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Giovanni Battista PERGOLESI
(1710-1736)
Nel chiuso centro (chamber cantata for soprano, strings and
continuo)* [16:36]
La conversione e morte di San Guglielmo duca d’Aquitania:
Sinfonia to the sacred drama [4:57]
Questo è il piano (cantata for contralto, string and
continuo)** [13:01]
Stabat Mater (1736?) (for soprano, contralto, strings and
continuo)*/** [37:06]
Anna Netrebko (soprano)* and Marianna Pizzolato (alto)**
Orchestra dell’ Accademia di Santa Cecilia/Antonio Pappano
rec. Festspielhaus, Baden-Baden, Germany, July 2010. DDD.
Texts and translations included
Also available as Standard Edition (CD only) 477
9337
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 477 8857 (Prestige Edition, CD + DVD ‘Behind
the Scenes’) [73:16 + DVD]
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Poor old Pergolesi, to whom almost everything composed in the
eighteenth century that wasn’t nailed down used to be
attributed - far more than he could ever have written in his
short life - is now restricted to a much narrower repertoire.
Most of what Stravinsky thought was by Pergolesi when he borrowed
from him for his ballet-with-song Pulcinella is now known
not to have been by him. What remains as firm attribution, however,
is music of a high order and the works included here are very
fine, even if only the Stabat Mater, together with La
Serva Padrona, has received much attention - too much attention?
- in the past.
The new Stabat Mater has very strong competition indeed,
with recordings featuring Emma Kirkby and David Taylor (BIS
BIS-SACD-1546), Sara Mingardo and Claudio Abbado (DGG’s
own rival recording, Archiv 477 8077: most liked this rather
better than John Sheppard - see review),
Anna Prohaska, Bernarda Fink and Bernhard Forck (Harmonia Mundi
HMC902072), Eileen Manahan Thomas, Robin Blaze and Florilegium
(Channel CCSSA29810), Gemma Bertagnoli, Sara Mingardo and Rinaldo
Alessandrini (Naïve OPS30441 or OPS30461 - see review),
and Barbara Bonney, Andreas Scholl and Christophe Rousset (Decca
466 1342) to name but a few of the best of a long list of contenders.
My own favourite is the Alessandrini at mid-price - or, rather,
it’s my favourite at times when I’m ready for its
exaggeratedly operatic tempi. Bearing in mind that I’m
not always in the mood for that, I plumped in my February 2011
Download
Roundup for a recording with Gillian Fisher, Michael Chance,
The King’s Consort and Robert King on Hyperion CDA66294,
coupled with the equally fine Salve Regina in a minor
and the less well-known In cælestibus regnis. King
has an equally strong sense of baroque drama, but it’s
more tempered than Alessandrini’s and his version is more
liveable-with.
The new version builds on the success of the earlier partnership
between Anna Netrebko, the Santa Cecilia Orchestra and Antonio
Pappano in Rossini’s Stabat Mater, a recording
to which Simon Thompson awarded Recording of the Month
status (EMI 6405292 - see review.)
Robert J Farr was somewhat less impressed, especially with Netrebko’s
contribution - see review
- and I shall not be surprised to see that this DG release similarly
divides opinion. The only two comments on this recording on
the Amazon website when I checked were both from disgruntled
writers.
Anna Netrebko, Marianna Pizzolato and Antonio Pappano certainly
give Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater the operatic treatment,
aided and abetted by a reduced-size Santa Cecilia Orchestra,
apparently coached in baroque style, in what the booklet aptly
describes as ‘Italian Fire and Russian Fervour’.
Despite the hype, the two solo voices blend well and the Italo-Russian
partnership works so well that I find it impossible to dislike
the result: more restrained than the Alessandrini, but more
dramatic than the two recordings which Emma Kirkby has made,
with James Bowman and Christopher Hogwood (Decca Oiseau Lyre
425 6292, mid-price) and for BIS, as listed above. Either of
those two Kirkby recordings would be fine if you’re not
in the mood for high drama. Alternatively, the new DG recording
captures something of both without falling into that awkward
and painful position between two stools, though it does it in
a manner somewhat removed from Robert King’s sense of
baroque style.
The main work is preceded by two chamber cantatas, one for each
soloist. I particularly enjoyed Nel chiuso centro, Orpheus’s
lament for Euridice, a fine addition to the recorded repertoire
of music on this familiar theme. At times I wondered if Anna
Netrebko was accommodating her voice sufficiently to the requirements
of baroque music - something which she was very much aware that
she needed to do, according to the notes - but it never becomes
a serious problem. At other times I wondered if she was trying
a little too hard to hold back her voice. In any case, there’s
only one current rival, on a Brilliant Classics recording, also
containing the Stabat Mater, and well worth considering
at its super-budget price (Angharadd Gruffydd Jones, Ensemble
Concerto and Timothy Brown, 93352, two CDs - see review
of DVD equivalent).
After the Sinfonia to San Guglielmo, Marianna
Pizzolato sings the chamber cantata Questo è il piano,
another secular work on the theme of lost love. I thought Pizzolato’s
contribution, here and in the Stabat Mater, no less impressive
than Netrebko’s and, if anything, more suited to the baroque
style.
Whether the de luxe hardback edition, with its detailed 60-page
booklet and ‘behind the scenes’ DVD is worth paying
extra for remains for you to decide. I haven’t seen the
‘standard’ version, but I’d be inclined to
go for that if I were paying. That said, I’m not the sort
of person ever to play the ‘bonus’ extras that come
with DVDs of films or operas, but they may be just your thing.
With excellent singing, fine orchestral support and a set of
performances which, while hardly likely to be mistaken for the
product of the period-instrument school, remain broadly true
to the spirit of the music, I’m sure that this CD will
find a ready market. The high quality of the recorded sound
is a welcome bonus.
Brian Wilson
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