Gloria in Excelsis Deo:
Celebrating the completion of the recording of Johann Sebastian Bach’s sacred
cantatas. Bach Collegium Japan conducted by Masaaki Suzuki. BIS. $29.99
(Blu-ray Disc).
Puccini: Complete Songs for
Soprano and Piano. Krassimira Stoyanova, soprano; Maria Prinz, piano.
Naxos. $12.99.
Verismo: Arias by Puccini, Cilea,
Mascagni, Catalani, and Giordano. Krassimira Stoyanova, soprano; Münchner Rundfunkorchester conducted
by Pavel Baleff. BR Klassik. $22.99.
There are ways to package an
excellent general-interest recording to turn it into an excellent
limited-interest one. That is what BIS has done with a Blu-ray release called Gloria in Excelsis Deo. The centerpiece
and the glory of this release is its offering of the last three Bach cantatas to
be recorded by Bach Collegium Japan under the direction of Masaaki Suzuki. They
are Gloria in excelsis deo, BWV 191; Lobe den Herrn, meine Seele, BWV 69; and
Freue dich, erlöste Schar, BWV 30.
All three get poised, beautifully balanced readings, with considerable
attention to detail. In Part I of BWV 30, the brilliant bass aria and alto aria
on the same basic motive are highlights, with bass Peter Kooij and countertenor
Robin Blaze quite impressive (as are soprano Hana Blažíková and tenor
Gerd Türk in their appearances).
A highlight of BWV 69 is the expressive tenor recitative, with its unexpected
dissonant and chromatic passage in the middle. And in BWV 191, Bach’s only
cantata to a Latin text, the work’s overall festivity is thoroughly winning.
Any listener interested in Bach’s cantatas will find these readings more than
worthwhile – but they are not the reason-for-being of the release. Instead,
this is a documentary, made in 2013, that marks the completion of the performers’
18-year musical odyssey through all the Bach cantatas, with interviews with
Suzuki and various singers, plus behind-the-scenes footage, intended as primary
attractions. They will be – but only for a rarefied audience whose interests
are as much in these specific performers and this specific cycle as in Bach’s
actual music. The result is a nicely presented visual production in which the
cantatas, although important, are not the sole point and in some ways not even
the most-central one. The recording is for fans of the performers and for
people interested in and impressed by the major undertaking of recording all
Bach’s cantatas. This is a release about a journey through time, not so much
one of a journey through music, and certainly not one focused on the spiritual
journey through which Bach’s music has taken listeners for three centuries.
A group-performance-centered
classical-music release is somewhat rarer than one focused on an individual
performer and aimed at that person’s fans. The single-performer focus is
especially common when it comes to singers, and is designed to give fans a
heaping helping of one particular artist’s approach to material of greater or
lesser familiarity. The new Naxos CD featuring soprano Krassimira Stoyanova
would be a straightforward case in point were it not for the repertoire. Yes,
everything here is by Puccini, and that is scarcely a surprise – but all 19
tracks on the CD are Puccini songs,
which are very infrequently performed and which it is fair to say that most
listeners will find unfamiliar. Whether they will find them congenial is
another matter: the songs are more conventional and less emotive than the
Puccini arias to which listeners generally come, and while there are a couple
of fascinating items here – especially two songs in Latin for soprano and
mezzo-soprano, with Stoyanova singing both parts through the miracle of
engineering and the flexibility of her voice – for the most part the songs are
rather ordinary. Accompaniments are straightforward and, by and large, so are
the comparatively restrained emotions expressed in these short works. The
topics are typical for Puccini’s time, especially for his early career, when
many of these pieces were written: they include life and death, love and faith,
nature and home. Stoyanova seems comfortable with the songs’ simplicity, and in
her mid-50s (she was born in 1962) also appears content with the somewhat
limited vocal range required by most of the works. Pianist Maria Prinz provides
fine backup, but there is not all that much for her to do: the piano parts are
generally even more straightforward than the lyrics. Fans of Stoyanova are
clearly the target audience for hearing this unusual but rather formulaic music
– the fact that the CD lasts just over 46 minutes makes it even more of a
for-fans-only offering.
Stoyanova’s fans will get
more music (70 minutes), albeit at a significantly higher price, and will find a
great deal more emotional expressiveness on another new CD, this one from BR
Klassik and titled Verismo.
Stoyanova, who is especially well-known for her work in La Juive, is in her element here in 15 tracks – the longest of
which, and one of the most impressive, is a real rarity: the death-scene aria
of the protagonist of Mascagni’s Lodoletta,
in which Stoyanova works effectively with the Münchner Rundfunkorchester under Pavel Baleff to extract every
possible bit of wrenching emotion from the highly melodramatic material. One
other Mascagni track, from L’amico Fritz,
is fine but does not hold a candle to the extended scene. Much of this CD is
devoted to Puccini – the familiar, deeply emotional, lyrical and even overdone
Puccini, not the one heard in his songs. Manon
Lescaut (twice), Turandot (also
twice), Madama Butterfly (again,
twice), Suor Angelica, Edgar and Tosca are all here – it seems inevitable
that the CD will end, after the Lodoletta
scene, with Vissi d’arte, and it
does. Also on display here are two arias from Cilea’s Andrea Lecouvreur, one from Catalani’s La Wally, and one from Giordano’s Andrea Chénier – none of them the
slightest bit surprising in an extended recital by a soprano, and all sung with
skill, a resonant vocal tone, and a fine sense of nuance. These excerpts
require more of a voice than do the Puccini songs, and Stoyanova has what they
need: her middle range is deep and sonorous, her attacks on high notes are elegantly
handled, and her overall vocal sound is pleasingly resonant. She is well
accompanied throughout the disc, and her fans will surely enjoy hearing how she
handles so many examples of operatic hyper-emotion. Even those who do not yet
know Stoyanova’s considerable abilities may enjoy hearing her perform this
material – but the disc does give a rather one-sided view of her singing, and
therefore remains more likely to be a “fan” recording than a really good
introduction to a first-rate soprano voice. In truth, not everything here is verismo in the traditional sense, but
the level of emotional expression is such that the CD’s title is understandable
– and the material downplays Stoyanova’s abilities in other types of opera,
notably bel canto. For listeners who
know her other work, though, this focus on a particular form of scene-setting
will be quite enjoyable.
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