Bajazet, Act 3, Finale: Recit: Parte Asteria e restano (Andronico/Irene/Tamerlano)
Bajazet, Act 3, Finale: Coro: Coronata di giglie (Idaspe/Asteria/Irene/Andronico/Tamerlano)
Track Listings (2) - Disc #3
Bajazet: Libretto
Bajazet: Synopsis
Fabio Biondi is one of the most important and influential figures of the Baroque period-instrument movement. Born in Palermo, he made his concerto debut with the RAI Symphony Orchestra at the age of twelve, and gave his fi... more »rst recital on a Baroque violin in Vienna's Musikverein when he was sixteen. He went on to work with such distinguished groups as Musica Antiqua Wien, La Chapelle Royale, Il Seminario musicale and Les Musiciens du Louvre, before founding his own ensemble, Europa Galante, in 1990. With Biondi as soloist and director, Europa Galante's performances and recordings of Italian Baroque music in particular rapidly established them as one of the world's foremost original-instrument ensembles, with a distinctive Italian style. Biondi's desire to free period performance of convention and musicological dogma has resulted in some of the most spontaneous and impassioned performances of this inexhaustible repertoire in modern times. Europa Galante now perform worldwide, from La Scala Milan, the Concertgebouw Amsterdam and the Royal Albert Hall, London, to New York's Lincoln Center, Tokyo's Suntory Hall and the Sydney Opera House. Fabio Biondi collaborates as both soloist and conductor with many other orchestras, including the orchestra of Santa Cecilia, Rome, the Rotterdam Chamber Orchestra, the Hallé Opera Orchestra and the European Baroque Orchestra. He also performs worldwide as a recitalist in repertoire that extends to Bach, Schubert and Schumann. Fabio Biondi's many recordings with Europa Galante have been universally acclaimed. In 1998 Fabio Biondi signed an exclusive contract with Virgin Classics as soloist and director of Europa Galante. His extensive discography now includes concertos by Vivaldi, Bach and Scarlatti, sacred motets by Vivaldi and cantatas by Bach, the oratorio La Santissima Trinità by Alessandro Scarlatti and, with individual members of Europa Galante, quintets by Boccherini (immediately labelled `essential' by Gramophone), and eighteenth-century Italian violin sonatas. More recently, released in spring 2005, their world-premiere recording of Vivaldi's opera Bajazet met with great critical acclaim, a release which was followed in the autumn of 2005 by a second volume of Vivaldi's 'Concerti con molti strumenti'. In spring 2006 for Mozart's anniversary year, Fabio Biondi moved into the Classical territory, releasing a disc of Mozart's first three violin concertos. Later came Pergolesi's Stabat Mater and Salve Regina, with David Daniels and Dorothea Röschmann.« less
Fabio Biondi is one of the most important and influential figures of the Baroque period-instrument movement. Born in Palermo, he made his concerto debut with the RAI Symphony Orchestra at the age of twelve, and gave his first recital on a Baroque violin in Vienna's Musikverein when he was sixteen. He went on to work with such distinguished groups as Musica Antiqua Wien, La Chapelle Royale, Il Seminario musicale and Les Musiciens du Louvre, before founding his own ensemble, Europa Galante, in 1990. With Biondi as soloist and director, Europa Galante's performances and recordings of Italian Baroque music in particular rapidly established them as one of the world's foremost original-instrument ensembles, with a distinctive Italian style. Biondi's desire to free period performance of convention and musicological dogma has resulted in some of the most spontaneous and impassioned performances of this inexhaustible repertoire in modern times. Europa Galante now perform worldwide, from La Scala Milan, the Concertgebouw Amsterdam and the Royal Albert Hall, London, to New York's Lincoln Center, Tokyo's Suntory Hall and the Sydney Opera House. Fabio Biondi collaborates as both soloist and conductor with many other orchestras, including the orchestra of Santa Cecilia, Rome, the Rotterdam Chamber Orchestra, the Hallé Opera Orchestra and the European Baroque Orchestra. He also performs worldwide as a recitalist in repertoire that extends to Bach, Schubert and Schumann. Fabio Biondi's many recordings with Europa Galante have been universally acclaimed. In 1998 Fabio Biondi signed an exclusive contract with Virgin Classics as soloist and director of Europa Galante. His extensive discography now includes concertos by Vivaldi, Bach and Scarlatti, sacred motets by Vivaldi and cantatas by Bach, the oratorio La Santissima Trinità by Alessandro Scarlatti and, with individual members of Europa Galante, quintets by Boccherini (immediately labelled `essential' by Gramophone), and eighteenth-century Italian violin sonatas. More recently, released in spring 2005, their world-premiere recording of Vivaldi's opera Bajazet met with great critical acclaim, a release which was followed in the autumn of 2005 by a second volume of Vivaldi's 'Concerti con molti strumenti'. In spring 2006 for Mozart's anniversary year, Fabio Biondi moved into the Classical territory, releasing a disc of Mozart's first three violin concertos. Later came Pergolesi's Stabat Mater and Salve Regina, with David Daniels and Dorothea Röschmann.
CD Reviews
A voice teacher and early music fan
George Peabody | Planet Earth | 04/20/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"VIVALDI BRINGS FORTH A POWERFULLY TRAGIC AND HIGHLY ROMANTIC OPERA!
One of fifty operas composed on the subject of bloody rivalry between the Tartar tyrant Tamerlano, and the proud Ottoman Sultan, Bajazet (Ildebrando D'Arcangelo), who after being imprisoned by Tamerlano opted for suicide rather than submission. In the opera, Tamerlano(David Daniels), though promised to the selfish Princess Irene(Vivica Genaux), loves Bajazet's daugher Asteria (Marijana Mizanovic), who tries to kill Tamerlano twice. Asteria loves and is loved by Andronico(Elina Garanca,pants role). Believe it or not, after Bajazet's suicide, Tamerlano is satisifed, and pardons Andronico and Asteria.
This opera is a 'mish-mash' of music by Vivaldi, some original, some drawn from earlier operas; arias by Hasse, Giocomelli,and Carlo Broschi(brother of castrato Farinelli) reworked by Vivaldi; three (by Vivaldi) chosen by conductor Fabio Biondi where they were missing from the score. However, this work was entirely overseen by Vivaldi, except for Biondi's last three choices.
Both conductor and cast perform with a theatrical passion seldom encountered on CD. Recitatives are regurgitated with great force and viciousness. Bajazet is performed with perfection by D'Arcangelo (bass-baritone). He is particularly moving in his deperate ActII "Dov'e la figlia"(Where is my daughter?) wherein he thinks his daughter has betrayed him by marrying Tamerlano. Overall he sings with fluent coloratura.
David Daniel's(Tamerlano) delivery is forceful, grand-mannered and tough (No one plays Tough better than Daniels); the singing is exquisite and always mellifluous with superb diction. This opera is indeed a great showcase for his voice. His aria 'Barbaro traditor' (villianous traitor), in which he denounces both Bajazet and Asteria for their individual attempts to kill themselves as well as an attempt on his life, is one of Daniel's high points in the opera, powerfully delivered reflecting the TRAGIC and ROMANTIC aspects of this work.
Mijanovic, in the role of Asteria, sings with dignity; her dark, lower register is ' to die for'! Genaux dazzles (Irene) in the two arias actually written for Farinelli. The highest-lying music is handled effortlessly with ease by Patrizia Ciofi(Idaspe) and Elina Garanca(Andronico) delivers her 'pant's role' with surety and princely abandon, though I personally would have preferred a male alto in this part.
Fabio Biondi and his Europa Galante contribute positively and with fervor. With his great showmanship, he surely was the one to put together this very dramatic Vivaldi opera.
The package comes with Synopsis, libretto and a TREMENDOUSLY INTERESTING Bonus CD. featuring each singer performing an entire aria and two for Bajazet, in a rehearsal situation. Information is in English, French, German and the text is in Italian, English and French."
Roll Over, Tony, and Tell George Frederic the News
Giordano Bruno | Wherever I am, I am. | 05/15/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This package is a re-release of the Bajazet performance I reviewed about two years ago, but with a new cover. It was a great performance then, and I presume it's just as good now, but you don't need two copies of it!
Here's my original review:
Vivaldi's opera Bajazet tells the same tale of love redeemed by a father's death as Handel's Tamerlane. I'd have to side with the Red Priest on his choice of titles; it's Bajazet, the Ottoman prisoner of Tamerlane, who drives the story. Otherwise, it's a toss-up as to which is the more glorious music, with Handel offering more pathos and Vivaldi more fury. Operas set in the Ottoman Empire were popular in the 18th Century, even in Venice where the Turks had been feared and hated for hundreds of years. Mozart wrote his Abduction from the Seraglio at the tail end of this enthusiasm for the exotic. An interesting link exists between Vivaldi and Mozart. The role of Idaspe in Bajazet was sung by a young Florentine, Giovanni Manzoli. Idaspe is only a secondary character in the drama, but she is given spectacular muisc to sing in this 'pasticcio'; Vivaldi composed all of her arias especially for this opera, rather than recycling or borrowing arias from other works. Manzoli went on to have a 30-year successful career, and to sing the title role in the Milan debut of the boy Mozart's opera Ascanio in Alba.
Another linkage: the role of Tamerlane on this studio recording is sung by countertenor David Daniels. Just recently I heard/saw Daniels sing Tamerlane in Handel's opera, at the Kennedy Center in Washington, with Placido Domingo singing the role of Bajazet. It's tricky to compare a CD with a stage performance, but to my ears Daniels is much more successful in this Vivaldi than he was in the Handel. The problem was the total musical context in Washington, with a mixed cast of Baroque specialists and singers more experienced in Verdi and Puccini, and a modern instrument orchestra. Domingo brought his huge personality to the role of Bajazet and made the tragic figure emotionally potent, but honestly he couldn't navigate the florid 'passagi' typical of Handel's Italian operas. Thank the muses that he didn't attempt Vivaldi! This CD performance features the superb original instrumentation of Europa Galante, led by Fabio Biondi, and a cast of vocal athletes that can toss off Vivaldi's swarming arpeggios with avian grace.
The two-side box of Bajazet comes with a third disk, a DVD of studio footage of the recording sessions, featuring one aria by each of the principals. Honestly, it's a wonderful bonus. CDs of operas are inevitably mere hauntings. Seeing and hearing the characters, even in street clothes with the mikes in their faces, makes the task of assembling all those recitativos and arias into a coherent whole in one's musical mind a good deal easier.
Among the singers, for me the stand-out is Vivica Genaux, the mezzo soprano who sings Irene, the jilted fiancee of Tamerlane. In an opera where vocal display is the raison d'etre, Genaux wins the Gold. But there are no disappointments; all six of the principals are impeccable.
After decades of relegation to elevators and car radios during commute hours, the music of Vivaldi is finally gaining its rightful appreciation. Vivaldi was above all a composer of operas and other music for voices. Although so far only two of his 40+ surviving operas are available on DVD, excellent CDs of his best works are being issued almost every month. Along with recordings by Europa Galante, those by the ensembles Accademia Bizantina and Concerto Italiano are uniformly excellent."