Vivaldi: Il Giustino. Delphine Galou, contralto;
Emőke Baráth, Verónica Cangemi, Arianna Vendittelli and Rahel Maas, sopranos;
Silke Gäng, mezzo-soprano; Emiliano Gonzalez Toro, tenor; Alessandro
Giangrande, countertenor; Accademia Bizantina conducted by Ottavio Dantone. Naïve.
$33.99. (3 CDs).
David Carpenter: From the Valley of Baca; Trio;
Sonata. Lawrence
Indik, baritone; Charles Abramovic, piano; Rebecca Harris, violin; Myanna
Harvey, viola; Cassia Harvey, cello; Katelyn
Bouska, piano. Navona. $14.99.
The remarkable Vivaldi Edition from Naïve, which began in 2000, has now
reached its penultimate opera offering with Il Giustino;
only Arsilda remains to be released.
Like so many of the earlier once-lost Vivaldi works found at the Biblioteca
Nazionale in Turin that form the basis of this series, Il Giustino is filled with interesting material even though it will
certainly not lead to a reconsideration or rethinking of Vivaldi as a composer,
or of his strengths and weaknesses. The opera is typically complex, filled with
a huge number of arias – more than three dozen – and typically overstated and
contrived. And, as is typical specifically for Vivaldi, it shows that the
composer had a far stronger feeling for instrumental music than for vocals: the
arias, although often highly attractive, are one and all superficial, and the
expressions of happiness, sadness, love, and other emotions are stylized and one-dimensional
– as, indeed, are the characters themselves. Indeed, this lack of depth may
explain Tartini’s famous observation that Vivaldi’s vocal works were not
successful. The characters’ rather uninteresting personalities may help explain
why the secco recitatives in this
recording are generally just plain dull – and sound rather cartoonish when they
are livelier. But the music of Il Giustino
shines forth despite the lackluster plotting and characterization; indeed,
Vivaldi’s vocal writing has something instrumental about it. Under Ottavio
Dantone, the Accademia Bizantina proffers virtuoso commitment throughout, with
an overture that pulls listeners in from the start and a series of
accompaniments that tend to outshine the vocal passages for which they provide
the foundation. Dating to 1724, Il
Giustino is set in the time of Byzantine Emperor Justin I (sixth century
C.E.), and revolves around the accession of a modest ploughman to the role of
co-emperor. It is a kind of semi-historical fairy tale, full of allegories,
deities, court intrigue, love and love-related misunderstandings, mistaken
identities, even a ghost – none of which elements matters as much as the music
that Vivaldi produced in support of his own libretto. The wind writing is
especially felicitous, the horn playing in particular is first-rate, and there
are some lovely string effects as well, as in Sento in seno, which features two solo violins against a larger
complement playing pizzicato. Vivaldi
also calls here for a psaltery (a sort of dulcimer, although played differently),
and uses it to lovely effect. The three primary soloists are all of very high
quality: Silke Gäng as Anastasio, the smoothest singer of all; Emőke Baráth as
Arianna; and Delphine Galou as Giustino. It is worth noting that even close
attention to historical performance practices does not and cannot deliver the
opera as Vivaldi’s audiences heard it: women were not allowed on stage at the
time, and nearly the entire cast of Il
Giustino in Vivaldi’s era consisted of castrati.
The necessary deviation from casting aside, this recording adheres very
carefully to correct performance practices of its time, and the excellent
accompanying booklet – containing texts and translations as well as a synopsis
of the complicated plot – makes the three-CD set a real pleasure to hear and experience.
There is, however, one element that may not be to the taste of all lovers of
Baroque music: the ornamentation of the A section repeats in arias. This is
unusually extensive here, perhaps too much so, and in a few cases so overdone
that the singers seem to have trouble handling the material. Some listeners
will find the extensive ornamentation thrilling, while others will consider it
over-the-top. But anyone intrigued by the rediscovery of interesting Baroque
material, and of Vivaldi’s works in particular, will find a great deal to
enjoy, even celebrate, in this new recording of Il Giustino.
It can be fascinating to hear the ways in
which contemporary composers come to terms with the vocal material of the past
– and with ancient texts. An intriguing song cycle written by David Carpenter
in 2016, From the Valley of Baca, is
a case in point. Carpenter reaches back to the Hebrew Bible, and even to the
Hebrew language, in this cycle, having previously created an Old Testament work
– also for baritone and piano – based on the book of Job. In From the Valley of Baca he turns to
Biblical material both directly and indirectly, in the latter case through the
poetry of Emma Lazarus. There are nine songs in the grouping, four taken from
Psalm 84 and the balance from Lazarus’ poetry: Not While the Snow-Shroud; Across the Eastern Sky; I Saw a Youth Pass
Down That Vale of Tears; What, Can These Dead Bones Live; and I Saw in Dream. On a new Navona CD,
baritone Lawrence Indik sings everything with depth and feeling, and pianist
Charles Abramovic provides sensitive, nuanced accompaniment. The result is a
multilayered tribute to and adaptation of material from the past – not so much
in musical style, which is primarily tonal but never slavishly so, as in the
consideration of Lazarus not only as the author of The New Colossus (inscribed at the Statue of Liberty) but also as a
Jew who was deeply concerned and troubled by European anti-Semitism in her own time
(the 19th century) and before. The intricacy of Carpenter’s cycle,
so different from the rather affected arrangement of material in Il Giustino, does share with Vivaldi’s
opera a certain sense of structural artificiality, indeed of artifice. But
Carpenter seeks to plumb real-world emotional depth in ways with which Vivaldi,
his attention on a largely made-up version of the past, is never concerned.
Carpenter’s approach is creative in a manner very different from Vivaldi’s and
is used for different purposes, yet its use of intermingled vocal and
instrumental elements is drawn from many of the same impulses. And in the
other, purely instrumental works on this (+++) CD, Carpenter harks directly
back to music and composers of the recent and not-so-recent past. Trio (2014) shares many sensibilities
with the music of Shostakovich, even to the point of incorporating the DSCH
motive that the great 20th-century Russian composer frequently used
to highlight personal elements of his musical communication during the
repressive Soviet era. Although not slavishly imitative of Shostakovich in any
way, this string piece feels like an updated presentation of many of the
wide-ranging emotions that the earlier composer packed into his music. And Sonata (2015) reaches back further, to
the 19th century, being directly inspired by Chopin’s B minor piano
sonata: Carpenter consciously uses the opening of the Chopin to start his own solo-piano
piece. There is no further Chopin quotation in Carpenter’s music, although the
work’s overall emotional arc shares something of the feeling of Romantic-era
piano compositions. All the works recorded here receive strong performances,
and all offer connections with the musical past that give them resonance beyond
what the notes themselves provide.
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