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Volume 26 Issue 1 - September 2020

Choral Scene: Uncharted territory: three choirs finding paths forward; Music Theatre: Loose Tea on the boil with Alaina Viau’s Dead Reckoning; In with the New: what happens to soundart when climate change meets COVID-19; Call to action: diversity, accountability, and reform in post-secondary jazz studies; 9th Annual TIFF Tips: a filmfest like no other; Remembering: Leon Fleisher; DISCoveries: a NY state of mind; 25th anniversary stroll-through; and more. Online in flip through here, and on stands commencing Tues SEP 1.

Choral Scene: Uncharted territory: three choirs finding paths forward; Music Theatre: Loose Tea on the boil with Alaina Viau’s Dead Reckoning; In with the New: what happens to soundart when climate change meets COVID-19; Call to action: diversity, accountability, and reform in post-secondary jazz studies; 9th Annual TIFF Tips: a filmfest like no other; Remembering: Leon Fleisher; DISCoveries: a NY state of mind; 25th anniversary stroll-through; and more.

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VOCAL<br />

Beethoven – Lieder; Songs<br />

Matthias Goerne; Jan Lisiecki<br />

Deutsche Grammophon 483835<br />

(deutschegrammophon.com/en)<br />

! A new disc<br />

featuring baritone<br />

Matthias Goerne<br />

and pianist Jan<br />

Lisiecki is a heartily<br />

welcomed release<br />

in what has become<br />

a much-curtailed<br />

Beethoven anniversary<br />

year. This album showcases oft-neglected<br />

songs: music that is sometimes given a wide<br />

berth by performers opting for more standard<br />

cycles from the lieder repertoire. But unlikely<br />

corners of the repertoire require unlikely<br />

artistic partners as champions and this recital<br />

is a case in point for such declarations.<br />

Goerne (b.1967) is, doubtless, one of the most<br />

considerate, insightful and committed lieder<br />

singers of his generation. He seems to veritably<br />

live and breathe this repertoire, always delivering<br />

an incredible depth of expression and<br />

narrative. Lisiecki (b.1995), while not especially<br />

known for his collaborative activities, brings a<br />

similar brand of devotion to his art, embracing<br />

– with equal measure – the composer whom<br />

he interprets, and the listener to whom he<br />

performs. This is the common ground between<br />

Goerne and Lisiecki and proves an ideal starting<br />

point for a wondrous creative match.<br />

Character and conviction are paramount<br />

to the poetry and the expression thereof in<br />

these songs. Goerne commands every turn<br />

and surprise as the well-seasoned pro that<br />

he is. Lisiecki follows suit, offering his own<br />

arsenal of colours and tonal insights within<br />

some rather off-the-beaten-path piano parts.<br />

Lisiecki plays the supportive role, never overpowering<br />

nor taking the reins too willfully.<br />

It’s everything one could look for in a<br />

supportive musical partner. Thrilling results<br />

indeed, as “youth and experience unite.”<br />

Adam Sherkin<br />

Gaspare Spontini – Fernand Cortez<br />

Schmunck; Voulgaridou; Lombardo;<br />

Margheri; Ferri Durà; Orchestra e Coro del<br />

Maggio Musicale Fiorentino; Jean-Luc<br />

Tingaud<br />

Dynamic DYN-37868 (naxosdirect.com)<br />

! In 1803, the<br />

28-year-old Gasparo<br />

Spontini, having<br />

already composed<br />

15 operas (!) in his<br />

native Italy, moved<br />

to Paris. There,<br />

as “Gaspare,” he<br />

became a favourite<br />

of Napoleon and<br />

Josephine, who<br />

commissioned Fernand Cortez (1809) as<br />

wartime propaganda. The contra-historical<br />

libretto by Étienne De Jouy and Joseph-<br />

Alphonse d’Esménard depicted Cortez as a<br />

Napoleon-like heroic conqueror, benevolently<br />

“liberating” the “oppressed” Mexican people<br />

while rescuing his lover, the Mexican princess<br />

Amazily, and his brother Alvar as they<br />

were about to be sacrificed by the Mexican<br />

High Priest.<br />

Fernand Cortez was a sensational hit,<br />

soon performed throughout Europe. In 1817,<br />

Spontini revised it, shifting scenes and adding<br />

the role of Montezuma. Today, however, the<br />

once-celebrated composer and his 24 operas<br />

are all but forgotten. This 2019 Florence<br />

production of the original version was its first<br />

staging in nearly two centuries.<br />

Heading the excellent cast are steely toned<br />

tenor Dario Schmunck (Cortez), the thrilling<br />

chocolate-voiced soprano Alexia Voulgaridou<br />

(Amazily), tenors David Ferri Durà (Alvar)<br />

and Luca Lombardo (Amazily’s warriorchieftain<br />

brother Telasco), baritone Gianluca<br />

Margheri (Cortez’s comrade-in-arms<br />

Moralez) and bass-baritone André Courville<br />

(High Priest).<br />

Conductor Jean-Luc Tingaud propels<br />

the energized score throughout the opera’s<br />

three hours, including two extended ballet<br />

sequences. In its dramatic vocal lines, bold<br />

orchestration, epic scenario, considerable<br />

length and vivid imagery (the Spaniards’<br />

historically appropriate silver-grey armour<br />

contrasting with the Mexicans’ colourful<br />

costumes), Fernand Cortez anticipated<br />

the operas of Berlioz (who admired it) and<br />

Meyerbeer. It’s an important – and entertaining!<br />

– operatic landmark.<br />

Michael Schulman<br />

Verdi – Simon Boccanegra<br />

Luca Salsi; Marina Rebeka; René Pape;<br />

Charles Castronovo; Wiener<br />

Philharmoniker; Valery Gergiev<br />

Unitel 80<strong>26</strong>08 (naxosdirect.com)<br />

! Verdi’s 21st<br />

opera about a<br />

14th-century corsair<br />

who became Doge<br />

of Genoa had a difficult<br />

time. It failed<br />

at its 1857 premiere<br />

but Verdi never to<br />

give up, revised it<br />

drastically for La<br />

Scala in 1881 where<br />

it was vindicated,<br />

but the opera never<br />

caught on with the public until 1977 thanks<br />

to Claudio Abbado and the stereo era. This<br />

present reincarnation is from the hands of<br />

German director Andreas Kriegenburg who<br />

brought it into the present with its political<br />

turmoil, civil unrest, urban chaos etc.,<br />

featuring people dressed uniformly in dark<br />

suits running around with smartphones. The<br />

set is architectonic, stark and monumental<br />

in black and white and fills the wide stage of<br />

the Grosses Festspielhaus admirably while<br />

creating a sinister and foreboding effect. Now<br />

and again we catch a glimpse of the Ligurian<br />

Sea in blue that’s picked up in the colour of<br />

Amelia’s dress, the only colour in the set.<br />

Conductor Valery Gergiev, to whom the<br />

director dedicated the show, concentrates<br />

on the inner life and conflicts of each character<br />

and the lyricism of the music, although<br />

the latter gathers excitement and tremendous<br />

dynamics especially in the council chamber<br />

scene – a gripping focal point of the opera<br />

featuring Verdi’s masterful ensemble writing.<br />

The cast is superb: Luca Salsi is a strong but<br />

conflicted Simon Boccanegra with a warm<br />

lyrical voice. His pianissimo singing of the<br />

word figlia after the famous Recognition Duet<br />

is quite incredible. As his daughter Amelia,<br />

Polish soprano sensation Marina Rebeka, is<br />

a genuine treat and very strong in the high<br />

registers. American tenor Charles Castronovo<br />

is a youthful, passionate Adorno, her lover.<br />

Basso profundo René Pape, as Simon’s<br />

nemesis, is a dignified, noble Fiesco, with an<br />

impressive vocal range.<br />

A memorable musical experience with<br />

strong emotional impact.<br />

Janos Gardonyi<br />

Mahler – Das Lied von der Erde<br />

Gerhild Romberger; Robert Dean Smith;<br />

Budapest Festival Orchestra; Iván Fischer<br />

Channel Classics CCS SA 40020<br />

(prestomusic.com)<br />

! “Is it really bearable?<br />

Will it not<br />

drive people to<br />

self-destruction?”<br />

Gustav Mahler<br />

(1860-1911) asked<br />

of Bruno Walter in<br />

1909 concerning<br />

his latest work,<br />

Das Lied von der Erde. In truth, few works<br />

of art are so life affirming as this supposed<br />

“final farewell,” especially so when it receives<br />

such a compelling interpretation as we<br />

have here from the incomparable Budapest<br />

Festival Orchestra in this stunningly wellproduced<br />

studio recording. Scored for large<br />

orchestra and two vocal soloists, it is in all<br />

but name Mahler’s Ninth, and, as he presaged<br />

at the time due to his ill health, possibly<br />

final symphony. The vocal soloists include the<br />

American Heldentenor Robert Dean Smith,<br />

who shows some evident strain in the heavily<br />

scored Das Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde<br />

that opens the work (not an unusual occurrence<br />

in this taxing movement). Elsewhere<br />

he is much more at ease, lending a winsome<br />

charm to the delicate Von der Jugend and<br />

convincingly swaggering his way through Der<br />

Trunkene im Frühling. The German contralto<br />

Gerhild Romberger, best known for her lieder<br />

and oratorio performances, sings with a<br />

subtle intensity and purity of tone well suited<br />

to her more intimate selections, including<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>September</strong> <strong>2020</strong> | 43

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