Cherubini: Les Abencérages or The Standard of Grenada / Vashegyi, Orfeo Orchestra
Cherubiniâs Les AbencĂ©rages, premiered in 1813, heralds the spectacle and extravagance of Romantic grand opera. From the Alhambra gardens to the battlefield, the action skillfully intertwines political conspiracies with a love story. Underpinned by the energy and timbres of period instruments, this recording demonstrates the workâs modernity and its musical qualities. AnaĂŻs Constans valiantly tackles the demanding role of NoraĂŻme, while Edgaras Montvidas displays his lyric tenor voice in a series of sublime airs whose beauty was already hinted at by none other than Roberto Alagna in a recital disc released in 2003. Around this couple, a plethoric cast of soloists (DoliĂ©, Sargsyan, Williams, Martin, Lavoie, etc.) achieves the same high standards of French diction and style. The Hungarian conductor György Vashegyi, flanked by the Purcell Choir and Orfeo Orchestra, reveals here another key milestone of French Romantic opera.
REVIEWS:
Unstaged in Paris for over two centuries Les AbenceÌrages, a kind of âmissing linkâ in the history of French opera, has been disinterred by Bru Zane. The overture with its two warring themes â romantic passion versus battlefield chivalry â announce a changed sensibility where the political is properly personal.
GyoÌrgy Vashegyi and the Orfeo Orchestra find Beethoven â drums and trumpets and driving rhythms â in Cherubiniâs score, and hints at the start of Act III of the Romanticism to come with Mendelssohn. While Ătienne de Jouyâs libretto is set in the exotic Alhambra of late-15th century Moorish Grenada, its spectacle and masterly use of the chorus suggests the coming French Grand OpĂ©ra. Its story presents two warring factions within the last Spanish caliphate ready to be reconciled through the warrior Almazorâs marriage to Princess NorĂŻme. That is until the villainous Vizier AlĂ©mar starts to plot!
Cherubiniâs vocal line is free of Italian decorative thrills. AnaĂŻs Constans handles NorĂŻmeâs high tessitura with grace, and Edgaras Montvidasâs Almanzor is a worthy heir to Louis Nourrit, the tenor who created the role in 1813. His farewell when exiled from Grenada having âlostâ the kingdomâs sacred standard on the battlefield is properly affecting.
Yet itâs the Purcell Choir who steal the vocal honours, with magnificent singing by the women in Act I as they prepare for the wedding, and the men rattling their vocal sabres handsomely as the plot thickens in Act II. For all that, the musical history is perhaps more striking than the opera itself.
--Â BBC Music Magazine
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Cherubini: Les Abencérages or The Standard of Grenada / Vashegyi, Orfeo Orchestra
Cherubini: Les Abencérages or The Standard of Grenada / Vashegyi, Orfeo Orchestra
Cherubiniâs Les AbencĂ©rages, premiered in 1813, heralds the spectacle and extravagance of Romantic grand opera. From the Alhambra gardens to the battlefield, the action skillfully intertwines political conspiracies with a love story. Underpinned by the energy and timbres of period instruments, this recording demonstrates the workâs modernity and its musical qualities. AnaĂŻs Constans valiantly tackles the demanding role of NoraĂŻme, while Edgaras Montvidas displays his lyric tenor voice in a series of sublime airs whose beauty was already hinted at by none other than Roberto Alagna in a recital disc released in 2003. Around this couple, a plethoric cast of soloists (DoliĂ©, Sargsyan, Williams, Martin, Lavoie, etc.) achieves the same high standards of French diction and style. The Hungarian conductor György Vashegyi, flanked by the Purcell Choir and Orfeo Orchestra, reveals here another key milestone of French Romantic opera.
REVIEWS:
Unstaged in Paris for over two centuries Les AbenceÌrages, a kind of âmissing linkâ in the history of French opera, has been disinterred by Bru Zane. The overture with its two warring themes â romantic passion versus battlefield chivalry â announce a changed sensibility where the political is properly personal.
GyoÌrgy Vashegyi and the Orfeo Orchestra find Beethoven â drums and trumpets and driving rhythms â in Cherubiniâs score, and hints at the start of Act III of the Romanticism to come with Mendelssohn. While Ătienne de Jouyâs libretto is set in the exotic Alhambra of late-15th century Moorish Grenada, its spectacle and masterly use of the chorus suggests the coming French Grand OpĂ©ra. Its story presents two warring factions within the last Spanish caliphate ready to be reconciled through the warrior Almazorâs marriage to Princess NorĂŻme. That is until the villainous Vizier AlĂ©mar starts to plot!
Cherubiniâs vocal line is free of Italian decorative thrills. AnaĂŻs Constans handles NorĂŻmeâs high tessitura with grace, and Edgaras Montvidasâs Almanzor is a worthy heir to Louis Nourrit, the tenor who created the role in 1813. His farewell when exiled from Grenada having âlostâ the kingdomâs sacred standard on the battlefield is properly affecting.
Yet itâs the Purcell Choir who steal the vocal honours, with magnificent singing by the women in Act I as they prepare for the wedding, and the men rattling their vocal sabres handsomely as the plot thickens in Act II. For all that, the musical history is perhaps more striking than the opera itself.
--Â BBC Music Magazine
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Description
Cherubiniâs Les AbencĂ©rages, premiered in 1813, heralds the spectacle and extravagance of Romantic grand opera. From the Alhambra gardens to the battlefield, the action skillfully intertwines political conspiracies with a love story. Underpinned by the energy and timbres of period instruments, this recording demonstrates the workâs modernity and its musical qualities. AnaĂŻs Constans valiantly tackles the demanding role of NoraĂŻme, while Edgaras Montvidas displays his lyric tenor voice in a series of sublime airs whose beauty was already hinted at by none other than Roberto Alagna in a recital disc released in 2003. Around this couple, a plethoric cast of soloists (DoliĂ©, Sargsyan, Williams, Martin, Lavoie, etc.) achieves the same high standards of French diction and style. The Hungarian conductor György Vashegyi, flanked by the Purcell Choir and Orfeo Orchestra, reveals here another key milestone of French Romantic opera.
REVIEWS:
Unstaged in Paris for over two centuries Les AbenceÌrages, a kind of âmissing linkâ in the history of French opera, has been disinterred by Bru Zane. The overture with its two warring themes â romantic passion versus battlefield chivalry â announce a changed sensibility where the political is properly personal.
GyoÌrgy Vashegyi and the Orfeo Orchestra find Beethoven â drums and trumpets and driving rhythms â in Cherubiniâs score, and hints at the start of Act III of the Romanticism to come with Mendelssohn. While Ătienne de Jouyâs libretto is set in the exotic Alhambra of late-15th century Moorish Grenada, its spectacle and masterly use of the chorus suggests the coming French Grand OpĂ©ra. Its story presents two warring factions within the last Spanish caliphate ready to be reconciled through the warrior Almazorâs marriage to Princess NorĂŻme. That is until the villainous Vizier AlĂ©mar starts to plot!
Cherubiniâs vocal line is free of Italian decorative thrills. AnaĂŻs Constans handles NorĂŻmeâs high tessitura with grace, and Edgaras Montvidasâs Almanzor is a worthy heir to Louis Nourrit, the tenor who created the role in 1813. His farewell when exiled from Grenada having âlostâ the kingdomâs sacred standard on the battlefield is properly affecting.
Yet itâs the Purcell Choir who steal the vocal honours, with magnificent singing by the women in Act I as they prepare for the wedding, and the men rattling their vocal sabres handsomely as the plot thickens in Act II. For all that, the musical history is perhaps more striking than the opera itself.
--Â BBC Music Magazine