Haydn: Orlando Paladino

Deutsche HM: 82876733702

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Haydn: Orlando Paladino

Awards:

Catalogue No:

82876733702

Discs:

2

Release date:

29th May 2006

Barcode:

0828767337029

Medium:

CD
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Haydn: Orlando Paladino


Patricia Petibon (Angelica), Christian Gerhaher (Rodamonte), Michael Schade (Orlando), Malin Hartelius (Eurilla), Werner Güra (Medoro), Johannes Kalpers (Licone), Markus Schäfer (Pasquale), Elisabeth von Magnus (Alcina) & Florian Boesch (Caronte)

Concentus Musicus Wien, Nikolaus Harnoncourt

CD - 2 discs

$26.25

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BBC Music Magazine

August 2009

“Orlando paladino is at the summit of Haydn's operatic art, and Harnoncourt's well-cast version is strongly recommended.”

Gramophone Classical Music Guide

2010

“Nikolaus Harnoncourt boldly proclaims that Orlando Paladino 'is one of the best works in 18th-century music theatre'. Written to commemorate a visit by Russian royalty to Eszterháza that never materialised, Orlando Paladino was first performed in 1782, in celebration of Prince Nikolaus's name-day.
Sabine Gruber's conversational essay explains how Haydn's musical portraits show an astute affection for Ariosto's epic poem. Although Haydn's Orlando Paladino seems part-pantomime, part-fantasy, these characters are never conscious that they are not what they protest to be. Like Ariosto, Haydn lets the audience in on the joke but the characters remain blissfully oblivious to the hypocrisy or naivety of their richly ironic statements to themselves and each other.
Harnoncourt's exemplary team of singers deliver deadpan comedy. For instance, Werner Güra takes on an opera seria posture as the romantic 'hero' Medoro in 'Parto, Ma, oh Dio': the glorious musical language suggests he suffers from sincere passion, but his real motivation is cowardice. One imagines that Patricia Petibon's Angelica is merely emulating the heroic fidelity and courage of women like Mozart's Konstanze but during 'Non partir, mia bella face' one suspects that there is sincerity in her after all: Angelica is facing possible abandonment and her vulnerability shows through. Michael Schade's voice is smokier than it used to be but his powerful resonant high notes, expressive weight and authority suggest that Orlando is more victim than villain. Only the comic secondary roles sung by Markus Schäfer and Malin Hartelius get hammed up, but they each sing with élan.
There is a vivid sense of dramatic intensity in this live concert recording. It is historically absurd to employ a lute as part of the continuo team in a late-18th-century opera but Harnoncourt leads Concentus Musicus Wien through a fizzing theatrical performance. This is comfortably among the finest Haydn opera recordings, although the stingy omission of scene numbers and stage directions from the libretto is unhelpful.”

Gramophone Magazine

October 2006

“Harnoncourt's exemplary team of singers deliver deadpan comedy. There is a vivid sense of dramatic intensity in this live concert recording. …Harnoncourt leads Concentus Musicus Wien through a fizzing theatrical performance. This is comfortably among the finest Haydn opera recordings...”

Gramophone Magazine

“The musical adventurer par excellence,… the scholarly conductor with temperament, the thinking musician who makes music with rough edges”

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