HANDEL Orlando
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: George Frideric Handel
Genre:
Opera
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Magazine Review Date: 07/2014
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 160
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 479 2199

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Orlando |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Bejun Mehta, Orlando, Countertenor B'Rock George Frideric Handel, Composer Konstantin Wolff, Zoroastro, Baritone Kristina Hammarström, Medoro, Mezzo soprano René Jacobs Sophie Karthäuser, Angelica, Soprano Sunhae Im, Dorinda, Soprano |
Author: Richard Wigmore
With three cellos and three double basses, many of the sonorities, not least in the recitatives involving Zoroastro and/or Orlando, are uncommonly weighty. The musette drones in Dorinda’s arias have a raw, demotic edge, a far cry from the etherealised rusticity evoked by William Christie in his Erato recording. Typically, Jacobs favours mobile tempi, sometimes controversially, as in the beautiful Act 1 trio where Angelica and Medoro seek to console Dorinda, or Medoro’s dulcet ‘Verdi allori’, which here becomes a jaunty minuet. Indeed, Jacobs often seems to minimise the element of nostalgic pastoral touchingly caught by Christie.
The cast, though, is more than a match for the competition. The unstable Orlando is perhaps the most dramatically challenging of Handel’s castrato roles. Combining histrionic flair, terrific agility in rapid ‘divisions’ and a wide palette of colours, Bejun Mehta rises superbly to its demands. He brings a musing inwardness to his opening cavatina and a finely judged balance of pathos, distraction and unhinged fury to the mad scene, singing the final repeat of the gavotte ‘Vaghe pupille’ as if in a trance.
Konstantin Wolff dispatches Zoroastro’s imposing arias cleanly and stylishly, though without the ideal weight and authority for the opera’s benign master-of-ceremonies. Low notes, a speciality of Antonio Montagnana who created the role in 1733, lack resonance. With her warm, evenly produced mezzo, Kristina Hammarström makes a sympathetic figure of the rather passive Medoro, almost vindicating Jacobs’s spritely tempo for ‘Verdi allori’. Sophie Karthäuser, with a hint of steel in her pellucid soprano, catches all the tenderness and passion of Angelica’s music: formidable in anger (Angelica is, after all, a queen), she phrases the elegiac ‘Verdi piante’ with sensuous grace. The endearing figure of Dorinda, unlucky in love yet distilling a naive wisdom, is portrayed with charm and spirit by Sunhae Im, much more in her element here than in some Jacobs recordings. If Christie’s recording, consistently well sung and conducted con amore, is a safer first choice, Jacobs’s boldly theatrical Orlando is a predictably vivid addition to the Handel discography.
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