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KAUFMANN, JONAS

L'OPERA -DELUXE-

Genre: Klassiek
Label: SONY CLASSICAL
Releasedatum: 15-09-2017
Herkomst: NL
Item-nr: 3708159
EAN: 0889853908325
Levertijd: 6 a 10 werkdagen

Recensie


Stertenor Jonas Kaufmann mag dan vooral bekend zijn door het Duitse en Italiaanse repertoire, als weinig anderen weet hij ook zijn weg in het Franse repertoire. Daarvan getuigt dit album, met bekende en minder bekende aria’s van onder andere Massenet (Werther, Manon), Bizet (Carmen, Les pêcheurs de perles) en Halévy (La juive). Veel indruk maakt Kaufmann in Enée’s scène uit Berlioz’ Les Troyens en Massenets Le Cid. Jammer dat hij deze partijen niet veel vaker in de grote operahuizen vertolkt. Met gemak een van zijn betere solo-cd’s.


L'Opéra
deluxe version

Berlioz:
La Damnation de Faust, Op. 24: Merci, doux crépuscule!
Inutiles regrets…En un dernier naufrage (from Les Troyens)

Bizet:
La fleur que tu m'avais jetée (from Carmen)
C’est toi, toi qu’enfin je revois (from Les pêcheurs de perles)
Au fond du temple saint (from Les Pêcheurs de Perles)
Ludovic Tézier (baritone)
Gounod:
L'amour, l'amour... Ah, lève-toi soleil (from Roméo et Juliette)
Halévy:
Rachel, quand du Seigneur (from La Juive)
Lalo:
Puisqu'on ne peut flêchir (from Le roi d’Ys)
Vainement, ma bien-aimée (from Le roi d’Ys)

Massenet:
Traduire ! Ah ! Bien souvent mon rêve s’envole… Pourquoi me réveiller (Werther)
Enfin Manon, nous voilà enfin seuls ensemble... En fermant les yeux (from Manon)
Toi ! Vous ! Oui ! Je fus cruelle… N’est-ce plus ma main (from Manon)
Sonya Yoncheva (soprano)
Ah! Tout est bien fini... O souverain (from Le Cid)

Meyerbeer:
Pays merveilleux... Ô paradis (from L'Africaine)

Offenbach:
O Dieu, de quelle ivresse (from Les contes d'Hoffmann)

Thomas, Ambroise:
Elle ne croyait pas, dans sa candeur naïve (from Mignon)


Jonas Kaufmann (tenor)
Bayerisches Staatsorchester, Bertrand de Billy


Jonas Kaufmann pays homage to a magnificent era of opera that defined musical splendor and elegance, in his new album of 19th-century French opera arias and duets. His selection of music for tenor spans this momentous period, starting with “Rachel, quand du Seigneur” from Halévy’s La Juive (1835), through two of Bizet’s greatest works, “La fleur que tu m’avais jetée” from Carmen (1875) and “Au fond du temple saint” from Les Pêcheurs de perles (1863), by way of Gounod’s “Ah! lève-toi, soleil!” from Roméo et Juliette (1867) and ending with the latest aria “Pourquoi me réveiller” from Massenet’s masterpiece Werther (1892). Plus many more along the way. “The French operatic repertory is very close to my heart,” says Kaufmann. “This fascinating music reflects a unique period in European culture. I didn’t want to choose only highlights for this album but also works and roles that have been key experiences for me. Wilhelm Meister in Mignon, for example, was my first major French role – I sang it in Toulouse in 2001. Carmen and Werther helped to open doors for me. The fact that I sang my first Werther at the Paris Opéra of all places, as a German surrounded by a French ensemble, was undoubtedly rather risky, but I had some excellent guides to help me: répétiteurs, colleagues, conductors and, not least, the recordings of the legendary French tenor Georges Thill.”





I’ve been waiting for a full programme of French arias from Jonas Kaufmann ever since I heard his stunning Decca debut disc Romantic Arias in 2008, and to my mind L’Opéra (out today on Sony Classical) is the finest recording he’s made since that auspicious beginning a decade ago. We’ve already had one superb recital of French arias from a baritonal tenor this month, Michael Spyres’s Espoir on Opera Rara, and Kaufmann’s counterpart might just as well be called Désespoir (indeed it’s literally the last word on the album). The vast majority of the personalities who spring to life here are either staring despair in the face or desperately trying not to confront it, whether they’re roles which the great German tenor has made his own on stage or characters which he may never sing in future – either because the operas are so rarely staged or because the moment’s passed for him to take them on.

Falling squarely into the latter category are the excerpts from Bizet’s The Pearl-Fishers and Massenet’s Manon, which feature outstanding contributions from Ludovic Tézier and Sonya Yoncheva respectively: it’s hard to imagine even the world’s biggest houses casting a voice of this size in the light lyric role of the lovelorn fisherman Nadir, and though Kaufmann did have considerable on-stage success as Des Grieux (in a chalk-and-cheese pairing with Natalie Dessay, almost ten years ago) he’s become more closely associated with the Chévalier’s heftier incarnation in Puccini’s Manon Lescaut.

But it doesn’t matter. The two Manon scenes are so vividly characterised that it feels as if years (and years of considerable emotional turmoil at that) have elapsed between them: if the soft-focus domestic fantasy of ‘En fermant les yeux’ glows with naïve ardour, the Des Grieux of the great Saint-Sulpice scene (in which the feckless Manon bursts in on her abandoned lover at prayer and begs for One More Chance) is a different man: bitter, volatile, and implacable until the very last moment so that the final ‘Je t’aime!’ is wrenched from the guts in a way that suggests not love but a lust that’s still tinged with hatred and resentment. It packs a powerful punch, thanks in no small part to the fragility and sensuality which Yoncheva brings to Manon’s entreaties.

Likewise, the famous Pearl Fishers duet becomes far more than a crowd-pleasing bonbon in the hands of these two great vocal actors, who blend so seamlessly that one person I played it to thought Kaufmann had multi-tracked himself in both roles! At one point in the preceding recitative (included in full) Nadir tells Zurga that they’ll look back on their love for Leila ‘at the age when dreams are fading’, and the maturity of both voices sounds as if they’re doing exactly that here.

But it’s the tantalising glimpses of roles which may never feature in Kaufmann’s stage repertoire that are the real plums of this album for me: Berlioz’s Énee, Meyerbeer’s Vasco de Gama and Rodrigue from Massenet’s Le Cid bear testimony to a voice that’s ageing quite spectacularly, whilst Eléazar’s ‘Rachel, quand du seigneur’ (from Halévy’s rarely-staged La Juive) brings some of the most incredible singing on the disc (which really is saying something).

Crucially, Kaufmann’s not one to gloss over the less attractive aspects of these characters, laying bare the fanaticism of Eléazar, the bullish entitlement of Vasco de Gama as he fantasises about conquering ‘paradise’, and above all the self-deluding machismo in the first section of Énee’s great scene as he struggles to convince himself that he’s Doing The Right Thing by abandoning Didon and Carthage without so much as a goodbye-note on the pillow. I couldn’t suppress a wry smile at the decision to end the album with this crowning jewel, which expresses the qualified remorse of a man faced with letting down the people who’ve feted him as a hero: Kaufmann notoriously withdrew from singing the part at Covent Garden in 2012, and has no plans to take it on in the future. It’s done so brilliantly that I experienced one or two ‘inutiles regrets’ of my own - but how wonderful to have this snapshot of what might have been.

Tracks

Disc 1
1. Romeo Et Juliette, Acte Ii: 'l'amour... Ah! Leve-Toi, Soleil!'
2. Werther, Acte Iii: 'traduire... Ah! Bien Souvent...pourquoi Me Reveiller, O Souffle Du Printemp
3. Mignon, Acte Iii, Scene 5: 'elle Ne Croyait Pas, Dans Sa Candeur Naive'
4. Carmen, Acte Ii: 'je Le Veux, Carmen... La Fleur Que Tu M'avais Jetee'
5. Les Pecheurs De Perles, Acte I: 'c'est Toi, Toi Qu'enfin Je Revois!... Au Fond Du Temple Saint'
6. Le Roi D'ys, Acte Iii, Scene 1:'puisqu'on Ne Peut Flechir... Vainement, Ma Bien-Aimee'
7. Les Contes D'hoffmann, Acte Iv: 'o Dieu, De Quelle Ivresse'
8. L'africaine, Acte Iv: 'pays Merveilleux!... O Paradis'
9. Manon, Acte Ii: 'enfin, Manon, Nous Voila Seuls Ensemble!... En Fermant Les Yeux, Je Vois La-Ba
10. Manon, Acte Iii, Scene 2: 'toi! Vous!... N'est-Ce Plus Ma Main Que Cette Main Presse?'
11. Le Cid, Acte Iii, Scene 3: 'ah! Tout Est Bien Fini!... O Souverain, O Juge, O Pere'
12. La Juive, Acte Iv: 'rachel, Quand Du Seigneur'
13. La Damnation De Faust, Part Iii, Scene 1: 'merci, Doux Crepuscule!'
14. Les Troyens, Acte V, Scene 1: 'inutiles Regrets! Je Dois Quitter Carthage!'

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