Stravinsky: The Nightingale (Le rossignol)

This page lists all recordings of The Nightingale (Le rossignol), by Igor Feodorovich Stravinsky (1882-1971) on CD, DVD & download (MP3 & FLAC).

Recommendations

DVD of the Month
September 2005

All recordings

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Stravinsky - Le Rossignol & Oedipus Rex

Stravinsky - Le Rossignol & Oedipus Rex


Stravinsky:

The Nightingale

Natalie Dessay, Marie McLaughlin, Violeta Urmana

Orchestre et Chœur de l’Opera National de Paris, James Conlon

Renard

Ian Caley, Vsevolod Grivnov, Maxim Mikhailov, Laurent Naouri

Orchestre National de Paris, James Conlon

Oedipus Rex

Anthony Rolfe-Johnson (Oedipus), Marjana Lipovšek(Jocasta)

London Philharmonic Choir & Orchestra, Franz Welser-Möst


The mid-price collection presents some of the most important and admired recordings of the EMI Classics and Virgin Classics catalogue which make EMI 'The Home of Opera'. These performances of Le Rossignol and Oedipus Rex were recorded in 1999 at All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London.

“Dessay is stunning, heading a strong cast in this unsurpassed account of The Nightingale.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2010 ****

EMI - The Opera Series - 4565002

(CD - 2 discs)

$20.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Stravinsky: The Nightingale

Stravinsky: The Nightingale


Natalie Dessay (Le Rossignol), Marie McLaughlin (La cuisinière), Violeta Urmana (La Mort), Laurent Naouri (Le chambellan), Albert Schagigullin (L'empereur), Maxime Mikhailov (Le bonze), Hugo Simric (L'enfant)

Orchestre Et Chœur De L’opera National De Paris, James Conlon

“Too many mediocre stage productions are being preserved for vocal, not visual, reasons. All the more important, then, is a release like this where a skilled (and musically literate) film director uses state-of-the-art computer technology to sculpt a multi-dimensional portrait of Stravinsky's gorgeous pre-First World War opera-pantomime.
Christian Chaudet bases it on the well-received EMI recording of 1999, reuniting the major soloists in front of blank blue- and green-screens to act their hearts out to imaginary scenery, effects and people that the computer will supply later.
This technique, long used in feature films, has a range and flexibility that might have been created for 20th-century opera.
The film begins with a fairly traditional dream frame: a little boy 'sees' his father's pottery turn into a Chinese landscape introducing all the story's characters and events. Later, the Emperor who so desires the Nightingale's singing is seen to live in a forbidden city made of chinaware.
This image of communication via images coming to life is developed to include the presence of mobile phones (with the Nightingale's image and song), webcams and computer screens – a modernisation that works through seamless integration with more traditional references.
Relevant instruments of the orchestra are also frequently dropped into view as part of the digital landscape.
Wearing a selection of T-shirts that almost suggest a 1960s Bond girl, Natalie Dessay gives a mesmerising but never indulgent or twee performance as the Nightingale, sometimes with a real bird in the hand. Marie McLaughlin's Cook (who steers the Child through the dream) is equally comfortable and subtle on close-up camera, while Schagidullin, Mikhailov and Naouri exhibit much presence and facial dexterity. From all his players Chaudet has secured that deliberately unemotional and real acting that so distinguishes French (and American) cinema and is such an asset in music-theatre of this genre.
The DVD is of a high visual and sonic quality and (another rarity in opera releases) there are some worthwhile 'extras' not devoted to company promotion. These 'making of' features really show you something of how the film was technically achieved.
On the soundtrack (as we may now call it) James Conlon goes all out for a colour and bite that binds Stravinsky's 1908-09 Debussian Act 1 more closely to the 1913-14, post-Rite of Spring final acts than a trenchant, Boulezian approach might have done, although it is not the only way.
The singing is first-rate (as was the languagecoaching), seeming almost to have been achieved in anticipation of this outstanding film.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

“…Stravinsky… would surely have been intrigued, occasionally irritated and ultimately spellbound by Christian Chaudet's vision. Using singers from the original 1999 recording, Chaudet has drawn fine mimes from them; Dessay's nightshirted soul of the nightingale and Marie MacLaughlin's wide-eyed cook are especially convincing. Inevitably they're dwarfed by the computer-generated animation: in this haunting dream of a Chinese boy... It works surprisingly well. Love it or hate it, Chaudet's world will haunt you long after viewing.” BBC Music Magazine, September 2005 *****

GGramophone Magazine

DVD of the Month - September 2005

DVD Video

Region: 0

Format: PAL

Virgin - 5442429

(DVD Video)

$20.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Stravinsky: The Nightingale, etc.

Stravinsky:

The Nightingale

Philharmonia Orchestra, Robert Craft

The Rite of Spring

Olga Trífonova (soprano), Robert Tear (tenor), Pippa Longworth (soprano) & Paul Whelan (bass-baritone)

London Symphony Orchestra, Robert Craft


“A long-time Stravinsky friend, aide-de-camp, and musical collaborator, Craft retains The Rite's powerful rhythmic thrust while remaining marvellously attentive to the music's ornate detail” The Stranger (Seattle, WA)

Naxos - 8557501

(CD)

$8.50

(also available to download from $6.00)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

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