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  • One Singer Offers Another's Writing

    New York Times
    Feb 6 2005

    One Singer Offers Another's Writing
    ANNE MIDGETTE

    Viardot-Garcia: Songs
    Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano; Serouj Kradjian, pianist. Analekta AN 2
    9903; CD.

    THIS recording links two singers who are increasingly in the
    spotlight. One is Isabel Bayrakdarian, a striking Canadian-Armenian
    soprano. The other is Pauline Viardot-Garcia, who was recently the
    focus of an evening at the New York Festival of Song and an opera
    performance at Caramoor.

    The main difference is that Viardot-Garcia has been dead for almost
    95 years. She was also, however, a composer; her songs are
    delightful, and Ms. Bayrakdarian does them vivacious justice.

    Viardot-Garcia kept her compositional aspirations relatively modest,
    but she performed her songs herself, often, both on tour and after
    her retirement at 42. She continued to write music for her salons
    until she was into her 80's.

    Her songs form a bright bouquet in an array of languages (French,
    German and Italian) and styles. This CD includes four of her
    arrangements of mazurkas by Chopin - "Seize Ans," for instance, is
    based on the Mazurka in A flat (Op. 50, No. 2) - approved by Chopin
    himself. He was one of a circle of close friends that included pretty
    much all the major musical figures of Europe in Viardot-Garcia's very
    long day, from Liszt (who taught her piano) to Massenet.

    Ms. Bayrakdarian is a fine interpreter of this music. Her voice has a
    brilliance and a lightness that don't prevent it from descending to
    darker nether regions (in "Die Sterne") or swelling to near-operatic
    fortes (in "Grands Oiseaux Blancs"). She genuinely engages with what
    she is singing, and there is a hint of a laugh in her voice that
    lifts the music with an infectious lilt.

    "Chanson de la Pluie," with its pitter-pattering raindrop
    accompaniment, is a nice measure of her brightness, of Serouj
    Kradjian's agility at the piano and of the generally appealing nature
    of the disc.
    ANNE MIDGETTE



    Alessandro Scarlatti: 'Griselda'
    Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, conducted by René Jacobs. Harmonia
    Mundi France HMC 901805.07; three CD's.
    THE conductor René Jacobs has played a notable role in the Handel
    opera boom. But the fixation on Handel, he is out to show, has
    obscured other worthy Baroque opera composers, notably Alessandro
    Scarlatti.

    Mr. Jacobs's latest recording from Harmonia Mundi France is an
    account of Scarlatti's impressive final opera, "Griselda," first
    performed in Rome in 1721. Scarlatti wrote a staggering number of
    operas: more than 100.

    Most are unknown, and many are no doubt standard fare. But "Griselda"
    was a special case, a semiprivate commission for a major theater in
    Rome. Scarlatti thought of it as a summation, Mr. Jacobs suggests in
    booklet notes, a chance to fulfill his highest aims.

    The story concerns King Gualtiero of Sicily, who has married a
    shepherdess, Griselda. His subjects, affronted that he has made a
    commoner their queen, demand that he renounce her.

    The complicated plot turns on the king's effort to prove Griselda's
    noble character by subjecting her to a series of feigned rejections
    and insults. She proves steadfast and wins the admiration of the
    Sicilian people, and all ends happily.

    The opera runs some three hours, and almost every moment offers rich
    pleasures: lyrically enchanting arias in which virtuosic flights
    never seem extraneous displays; elaborate and surely paced
    recitatives; elegant ensembles; savvy instrumental writing.

    The top-notch cast is headed by the rich-voiced soprano Dorothea
    Röschmann, in the title role, and the fine young countertenor
    Lawrence Zazzo, as Gualtiero. The excellent tenor Kobie van Rensburg,
    who made an impressive Metropolitan Opera debut this season in
    Handel's "Rodelinda," sings Prince Corrado, the king's friend.
    Conducting the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Mr. Jacobs elicits a
    performance at once stylistically informed and wonderfully
    spontaneous.
    ANTHONY TOMMASINI



    Mahler: Orchestral Song Cycles
    Violeta Urmana, soprano; Anne Sofie von Otter, mezzo-soprano; Thomas
    Quasthoff, bass-baritone; Vienna Philharmonic conducted by Pierre
    Boulez. Deutsche Grammophon B0003894-02; CD.


    IS one excellent album more treasurable than half a great one?

    This is an excellent album. In comparison with their performances on
    a Mahler recording of 1999 - "Des Knaben Wunderhorn," also on
    Deutsche Grammophon - Thomas Quasthoff is expectedly strong in
    "Lieder Eines Fahrenden Gesellen" ("Songs of a Wayfarer") and Anne
    Sofie von Otter gratifyingly so in "Kindertotenlieder" ("Songs on the
    Death of Children").

    Ms. von Otter, a superb mezzo-soprano, sounded disappointingly wan in
    that earlier recording, perhaps because of vocal problems she was
    having around the time. But Mr. Quasthoff, at his rough-hewn best in
    some of Mahler's earthiest music, was a force of nature. And the
    Berlin Philharmonic, conducted by Claudio Abbado, drove the
    earthiness home.

    Mr. Quasthoff's approach is slightly more refined here, in keeping
    with the nature of the music, but he lacks nothing in expressiveness
    and sheer beauty of tone. Ms. von Otter brings the needed poignancy,
    anguish and consolation to the role of a bereft mother.

    Violetta Urmana shows the power needed to stand up to Mahler's
    orchestra in the Rückert Songs. And though she undercuts some of the
    more restful and luminous moments with an intense vibrato, she can
    spin a sweet and lovely pianissimo.

    The disc is only enhanced by the vibrant playing of the Vienna
    Philharmonic under Pierre Boulez. Deutsche Grammophon's recording
    gives full and accurate voice to those colorful and piquant, if not
    gamy, Viennese woodwinds.

    There is every reason to buy this record. All it lacks is the bolt of
    revelation that comes with the sense that a work has found its ideal
    interpreter. For that you should return to Mr. Quasthoff in "Des
    Knaben Wunderhorn."
    JAMES R. OESTREICH
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