Περιγραφή
Καλλιτέχνες
The nineteenth-century French opera overture was for many years looked down on by certain music critics (and musicians) – largely as the genre turned its back on the historical adherence to strict musical form (fugue, sonata form, etc.). Percy Scholes, in the 1955 Oxford Companion to Music, had the following to say: ‘a cheap but not always ineffective type of opera overture is that of the pot-pourri or medley – little more than a string of tunes from the work to follow.’ These overtures were incredibly popular in their time, and the revival of this repertoire is long overdue. Daniel Auber composed more than fifty operas, some for the Paris Opéra and some for the Opéra Comique. His Grand Opera La Muette de Portici famously sparked the Belgian revolution in 1830, which led to the country’s independence in 1839. Les Cloches de Corneville was by far the most successful of Planquette’s twenty-four operas, receiving some 400 consecutive performances. Alexandre Lecocq’s La Fille de Madame Angot was premièred in Brussels in 1872 and is set in post-revolutionary Paris. The Overture is followed here by numbers put together by Gordon Jacob, in his re-orchestration of material taken mainly from the opera, for Léonide Massine’s ballet Mam’zelle Angot, which closely follows the action of the opera. Reviews BBC Music Magazine September 2024 “Neeme Järvi and the Estonian National Symphony Orchestra bring plenty of zest as well as insight to their playing , especially in the three Auber overtures. – 3 out of 5 stars (Performance) / 4 out of 5 stars (Recording) Gramophone Magazine October 2024 “Certainly, Järvi and his Estonian orchestra go at it all with affection and flair: dance rhythms are springy, tuttis are explosive and the Estonian woodwinds have a pleasingly Gallic tang. Classical Explorer 29th June 2024 “What an amazingly life-enhancing disc!… Järvi brings a rhythmic lift to the performance that is to characterise the entire disc… A beautifully performed and recorded disc – and what repertoire! A celebration of life itself. |