Rameau: Le Temple de la Gloire—original 1745
version.
Marc Labonnette and Philippe-Nicolas Martin, baritones; Camille Ortiz,
Gabrielle Philiponet, Chantal Santon-Jeffery and Tonia D’Amelio, sopranos;
Artavazd Sargsyan and Aaron Sheehan, hautes-contre (countertenors);
Philharmonia Baroque Chorale and Orchestra conducted by Nicholas McGegan.
Philharmonia Baroque. $30 (2 CDs).
Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) was the
multimedia master of his day, and thanks to a steady supply of funding from the
Bourbon court in France, was able again and again to indulge his taste – and
the taste of French royalty – for spectacular musical-theatrical productions
that were part opera, part ballet, and part virtually unclassifiable
entertainment mixing a wide variety of instruments, vocal parts and special
effects. Rameau’s influence was
formative for later French opera: while Italian composers focused on the voice
and Germans more on the orchestra, French opera sought and generally achieved a
nearly equal balance of vocal and instrumental material, so that an opera by,
say, Berlioz, has a completely different sound and emphasis from one by Verdi
or Wagner.
In truth, the differences were already
pronounced in Rameau’s own time, when the primary competition for a work such
as Le Temple de la Gloire – which is
officially deemed an opera-ballet – was in the form of Italian opera seria, although “competition” is
not exactly the right word for works composed for entirely different audiences
in completely different countries. With historical hindsight, though, the
differing approaches are quite clear: for example, the French emphasis on
careful and correct pronunciation of all words in the libretto, a notable
feature of later French opera, is already present in Rameau – and contrasts
strongly with the Italian approach of advancing the story through recitative
and using elaborately varied da capo
arias for generic responses and emotional expressions (thus making it possible
for composers such as Handel to reuse material intact in entirely different
contexts).
Le
Temple de la Gloire has a libretto by none other than Voltaire, and Rameau
was scrupulous in setting the words so they and their philosophical/instructional
message would be abundantly clear to the court audience. It was because of that
audience, specifically the court of Louis XV, that this work has been known for
some time only in its revised and somewhat censored 1746 edition rather than
its original one from 1745. Now, though, the original version of Le Temple de la Gloire has received a
marvelous and thoroughly engaging set of performances by the Philharmonia
Baroque Chorale and Orchestra under Nicholas McGegan – and live recordings of
those performances, from April 2017, have been used to produce an absolutely
first-rate two-CD release, a world première recording, on the orchestra’s own
label.
From start to finish, this is marvelous
entertainment. Rameau was a master of orchestration who had at his disposal
some absolutely top-notch players, notably of woodwinds – which are far more
prominent in Le Temple de la Gloire
than in non-French music of Rameau’s time. The work’s overture includes two
piccolos along with oboes, trumpets, horns and bassoons, and has a central
section prominently featuring two flutes. The first scene of the opera-ballet,
its prologue, opens with a bassoon duet in dialogue with violins playing
descending scales – a kind of tone painting of the cave of Envy, where the
whole production begins. Later there is an unsurprising touch through the inclusion of a scene of
shepherds and shepherdesses, but with the surprising inclusion of bagpipes –
actually the musette de cour, whose
sound, initially unexpected, fits the action perfectly. The plot of Le Temple de la Gloire, or rather the
lesson it was created to teach, has to do with the proper route to glory for
rulers. Voltaire makes it clear that brutal conquest will not do, nor will
indulgence of the senses through Dionysian revels: it is only magnanimous decision-making
in the name of peace and prosperity that makes a ruler deserving of entry into Le Temple de la Gloire. So this is a
“message” opera, or opera-ballet, and is intended strictly for rulers by divine
right. But it is not for the words, however skillfully Voltaire crafted them to
serve his purpose, that listeners will engage with this lovely recording. It is
the sheer variety of instrumentation that stands out most clearly, including
the absence of the harpsichord (thus
focusing the audience’s attention elsewhere, notably on the winds) and the
cleverness of presentation (divided violas, for example, are prominent). The
words, of course, do matter, and are sung by soloists and chorus alike with
sensitivity to historical performance practice plus a penchant for characterization – there really is personality
delineation here among the priests and priestesses, Romans, Bacchantes, Muses,
demons and others who pervade the production.
And that is where the frustration of what
is otherwise a splendid release comes in. Rameau’s theatricality and
understanding of spectacle were very pronounced, and Le Temple de la Gloire really does have multimedia elements that
range from special sound effects to frequent scene changes to unpredictable
alterations of solos, duets, choruses, dances and more. This is a work that
cries out to be seen, one that
suffers greatly when it is only heard on a CD release – no matter how fine. Everything is part of the overall effect
of Le Temple de la Gloire, including
costumes and staging and all the visual appurtenances with which a supremely
wealthy ancien régime court could
afford to lavish its entertainments. The music is marvelous, the performance
under McGegan is absolutely top-level from the first note to the last, and
having the original version of Le Temple
de la Gloire available in any form at all is a tremendous treat. But again
and again, as one type of music gives way to another, a listener is going to
miss the visual elements that originally tied this whole sprawling work
together, giving it coherence that, on a strictly musical basis, it lacks
(albeit by intent). There are marvels to be heard here, and marvels to be seen,
but only the former are available in CD form, and the latter will be sorely
missed by anyone captivated and enraptured by what Rameau and Voltaire created
in Le Temple de la Gloire.
No comments:
Post a Comment