Adam Le Toréador
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Adolphe (Charles) Adam
Genre:
Opera
Label: Decca
Magazine Review Date: 4/1998
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 77
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 455 664-2DHO
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(Le) Toréador |
Adolphe (Charles) Adam, Composer
Adolphe (Charles) Adam, Composer John Aler, Tracolin, Tenor Michel Trempont, Don Belflor, Tenor Richard Bonynge, Conductor Sumi Jo, Coraline, Soprano Welsh National Opera Orchestra |
Author: Andrew Lamb
Richard Bonynge’s ability to persuade Decca to record out-of-the-way nineteenth-century French stage works has been to our repeated benefit over the past 40 years. Yet few of the results have been more welcome than this delightful operatic souffle. Not that the music is completely unfamiliar, since a 1963 radio version was briefly available on Musidisc’s Gaiete Lyrique label (3/92). However, that omitted not only the dialogue but also the overture, some major arias and important incidental music, all of which are included here.
Despite the title, there is little specifically Spanish about the piece beyond the Barcelona setting and the cuckolded elderly husband who just happens to have been a toreador. The love interest is between the former opera-singer wife and her flautist admirer, and it is the important contribution of the flute (almost a fourth character, and admirably played by Jonathan Burgess) that accounts for much of the aforementioned incidental music. The admirer identifies himself by means of assorted operatic airs and grades the seriousness of the husband’s infidelities by whether he plays a fandango or a cachucha. The score’s most familiar number is a set of variations onAh, vous dirai-je, maman (Twinkle, twinkle, little star, if you like); but there is much else that brings out Sumi Jo’s crystal-clear, effortless coloratura to marvellous effect, as well as showing off John Aler’s ardent, elegant tenor and Michel Trempont’s well-practised comic baritone. Delicious! '
Despite the title, there is little specifically Spanish about the piece beyond the Barcelona setting and the cuckolded elderly husband who just happens to have been a toreador. The love interest is between the former opera-singer wife and her flautist admirer, and it is the important contribution of the flute (almost a fourth character, and admirably played by Jonathan Burgess) that accounts for much of the aforementioned incidental music. The admirer identifies himself by means of assorted operatic airs and grades the seriousness of the husband’s infidelities by whether he plays a fandango or a cachucha. The score’s most familiar number is a set of variations on
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