STRAVINSKY The Rake's Progress
Screen technology at last for the ‘Hockney’ Rake’s Progress
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Igor Stravinsky
Genre:
Opera
Label: Opus Arte
Magazine Review Date: 03/2013
Media Format: Digital Versatile Disc
Media Runtime: 140
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: OA1062D
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(The) Rake's Progress |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Clive Bayley, Trulove, Bass Duncan Rock, Keeper of the Madhouse, Bass Elena Manistina, Baba the Turk, Mezzo soprano Glyndebourne Chorus Graham Clark, Sellem, Tenor Igor Stravinsky, Composer London Philharmonic Orchestra Matthew Rose, Nick Shadow, Baritone Matti Lehtinen, Tom Rakewell, Tenor Miah Persson, Anne, Soprano Susan Gorton, Mother Goose, Mezzo soprano Wladimir Jurowski, Conductor |
Author: Richard Fairman
In other respects, though, the production has started to feel its age, the atmosphere here being sweetly naive (on balance a plus) but rather bland (not so good). It is hard to imagine a Tom Rakewell who looks the part better than the lanky, almost adolescent Topi Lehtipuu, his wide-eyed innocence an open invitation to corruption, and he sings the role with elegance. Miah Persson is almost his equal, except that her voice sounds constricted in Anne Trulove’s Act 1 solo scene – a shame, as she is predictably lovely from there on, melting hearts in her lullaby to Tom. The weak link is Matthew Rose’s Nick Shadow, as this magnificent young bass (heard to such advantage in Glyndebourne’s recent CD recording of A Midsummer Night’s Dream) proves unable to create a devilish persona without more help from the director. Elena Manistina makes a suitably exotic Baba the Turk and Graham Clark a brilliant Sellem. The combination of Vladimir Jurowski and the London Philharmonic Orchestra ensures crisp ensemble of the highest quality, and also more warmth from the pit than might have been expected.
The main competition comes from Opus Arte’s 2008 DVD from Brussels. In the theatre I easily preferred Glyndebourne’s production but Robert Lepage’s cinematic take on the opera – Nick Shadow is a Hollywood film director luring a simple Texan boy to a life of glamour and excess – looks splendid on the small screen and the electricity between the Rake and Nick Shadow crackles. The answer may be to get both.
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