three operas 
                (David Schiff's Gimpel the Fool, 
                Elie Siegmeister's Lady of the Lake 
                and Hugo Weisgall's  Esther) 
                to get a UK staging. (Naxos:Jewish 
                operas vol 2)
              
              Finally a disc of choral 
                music by Brian Ferneyhough. Not a composer 
                associated with choral repertoire, the 
                music is challenging. But the BBC Singers 
                respond to the challenges in superb 
                fashion. This is what discs of contemporary 
                music should be like, stretching and 
                challenging us but giving us superbly 
                crafted performances. (Ferneyhough:Choral 
                Music)
              Robert Hugill