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Berlioz Arias & Songs; Roberto Alagna
Roberto Alagna, Hector Berlioz, Bertrand de Billy
Berlioz Arias & Songs; Roberto Alagna
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (20) - Disc #1

Berlioz wrote very difficult music for the tenor voice, music which is not reminiscent of any other composer. The rhythms are unique, and the leaps to high notes are somewhat uncomfortable. Like other composers, he wrote ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Roberto Alagna, Hector Berlioz, Bertrand de Billy, Orchestra of the Royal Opera House - Covent Garden
Title: Berlioz Arias & Songs; Roberto Alagna
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: EMI Classics
Release Date: 2/25/2003
Genre: Classical
Styles: Opera & Classical Vocal, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 724355743329

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Berlioz wrote very difficult music for the tenor voice, music which is not reminiscent of any other composer. The rhythms are unique, and the leaps to high notes are somewhat uncomfortable. Like other composers, he wrote for different types of tenors, from light and lyrical to the truly dramatic. Here Roberto Alagna, in possibly his finest recording, sings them all, from the delicate narrator in L'enfance du Christ and gentle poet Iopas in Les Troyens to the somewhat grander Benvenuto Cellini, and on finally to the Siegmund-like Aeneas. Each is imbued with true character, and Alagna's range cannot help but impress; he even sings the sweet, high C-sharps of the duet from La damnation de Faust with ease (his Marguerite is his wife, Angela Gheorghiu). Rarities here are a song sung by Mephistopheles in an earlier work based on Faust when the role was composed for tenor, and some music from the half-sung, half-spoken drama Lelio (the actor Gerard Depardieu is the speaker). This is a great collection, and it's Alagna at his most superb. A must for opera lovers of all tastes. --Robert Levine
 

CD Reviews

Wake up.
John bloggs | wellington, new zealand | 06/01/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"It seems that one of the chronic diseases of modern times is a lowering of standards of operatic singing. A decline or just a temporary slump? There was a comparable shortage of new voices of real quality in the inter war years of the last century, but things improved after ww2. It certainly seems that most of todays great singers are not as great when compared to their predecessors, but there are a select few that measure up i think. Perhaps most of us are so used to hearing butchers like russel watson, or better but still mediocre singers labelled as "great", that when someone truly great comes along we fail to recognise their quality.Roberto Alagna is the finest tenor of his type (heroic-lyric) since 1960, when we lost the great Jussi Bjorling. His voice is warm, his style individual, his breathing technique simply phenomonal (listen to his long breath span in the La Juive aria on his french arias disc, and on numerous examples on this disc). Did a review before mine label him as not being good enough to make a choir audition? was Jussi Bjorling a choir boy? was his predeccesor and compatriot the great Georges Thill good enough to be in a choir? These are questions we must seriously ponder. Maybe Caruso was a cold, inexpressive and inhuman singer? Maybe Pavarotti faked those high c's in Daughter of the Regiment? Does he really wear a fat suit? hmmmmm......Anyway, when berlioz wrote his music, it was sung for him during his lifetime by singers much more like Alagna than Vickers. If we can listen to it without thinking that Alagna is trying to impersonate him, we might find that, hey, this tenor is very different, both in his voice and his basic approach to singing. His interpretation is his own.Nowhere is it set in stone that only a purely dramatic tenor can sing this music. This is just the sort of repetoire that Alagna excels in. Infact no one today can match him in his singing of just about anything french, and this disc proves him to be the most significant french tenor since the late Thill. Must have been one hell of a choir he was going for."
A Berlioz champion for our time
Joy Fleisig | New York, NY United States | 10/21/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"When I raved about Roberto Alagna's 'French Arias' two years ago, I commented that a disc from him dedicated to Berlioz was essential, especially since Berlioz is his favorite composer. This disc has now arrived, and is not only a tremendous artistic achievement for Alagna, it may very well be the most important classical CD released in this Berlioz centennial year. What makes this disc so remarkable is that it shows just how devoted Alagna is to this composer - no other tenor has committed this much Berlioz to a solo recording, not even Nicolai Gedda or Alagna's great French predecessor Georges Thill. This isn't too much of a surprise because the music is often extremely difficult, and requires a great vocal, stylistic and dramatic range. Alagna is up to every challenge and sings even the heaviest music here with remarkable ease - considerably more so than he has been showing lately in dramatic Italian repertory - but still has enough sweetness and elegance for most of the lighter music. Not even Alagna's closest competitors in this music today, the splendid Ben Heppner and Marcello Giordani, can match him for sheer artistic imagination, character identification, and, for lack of a better word, Frenchness. Alagna's French diction dwarfs even many other native singers. And did I mention the gorgeous voice? To put the icing on the cake, EMI provides Alagna with the finest supporting forces. These include not only Alagna's wife, the magnificent soprano Angela Gheorghiu, and several superb choruses including the French Army Chorus, but in the most luxurious casting imaginable, the spoken lines are delivered by no less than Gerard Depardieu!The album begins with Enee in 'Les Troyens', one of Alagna's dream roles. He ably handles the fiendish tessitura of Enee's entrance 'Du peuple et des soldats' - a passage reputably even more difficult than Otello's entrance. In 'Inutiles regrets' he experiences the full measure of Enee's heroism, frustration, and love for Didon. Turning to Iopas, in 'O blonde Ceres' , Alagna perfectly captures the innocent joy of being in nature and the sense of worship, even if he could have provided a bit less volume and a bit more gentleness. I regret that Alagna does not include Hylas' gorgeous serenade 'Vallon sonore' and hope he records it on a future CD. Another role in Alagna's future is Benvenuto Cellini, and on the basis of the two arias here (particularly a 'Seul pour lutter' superior even to Gedda's) it is definitely something to look forward to. The finest selection here is from `L'Enfance du Christ' - clear, simple, dignified, full of tenderness and reverence. Also splendid are the selections from `La Damnation de Faust'. After a gentle, sensuous and awestruck rendition of 'Merci, doux crepuscule', Alagna is joined by Gheorghiu for a magnificent account of 'Ange adore', notable not only for Gheorghiu's usual radiance and passion but also for Alagna's glorious ascensions to sweet, high C#s. Thanks to the perfect blending of their voices, it nearly equals their finest duet recording - again Berlioz - the 'Nuit d'ivresse' on their first duet album. This is followed by Alagna's second recording of 'Nature immense', which may have just a bit more intensity and edge than the one on `French Arias'. On a lighter note, this tenor most famous for his astonishing Romeo now gives us his fleet, elegant Mercutio. He is also an eager, charming, and appropriately love-struck Benedict. As in all his solo and duet recordings, Alagna unearths and performs rarities that may be unknown to all but the most fanatic historical collectors. The most notable of these is 'Lelio', the symphonic poem Berlioz wrote in order to recover from the hellish experience of writing the 'Symphonie Fantastique'. In the Song of the Fisherman. Alagna not only has an excellent rapport with pianist Jeff Cohen, but once again makes ascensions to miraculous high notes look easy, and truly brings out the poetry of the words. Based on this, I am eager for Alagna to perform more song repertory with piano both on recordings and in live recitals. How about 'Les Nuit D'Ete', almost never recorded in its entirety by a tenor? As Lelio, Depardieu provides a perfect portrait of despair and longing - and I had never realized just how beautiful HIS voice is! And in 'O mon bonheur', the heavens really do open on Alagna's gorgeous high A (?). However, while I again applaud Alagna's questing spirit for bringing out the earlier tenor version of Mephistopheles' Serenade (not from 'La Damnation de Faust' but from it's precursor 'Huit Scenes du Faust'), he sings it a bit too heavily. Nor does he really sound like the 'singing voice' of the baritonal Depardieu. The disc ends with a thrilling rendition of the Marseillaise, where Alagna and the massed choral forces do a splendid job. I have always wanted to hear him sing this, and am delighted to report that he also did so at a Parisian rally last May to counter French fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen. Bertrand de Billy is one of the finest conductors of French opera of our day, providing excellent support for Alagna and evoking luminous and sensitive playing from the Covent Garden Orchestra. Although I regret that, unlike 'Bel Canto', the documentation does not include a note from Alagna, the thick booklet contains full texts and translations, as well as an essay about Berlioz and his tenors and notes on each track by British Berlioz scholar Hugh McDonald. Alagna recently turned 40 and seems to be in his prime - at least in French music. I would be overjoyed to hear more complete Berlioz from this team, but if that is impossible, let's just have another five or six French solo albums from Alagna, and a French duet disc with Gheorghiu. In the meantime, Alagna's work here will give any lover of Berlioz - or someone who wishes to become one - much to savor and discover."
THE BERLIOZ BICENTENNIAL
Leonard Dahlke | Oakland, CA | 03/30/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Roberto Alagna gets it.
Berlioz' music is a challenge. In fact I find it difficult to find performances that shed true light on what Berlioz was attempting to create. (Witness Placido's voice cracking on the Mets, le Troyen.) As with most recordings of Berlioz' works, you get a glimmer, but it's a taste not quite the feast. Something is missing. Not by fault of the performer in most instances, in fact it's the extremes that the composer imposes that render the performance just slight of a true rendition.
Berlioz' music consists of difficult extremes, from faint subtlety to extreme bravado. A performer must be of true virtuoso ilk to take his works on.
Listen to "Chant de Bonheur". Alagna scales amazing extremes like a true Master. But not as a means to an end, instead, engendering true grace to the piece itself. Of this piece, it's the best recording of it I have ever heard.
Roberto Alagna is an artist that, like I said before, gets it. He takes the bull by the horns so to speak and tames it beautifully.
Ben Hepner's disc which came out last year, was a welcome bow to certain pieces that one had not heard for a long time. Refreshing, but not virtuosic. It felt forced and pale. A rather typical "Operatic" rendering of the works.
An attempt.
This disc on the other hand is more daring. From the choice of the pieces to the execution, it delivers an excellent experience.
My most coveted and beloved tenor piece "Sur Les Monts Les Plus Sauvages" is given the royal treatment here. Listen and please let me know of any performance that renders it with such subtlety and utter bliss.
All in all a disc well worth it, highly recommended especially in celebration of the bicentennial of a composer that is most often misunderstood and neglected. But one that also enabled a musical vocabulary that we use, rather matter of factly, to this day."