The instrumental ensemble was strongest when Brown led the first violin part with chiseled detail, gentle notes inégales that were never predictable, and sparkling ornamentation. Linear upper lines were balanced by the vigorous continuo playing of harpsichordist Andrew Appel (Artistic Director of Four Nations Ensemble) and cellist Loretta O’Sullivan; tempi were strong, never fast. Boulianne rendered Lully’s Récit de la Beauté beautifully, with painfully dissonant ornaments on the word “peines.” Lambert’s Pour mes chants featured the subject of melancholy: “I never want it to cease… but rather prolong it.” The Couperin suite’s variety of dance rhythms were a joy.
Joe Banno, Opera Lafayette and Four Nations Ensemble (Washington Post, December 4) |
The next concert by Opera Lafayette is The Genesis of Don Giovanni, combining excerpted scenes from Mozart's masterpiece with two earlier operas on the same story, Gazzaniga's Il Convitato di Pietra and Melani's L'Empio Punito (March 9, 3 pm). The next concert at La Maison Française is Jazz and the Diva, featuring soprano Caroline Casadesus, jazz violinist Didier Lockwood, and pianist Dimitri Naïditch, a show that has been wildly successful in France (December 9 and 10, in English; December 11, in French).
No comments:
Post a Comment