That Sir Charles is a superb Mozartean is a well-known fact, and 
                he is well documented on record. Most monumental is his complete 
                cycle of the symphonies. He has also been successful in the field 
                of opera, most recently with La clemenza di Tito for DG, 
                which ranks among the best.
                
              
He recorded Così 
                fan tutte fifteen years ago for Telarc with an international 
                cast including Felicity Lott and Jerry Hadley. A highlights disc 
                was issued a while ago (see 
                review) and it confirmed that the set is competitive in the 
                crowded field of Così recordings, where it rubs shoulders 
                with Karajan’s mono recording from the 1950s, now on Naxos, EMI 
                (see  
                review) and Regis (see review), 
                Karl Böhm’s second version with Schwarzkopf and Christa Ludwig 
                and possibly a couple of others. As always Mackerras is very aware 
                of performance practice and inspires his singers to embellish 
                the vocal line. Fifteen years ago he employed the Scottish Chamber 
                Orchestra, playing on modern instruments but with 18th 
                century style. When he returns to the opera for this English language 
                version he goes the whole hog and employs a real ‘period’ band, 
                the wholly admirable Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. Like 
                the Telarc version this is mostly a swift and virile reading but 
                even crisper thanks to the period instruments. ‘Swift’ doesn’t 
                necessarily mean ‘hard-driven’; Sir Charles makes the music breathe 
                and the overture, the airiest of orchestral pieces, flutters like 
                a butterfly in the garden on a warm summer’s day, even lighter 
                when played as here. The delicate scoring, especially the woodwind, 
                becomes beautifully transparent in his hands. As a whole the many 
                tender moments of the score are well catered for while there is 
                no lack of power in the dramatic outbursts. The chorus Alla 
                gloria militar (‘Oh, the soldier’s life for me!’ in the English 
                version, CD 1 tr 14) is intensely warlike and both finales fizz 
                along with spirited elegance. 
              
The feeling of speed 
                  and dramatic unity is properly underlined by the unification 
                  of recitatives and musical numbers: they grip into each other 
                  attacca. The secco recitatives are stylishly accompanied 
                  by a fortepiano.
                
The cast is a strong 
                  one with two favourite ‘veterans’ in the all-important 
                  roles of Don Alfonso and Despina. They are the ‘masterminds’, 
                  who manipulate the four lovers and for a successful performance 
                  of Così fan tutte those characters need both verbal acuity 
                  and expressive acting. In this case they have both. It might 
                  be argued that Lesley Garrett overdoes things at times with 
                  distorted voice and laughs and giggles but I prefer that to 
                  a straight-faced reading and she sings with her customary finesse; 
                  her aria At fifteen a girl already Must be truly wise and 
                  worldly is as fresh as a newly opened bottle of sparkling 
                  water. Thomas Allen’s voice has hardly aged at all and he is 
                  impressive in the aria Man accuses the woman (CD 3 tr. 
                  10) – the one which ends with Così fan tutte! – and in 
                  recitatives as well as musical numbers his enunciation and phrasing 
                  is a pleasure. Christopher Maltman is both virile and sweet-voiced 
                  as Guglielmo (or Guilelmo as Da Ponte invariably spelled his 
                  name) and Toby Spence can fine down his rather bright tenor 
                  to lyrical tenderness, as in the beautifully sung Her eye 
                  so alluring (Un’ aura amorosa). He is even more impressive 
                  in the duet with Fiordiligi in act 2 All too slowly the hours 
                  are fleeting. Janice Watson has both the creamy beauty and 
                  dramatic bite, and also the wide register for a successful reading 
                  of Fiordiligi’s role. Only on some top notes she can 
                  sound a bit forced. As Dorabella we hear Diana Montague, whose 
                  mezzo-soprano is as secure and well-modulated as ever. Her duet 
                  with Guglielmo is one of the high-spots of this performance.
                
It is however as 
                  an ensemble performance, as an entity, that this recording stands 
                  out, no doubt thanks to Sir Charles Mackerras’s overriding influence. 
                  The recorded sound is reliable, as it mostly is with Chandos 
                  products, though for my taste some of the recitatives are a 
                  shade too backwardly balanced. The English text version by Marmaduke 
                  Browne was made for a performance by the Royal College of Music 
                  at the Savoy Theatre in London in 1890. It has been adapted 
                  by John Cox and presumably somewhat modernized but it still 
                  has a rather old-fashioned tinge, which isn’t at all unbecoming.
                
English-speaking 
                  readers who prefer opera in the vernacular need not hesitate: 
                  this is from all points of view a splendid reading. Those who 
                  normally choose recordings in the original language should find 
                  this a highly satisfying version with Sir Charles Mackerras’s 
                  lively conducting and the six accomplished singing-actors co-operating 
                  as a unity that is actually more than the sum of its parts.
                
              
Göran Forsling