Available at Amazon: Rameau, Les Boréades, B. Bonney, P. Agnew, L. Naouri, Les Arts Florissants, W. Christie (2004) |
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The singing is generally exquisite, beginning with Barbara Bonney as Aphise, vocally rich and dramatically affecting. Paul Agnew's voice has positives and negatives, tending towards a fluttery vibrato and discoloration at loud dynamics, but when he hits those high haute-contre notes in that pure head voice ("Volez, volez, zéphyrs, hâtez-vous"), all is forgiven. Laurent Naouri's Boréas is equal parts thick-timbred menace and oily stage presence. Toby Spence has a nice turn as a full-voiced evil suitor, Calisis (see the YouTube video below). Christie's leadership of Les Arts Florissants is, as usual, an inspiration: a Baroque ensemble in the pit of a major opera house and sounding phenomenal. Carsen's staging is minimalistic, odd, but visually delectable, with tableaux of seasonal color behind the stark white-black costumes, much of it skimpy (sets and costumes by Michael Levine). The dancers -- all of the dance music is included, saints be praised -- are members of the Canadian troupe La La La Human Steps, choreographed by Édouard Lock, with his signature mixture of classical steps and jerky, hyperphysical movement. A DVD well worth owning -- and the only version of this worthy opera -- not least for the 60-minute documentary featuring interviews with all of the artists involved.
Opus Arte OA 0899 D
Toby Spence as Calisis, Les Boréades, directed by Robert Carsen,
Opéra national de Paris, 2003
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