MOZART La Finta Giardiniera
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Genre:
Opera
Label: Erato
Magazine Review Date: 09/2015
Media Format: Digital Versatile Disc
Media Runtime: 176
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 2564 616645
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(La) finta giardiniera |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
(Le) Concert d'Astrée Carlo Allemano, Anchise, Tenor Dimitri La Sade-Dotti Emmanuelle Haïm, Conductor Enea Scala, Belfiore, Tenor Erin Morley, Sandrina, Soprano Marcelo Rodrigue Marie Virginia Savastano, Serpetta, Soprano Marie-Adeline Henry, Arminda, Soprano Marie-Claude Chappuis, Ramiro, Mezzo soprano Nikolay Borchev, Nardo, Baritone Rolin de Goes Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Author: Richard Wigmore
All the cast seem natural stage animals and take well to the camera. Among a sprinkling of Italians – always desirable in opera buffa – Maria Savastano as the wide-eyed, pocket-sized Serpetta is a delightful comic presence. Singing with bright, focused tone and gleefully dispatching her reams of patter, she has her would-be lover Nardo, played with gusto by Nikolay Borchev, wrapped round her little finger. Marie-Claude Chappuis, perpetually clutching a badminton racket, brings agility and (in her distraught Act 3 aria) passion to the serious music Mozart wrote for the lovelorn Ramiro (Chappuis sang the same role on René Jacobs’s CD recording); and the mannishly dressed, rapier-wielding Marie-Adeline Henry makes a vocally and histrionically formidable Arminda, her over-the-top haughtiness tamed only when she accepts Ramiro as her husband.
Neither the Governor, the rough-voiced Carlo Allemano, nor Enea Scala, incisive but slightly gritty of tone as the Count, is a Mozartian paragon. But Scala vividly charts the Count’s progressive transformation from preening foppishness, via his ‘mad scene’ – a musical and dramatic highlight – to his final remorse and reunion with Sandrina. In the title-role, fast-rising American soprano Erin Morley virtually steals the show, as she should. No shrinking violet, she subtly hints at the vulnerability beneath Sandrina’s poise and savoir faire, singing with lovely, pellucid tone and movingly realising the terror and despair of her Act 2 scena. Emmanuelle Haïm encourages playing of energy and colour from her period band and works up a fine comic lather in the act finales. While Dörrie’s Salzburg production generates more zany fun, there is plenty to savour in this spare, elegant and emotionally truthful staging of an opera which already hints at the future composer of Figaro.
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