Free Music Notes for Purcell: Dido and Aeneas

Camilla Tilling - Purcell: Dido and Aeneas

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Free Music Notes for Purcell: Dido and Aeneas

Free Music Review: Whew!
Hit: 5 Stars

Jaw-droppingly good -- a vibrant, intensely theatrical reading of the score with an exemplary cast. The text is wonderfully projected, excellently ACTED & beautifully sung, the orchestral performance (including some breath-taking tempos & apt interpolations) supporting the dramatic structure at every turn. As a performer myself, I appreciated its brilliant, savage, almost rock-and-roll energy -- this is easily my favorite of any of the recordings I've encountered. The entire performance just DANCES! A couple high points for me: The vaguely leering, sly, just plain nasty quality of the chorus and soloists in the first scene as they play pander between the protagonists; the depth, commitment, & fire of Felicity Palmer's Sorceress (for once not a camped-up Cruella DeVil figure), David Daniels' eerie countertenor sprite, and probably the simplest, cleanest, most moving "When I Am Laid..." ever recorded. And did I mention those TEMPOS? But there really ARE no low points here. This is a truly exciting recording.

Free Music Review: DIDO AND AENEAS
Hit: 5 Stars

"Dido and Aeneas" is one of my favorite operas. I only wish that I could see it in, preferably, a venue intimate enough to capture its beauty and passion. I own 5 different cd versions and only the one with Von Otter and the one with Hunt Lieberson come close to this one. This is a truly magnificent accomplishment: Every singer is perfect for his or her role, the chorus is wonderful and the orchestra under Haim cannot be topped. Some, I've read here, find the tempos too fast or even rushed. I find them brisk and exciting. Graham and Bostridge cannot be beaten.

Free Music Review: Perfect
Hit: 5 Stars

This CD is part of a Journey to the roots of beautiful music. The polyphony of the voices is almost hurting. When I Am Laid In Earth is so compelling. This is a must in the CD collection of Bach , Palestrina and Pärt lovers.

Free Music Review: Exquisite Dido and Aeneas
Hit: 5 Stars

Susan Graham's performance of Dido is rich-toned, expressive--all you could ask for. The rest of the cast is also superb in this wonderful recording directed Emmanuelle Haim.

Free Music Review: Vigorous Playing Overshadows the Drama
Hit: 4 Stars

I am unable to jump on the bandwagon for this recording. It is indeed a must-listen ... fascinating from start to finish, but in the end the effectiveness of the drama is undermined by key choices.

The playing is monstrous in the sense of revelatory ... Haim brings forth accents, rhythms, and textures you didn't know were there. The score is alive with thumping, strumming, and ornament. You really won't want to miss this reading, but for me it's not the one I will return to for the sake of the story. More moving by far is Hogwood's with Bott, Kirkby, Baird (caviar casting as Dido, Belinda and the Second Woman!), Ainsley, Thomas, and Chance. Hogwood's instrumental profile is less robust and deluxe (he uses no winds as Haim and Jacobs do), but the musical lines are more clearly drawn and voices more true to character.

I love Susan Graham, and she certainly does wonders with the music here. Her breath control is enviable, her phrasing gorgeous, her ornamentaiton supple, though her attack less authentic than early music specialists. She wraps the music in velvet tones. But in the final confrontation she is all woman and no queen, which I think undercuts her tragedy: her "away! away!" is more desperate than determined. Her lament, though beautiful, makes less of an impression than most because her timbre is almost completely absorbed in the lower strings. Still, she does her reputation no discredit on this outing.

Aeneas's music lies a shade too low for a tenor, although most performances nowadays go with one. Bostridge's vocal impersonation is interesting but not convincing -- just too fussy for my taste, the word-pointing à la Fischer-Dieskau out of place for such a sparsely drawn role. He blows the one opportunity in this short opera to win sympathy for his character, the soliloquy in Act II after the Spirit's visit. John Mark Ainsley for Hogwood cuts a more honest figure throughout, evincing more feeling in just his melismatic "ah!" than Bostridge in the whole of the passage. The baritone Gerald Finley for Jacobs is better still.

The wayward sisters are not very witch-like in tone -- Felicity Palmer sounds more like a rival than a nemesis, and the witches were so attractive in tone I had to check that they weren't Belinda and 2nd Woman doubling roles! The echo in the echo chorus is barely noticeable. Eschewing the typical caricatures is certainly a valid interpretation, but in this performance where the playing is so strong and even outlandish, this restraint is a bit curious, one token of the dramatic weakness here. All the more bizarre that the "horrid music" that concludes the Echo Dance of the Furies should be teeming with haunted-house effects.

David Daniels certainly adds cachet as the Spirit, but he is less atmospheric than the proper British countertenors Michael Chance for Hogwood and Robin Blaze for Jacobs.

Some of the reasons this recording fails to bring off the drama are suggested above. Because of the boisterous playing, the vocal lines are less exposed and affecting and they fail to up the ante staked by the instrumentalists -- and how could they? Bostridge's overliterate interpretation stunts the drama, too. Vocal repeats by all performers have been carefully ornamented, always beguilingly but in rare cases it poses a distraction; ultimately the virtuosity is one more barrier between listeners and the emotional center of the opera.

Though instrumentally Haim provides atmosphere galore, she neglects similar vocal opportunities. "To the Hills and the Vales" at the end of Act I is just another romp, rather than an invitation. The ominous solo chorale by Belinda in Act II, "Oft she visits this lov'd mountain" is muddied by the oppressive strings. Both Haim and Hogwood seem to use stage machinery for the storm effects (Jacobs opts for recorded nature sounds!), but Hogwood does a better job of integrating it musically and dramatically.

The single most crippling factor dramatically is the obvious choice to have the chorus provide a detached commentary in an oversimplification of its role in Greek tragedy, rather than a sympathetic sounding-board. This detachment is apparent throughout, but never moreso than in the closing chorus, "With drooping wings" sung over Dido's grave. The omission of an instrumental ritornello (or repetition of the chorus as Jacobs offers) only makes the coldness more stark.

The word I keep returning to is drama ... this recording is exciting, incisive, vigorous ... but it fails to deliver the drama of a wronged woman, a betrayed heart, a noble queen, and the forces converging upon her.
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