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Volume 26 Issue 8 - July and August 2021

Last print issue for Volume 26. Back mid-September with Vol 27 no 1. And what a sixteen-month year it's been. Thanks for sticking around. Inside: looking back at what we are hoping is behind us, and ahead to what the summer has to offer; also inside, DISCoveries: 100 reviews to read, and a bunch of new tracks uploaded to the listening room. On stands, commencing Wednesday June 30.

Last print issue for Volume 26. Back mid-September with Vol 27 no 1. And what a sixteen-month year it's been. Thanks for sticking around. Inside: looking back at what we are hoping is behind us, and ahead to what the summer has to offer; also inside, DISCoveries: 100 reviews to read, and a bunch of new tracks uploaded to the listening room. On stands, commencing Wednesday June 30.

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VOCAL<br />

Distance<br />

Choeur de l’Eglise St. Andrew <strong>and</strong> St. Paul;<br />

Jean-Sébastien Vallée<br />

ATMA ACD2 2840 (atmaclassique.com/en)<br />

! Recorded at the<br />

height of Montreal’s<br />

second wave of<br />

the COVID-19<br />

p<strong>and</strong>emic under<br />

extremely specific<br />

<strong>and</strong> restrictive<br />

public health conditions,<br />

Distance<br />

could not be more<br />

appropriately titled. Despite these challenging<br />

times <strong>and</strong> conditions, this disc manages<br />

to distill an extraordinary amount of strength<br />

<strong>and</strong> beauty into its 69 minutes, a testament<br />

to the quality of the Choir of the Church of<br />

St. Andrew <strong>and</strong> St. Paul <strong>and</strong> its director, Jean-<br />

Sébastien Vallée.<br />

Spanning nearly five centuries of music<br />

<strong>and</strong> a great range of styles, there is something<br />

for everyone here. Beginning with a stunning<br />

performance of Samuel Barber’s Agnus<br />

Dei (his own arrangement of the Adagio<br />

for Strings), Trevor Weston’s atmospheric<br />

Magnificat <strong>and</strong> Bach’s Komm, Jesu, Komm,<br />

the first three works are notable for the way<br />

in which the choir is able to modify their<br />

performance practice to meet the dem<strong>and</strong>s<br />

of each era.<br />

The remainder of Distance is equally<br />

stimulating, with Elgar’s legendary Nimrod<br />

appearing in a vocal arrangement by John<br />

Cameron titled Lux aeterna, <strong>and</strong> works by<br />

Rachmaninoff, James MacMillan, <strong>and</strong> Uģis<br />

Prauliņš. In addition to these renowned<br />

composers, there are also appearances by<br />

contemporary composers Reena Esmail,<br />

Caroline Shaw <strong>and</strong> William Kraushaar, each<br />

born in the 1980s.<br />

There is little more to say about the<br />

performances on this disc, other than that<br />

they are extraordinary. The virtuosity present<br />

in the Barber is entirely different from that<br />

dem<strong>and</strong>ed by Bach, which is itself radically<br />

different from Prauliņš, <strong>and</strong> each is simply<br />

stunning in its own way. This reviewer is very<br />

rarely rendered speechless but, when something<br />

is done as well as the interpretations<br />

presented here, it is undoubtedly better to<br />

talk less <strong>and</strong> listen more.<br />

Matthew Whitfield<br />

Schubert – Winterreise<br />

Joyce DiDonato; Yannick Nézet-Séguin<br />

Erato 0190295284245<br />

(warnerclassics.com)<br />

! There is ample<br />

evidence, in their<br />

individual oeuvres,<br />

to suggest that<br />

luminous mezzo<br />

Joyce DiDonato <strong>and</strong><br />

maestro Yannick<br />

Nézet-Séguin are<br />

artists of the first<br />

order; enough, it<br />

may be said, to have earned them the right to<br />

do whatever they may wish to. This recording<br />

of Winterreise, Franz Schubert’s iconic <strong>and</strong><br />

desolate song cycle, is an altogether more<br />

challenging assignment, but one that’s pulled<br />

off with aplomb.<br />

This unique duo interprets this music<br />

from the despondent woman’s perspective<br />

<strong>and</strong> provides Schubert’s music <strong>and</strong> Wilhelm<br />

Müller’s verses with a new benchmark.<br />

This is no simple replacement of the male<br />

protagonist – the rejected lover on the verge<br />

of madness – with a female one. The lonely<br />

peregrinations of Schubert’s old character<br />

through the snowbound l<strong>and</strong>scape have<br />

been given dramatically new meaning by<br />

DiDonato. Müller’s 24 verses speak to the<br />

mezzo in a very special way. She has, in<br />

turn, interiorized the bleak despondency of<br />

Die schöne Müllerin <strong>and</strong> recast the music’s<br />

unrelenting desolation in a breathtaking new<br />

l<strong>and</strong>scape of personal pain.<br />

Meanwhile, from his vantage point in the<br />

shadows behind his piano, Nézet-Séguin<br />

conducts himself with impeccable decorum,<br />

occasionally emerging into the limelight if<br />

only to gently emphasize or provide poignant<br />

relief from the music’s bleak mood. His musicianship<br />

throughout is eloquent. His astute<br />

pianism – especially in Der Leiermann –<br />

highlights <strong>and</strong> embellishes the emotional<br />

veracity of Winterreise, combining with<br />

DiDonato’s darkly lustrous performance to<br />

take Schubert’s magnificent art song cycle to<br />

a rarefied realm.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Donizetti – Lucrezia Borgia<br />

Marko Mimica; Carmela Remigio; Xabier<br />

Anduaga; Varduhi Abrahamyan; Orchestra<br />

Giovanile Luigi Cherubini; Coro del Teatro<br />

Municipale di Piacenza; Riccardo Frizza<br />

Dynamic 37849<br />

(naxosdirect.com/search/37849)<br />

! Nestled on the<br />

southern slopes<br />

of the Italian Alps<br />

is the lovely small<br />

town Bergamo,<br />

birthplace of<br />

one of the great<br />

masters of Italian<br />

bel canto, Gaetano<br />

Donizetti. Lucrezia<br />

Borgia, one of his<br />

early successes,<br />

premiered in 1833<br />

at La Scala shortly<br />

after Anna Bolena, his first major breakthrough.<br />

It is rarely performed, as it requires<br />

soloists, especially the lead soprano, of the<br />

highest calibre. Over the last century the<br />

opera went through many revisions, but it<br />

never left the stage <strong>and</strong> attracted the likes of<br />

Caruso, Gigli, Caballé, Sills, Gruberova <strong>and</strong><br />

Sutherl<strong>and</strong> for the principal roles.<br />

The opera centres around one of the<br />

most despicable characters of the Italian<br />

Renaissance, the daughter of Pope Alex<strong>and</strong>er<br />

VI, Lucrezia Borgia who murdered three<br />

husb<strong>and</strong>s <strong>and</strong> is presently on her fourth,<br />

Don Alfonso, ruler of Ferrara. The story that<br />

follows is a total mayhem of horror, jealousy,<br />

vendetta, poisoning, mass murder <strong>and</strong><br />

suicide, but the music remains one of the<br />

composer’s most compelling <strong>and</strong> forwardlooking<br />

scores. In fact, he is attempting to<br />

break the traditional rigid rules of bel canto<br />

by bringing the recitativo <strong>and</strong> aria closer<br />

together towards a more fluid style <strong>and</strong><br />

expressive language, a step closer to Verdi.<br />

The strongest feature of this memorable<br />

performance is Italian soprano Carmela<br />

Remigio in the title role. She truly carries<br />

the show with her dramatic persona, total<br />

emotional involvement, absorption into the<br />

role <strong>and</strong> a mesmerizing voice powerful in<br />

all registers. Gennaro, her illegitimate son,<br />

cause of much of her grief <strong>and</strong> anguish, is the<br />

sensational Spanish tenor Xabier Anduaga,<br />

winner of Operalia Competition 2019. Young<br />

Marko Mimica from Zagreb, Croatia, as Don<br />

Alfonso, is a powerful bass-baritone <strong>and</strong><br />

the supporting cast is remarkable. Riccardo<br />

Frizza, master of Italian opera, conducts.<br />

Janos Gardonyi<br />

38 | <strong>July</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2021</strong> thewholenote.com

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