MOZART Zaide
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Genre:
Opera
Label: Signum
Magazine Review Date: 10/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 77
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: SIGCD473

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Zaïde |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Allan Clayton, Gomatz, Tenor Classical Opera Company Darren Jeffrey, Osmin, Bass-baritone Ian Page Jacques Imbrailo, Allazim, Baritone Jonathan McGovern, Vorsinger, Baritone Sophie Bevan, Zaide, Soprano Stuart Jackson, Soliman, Tenor Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Author: David Vickers
There is no overture, so Classical Opera’s top-notch orchestra begins with an entr’acte from Thamos, König in Ägypten packed with Sturm und Drang. The rhetoric adopted for the strings in the slaves’ opening chorus (‘Brüder, lasst uns lustig sein’) manages to be both sturdy and cheerful, and is astutely juxtaposed against the disconsolate mood of Gomatz’s anguished melodrama: the orchestral responses to each line of speech are paced and dramatised beautifully, and Allan Clayton delivers the spoken text with the same compassionate characterisation that he invests in his arias. Zaide’s ‘Ruhe sanft’ is a sure-fire success thanks to Sophie Bevan’s intelligent soulfulness, Rachel Chaplin’s plangent oboe (a little bit distant in the mix) and finely shaded strings. Stuart Jackson performs Soliman’s furious melodrama (‘Zaide entflohen!’) and vengeful aria (‘Der stolze Löw’) with controlled malevolence; the tyrant could have sounded more implacable from the outset of the melodrama, but perhaps the decision not to stamp and shout furiously in every line of the long scene characterises the villain’s response to bad news as a credible process of emotional complexity. There is compelling synergy between dramatically aware orchestral playing and Bevan’s marvellous singing in Zaide’s double-whammy of her serene lament after capture (‘Trostlos schluchzet Philomele’) and the defiant courage of her outburst in reaction to the death sentence (‘Tiger! wetze nur die Klauen’) – as powerful as any confrontation Mozart ever produced in his finished masterpieces.
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