Description
The Orpheus myth was as important for the birth of opera in France as it had been in Italy. In 1684, Charpentier composed a work for three voices, OrphĂ©e descendant aux Enfers. With this piece, remarkable for its style and concision, he showed how well he had assimilated Carissimiâs art. It is a dramatic scene, similar to the âsacred historiesâ of the Roman master. The text, by an unknown author, narrates Orpheusâ quest for his beloved in the Underworld. The heroâs haute-contre gives him an elegiac timbre â this was the vocal register in which Charpentier, himself a singer, excelled. In 1687 he created his second illustration of the myth, La Descente dâOrphĂ©e aux Enfers. In its two acts can be discerned the outline of a possible complete opera â the manuscript has reached us shorn of the third act in which Orpheus would presumably have lost Eurydice before being devoured by the Maenads. While La Descente dâOrphĂ©e has already been recorded several times, the OrphĂ©e of 1684 is a rarity and a magnificent discovery. In these two roles that might have been written for him, Reinoud van Mechelen is at the peak of his artistry, while his ensemble A Nocte Temporis and Lionel Meunierâs group Vox Luminis blend in perfect symbiosis.