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Sir Thomas Allen: Great Operatic Arias - Volume 2 Wolfgang Amadeus
MOZART(1756-1791) The Magic Flute - Papageno's Aria (Der
Vogelfäger bin ich ja) [2:05]; Pamina and Papageno’s
Duet (Der Vogelfäger bin ich ja) with Susan Gritton
(soprano) [3:12]; Papagena and Papageno's Duet, Pa-pa-ge-na, with
Susan Gritton (soprano) [2:38] The Marriage of Figaro -Non più andrai [3:51]
Figaro’s Recitative and Cavatina - Se vuol ballare [3:30] Don Giovanni - Leporello's Catalogue Aria, Madamina [5:38];
Don Giovanni's Aria, Finch' han dal vino [1:29]; Don
Giovanni's Canzonetta, Deh, vieni alla finestra [2:20] Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) Falstaff - Ford's Monologue, È sogno? O
realtà... [4:37] Don Carlos - Don Carlos' and Rodrigo's Duet, Dio,
che nell'alma infondere with Gwyn Hughes Jones (tenor);
Philip Tebb (bass);Geoffrey Mitchell Choir
[5:41]
Prison Scene. Per me giunto è il dì supremo with Gwyn
Hughes Jones (tenor) [12:13] Macbeth - Macbeth's Scena and Aria, Perfidi!
- Pietà, rispetto [5:16] La Traviata - Recitative and Duet, Pura
siccome un angelo with Claire Rutter (soprano) [18:56] Kurt WEILL (1900-1950) Knickerbocker Holiday -September Song [4:04]
Sir Thomas
Allen (baritone)
Philharmonia Orchestra/David Parry
rec. Blackheath Halls, London, 12-15 October 2007 CHANDOS OPERA IN
ENGLISH CHAN3155 [76.23]
I recently went to a performance
by Welsh National Opera of the Magic Flute. This wason
behalf of Musicweb International’s Scene and Heard (see review)
and I also attended the pre-performance talk. The speaker
recounted that his first, most lasting impression and experience
of the work, was by the WNO in 1971. What had impacted itself
on him the most was the performance of a young Thomas Allen
(b. 1941) as Papageno. I saw the same production and it also
had a similar lasting effect on me. With his immaculately
articulated lyric baritone ideally suited to the role, Allen
not only sang superbly, but his vocal and acted assumption
of the birdman in Michael Geliot’s production combined to
give a near immaculate memorable performance. Typical of
his early on-stage confidence, Allen notably, and with characteristic
humour and aplomb, added to the impact by adapting the English
translation into his native Weirside accent, complete with
topical jokes that owed nothing to librettist Schikaneder!
In reviewing a performance by Opera North I recalled my experience
of Allen at that time and suggested that the singer in the
performance under review, Roderick Williams, was the nearest
I had come to that of his illustrious predecessor in the
intervening thirty odd years. I hoped that it presaged an
equally distinguished career (see review).
With
those memories of Thomas Allen it is appropriate for me that
this, his second volume of arias sung in English for Chandos,
starts with Papageno’s opening aria Der Vogelfäger bin ich ja (tr.1). I use
the better known original language titles rather than the
English translation. In this aria Papageno yearns for a Papagena
to share his life with and have children. Compared to his
1984 recording of Mozart Arias (CDC 7 47508 2) Allen’s voice
has lost some flexibility and the tone is heavier. What has
not changed is his innate musicality and its influence on
the most important constituent of his considerable vocal
skills, the ability to characterise. Compare his representation
of Papageno’s musings and longings in this first aria with Der
Vogelfäger bin ich ja from act two, where Papageno’s
joy at finding his soul-mate is unbounded and where Allen
is joined by Susan Gritton as an appropriately light-toned
and expressive Papagena (tr.9). Allen understands and conveys
every nuance of the words. This is also evident in the diverse
sentiments of Figaro’s two arias from The Marriage of
Figaro. First, his light-hearted bravura singing of Non
più andrai (tr.2) as Figaro sends off Cherubino, whom
the Count has granted a commission in his regiment to get
rid of him and his habit of being in the wrong place at the
wrong time. Listen to the fuller incisive and biting tone
of Se vuol ballare as Figaro realises his master’s
plans for his intended bride (tr.7).
At
the onset of his career, having won the Queen’s Prize at
the Royal College of Music, Allen joined Welsh National Opera
and debuted in major roles as Figaro in Rossini’s Barber
of Seville on 18 October 1969. As a company member, he
took on a wide variety of characters including, among many,
Paola in Simon Boccanegra, Guglielmo in Cosi and
Falke in Fledermaus. Covent Garden and Glyndebourne
became interested with the former placing him under contract
from the 1972-73 season. Under the stagione system operating
at Covent Garden, Allen took on many small roles as well
as some major ones whilst returning regularly to WNO to try
out others. It was, however, in Mozart that he began to make
waves on the international stage. He easily encompassed the
higher tessitura of Count Almaviva in Figaro, but
it was in Don Giovanni that he found the role that
was to define his future. His acclaimed assumption of the
title role in Peter Hall’s 1977 production at Glyndebourne
was widely noted. His acting as a lithe and suave seducer
with a demonic and sadistic bent was frightening in its intensity
as was his interpretation for Covent Garden in the 1990s.
Both those productions were broadcast and will doubtless
appear on DVD in due course whilst already his portrayal
under Muti at La Scala in 1987 and Cologne in 1991 are available
in that medium (Opus Arte OA LS 3001D and Arthaus Musik 100
020 respectively). On CD all his Mozart roles are available
on complete recordings. The vocal virility and suavity of
Thomas Allen’s Giovanni are represented here by the brief
aria Finch' han dal vino (tr.10)and canzonetta Deh,
vieni alla finestra (tr.11) whilst his relishing of Leporello’s catalogue
aria is an added bonus.
Allen
did not restrict himself to Mozart but also undertook the
more lyric of Verdi’s baritone roles of Rodrigo in Don
Carlo and Germont pére in La Traviata. The former
is represented by a very fine rendering of the friendship
duet, (Tr.4) and the death of Rodrigo (tr.12) who sacrifices
himself to save the prince and, he hopes, Flanders; both
are with a lyric sounding Gwyn Hughes Jones. The long duet
from La Traviata, with Allen suitably austere before
realising Violetta’s qualities, is another assumption of
distinction with his now heavier voice ideally expressive
in all the aspects of the interpretation (tr.8). Claire Rutter
is a full-voiced and dramatic Violetta. Allen’s fuller tone
in his sixty-third year enables him to give justice to Macbeth’s Perfidi!
- Pietà, rispetto (tr.5) as well as Ford’s monologue from
Falstaff, a role he also sang on stage (tr.3). Although the
Verdi is interspersed with Mozart, Kurt Weill’s September
Song (tr.14) gives a glimpse of the singer’s skills in
lighter music, skills he has brought to operetta with distinguished
performances as Danilo in The Merry Widow (Royal Opera
House, 1997) and as Eisenstein in Die Fledermaus (Glyndebourne
2003). Both of these performances were broadcast and will
doubtless appear on DVD where Thomas Allen’s well thought
out and acted assumptions bring an added dimension to the
consummate vocal skills exhibited here. The careful husbanding
of his vocal resources, and choice of repertoire, over his
career means he can take on a recording such as this without
fear for his reputation. Darker tone of course, but, unlike
many others there is no sign of vocal spread or thinness.
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