Bizet reviews
Hymns of Love (Dmytro Popov)
Amour éternel
Desire
Bizet: Les Pêcheurs de Perles
Arias by Arakishvili, Bizet, Verdi, Saint-Saëns, Massenet, Rimsky-Korsakov, Mascagni & Gounod
Bizet • Gounod: Carmen Suite, Petite Symphony, etc
A fizzing performance of Bizet and Gounod
French Arias
Works by Bizet, Debussy & Ravel
Duets by Bizet, Boito, Donizetti, Verdi, Gounod, Lara and F. Hermann
This is boys having fun. And the CD is at its best when the composer is having fun too. So Rolando Villazón and Ildar Abdrazakov make the most of Donizetti’s Act I duet from L’eslisir d’amore, with Villazón a plaintive love-sick Nemorino and Abdrazakov a snake-like Dulcamara.
Caruso 1873
Hampson performs French recital
Bizet's The Pearl Fishers directed by Penny Woolcock
A century after Enrico Caruso, Giuseppe De Luca and Frieda Hempel adorned the Met’s first and only previous production of Les pêcheurs de perles, Bizet’s ‘other’ opera returns to New York in Penny Woolcock’s thoughtful production.
Christine Rice stars in Bizet's Carmen
The label quotes a review asserting that Francesca Zambello’s production ‘lends itself especially well to film’. I can’t altogether agree. The production’s first DVD recording was shadowy, atmospheric, turbulent and galvanised by Antonio Pappano’s conducting but still ultimately somewhat stagy. This second version, filmed in 3D and now re-released in 2D, seems much less lively and yet more contrived. Some of this listless air stems from Constantinos Carydis’s uninspiring conducting, still more from the substantial and overdone restaging for 3D.
Bizet
Classic Beecham accounts reissued in improved sound. The French forces are a touch wayward in the Symphony, but the RPO’s L’Arlésienne suites are magical. Christopher Dingle
Bizet
Old-fashioned beefy voices and execrable French, with ponderous conducting by Bernstein, this classic Met recording is effectively remastered to SACD from the four-channel original.
Bizet
Even the best composers are allowed to turn out a dud from time to time (Beethoven’s Battle Symphony, anyone?), and Bizet’s overture Patrie is a fairly blatant example. Bizet said it celebrated a Polish victory over the Russians in 1792, but in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War French audiences not surprisingly felt it came nearer home. They loved it, as did Massenet, the dedicatee, but it hasn’t worn well.
Bizet: The Pearl Fishers (DVD)
The Pearl Fishers is widely known for that duet. But ‘Bizet’s other opera’ has other highlights, including the nostalgic tenor aria ‘Je crois entendre encore’ and the soprano’s ‘Comme autrefois’. Its mildly exotic/erotic Oriental atmosphere is a gift to an imaginative producer, as ENO’s recent staging brilliantly demonstrated.
Bizet • Fauré • Gounod
Depressed by the gloomy plot, and bewildered because ‘the girl from Arles’ never actually appears on stage, the first audiences of the 1872 Daudet/Bizet collaboration L’Arlésienne gave it the cold shoulder. Or was the music just too good, taking attention away from the story?
Bizet: Le Docteur Miracle
In 1857 the 18-year-old Bizet was a joint-winner in a competition organised by Jacques Offenbach to discover talented new composers of operetta; his co-winner was Charles Lecocq, who would go on to become a master of the genre, whereas Bizet would concentrate on opera. Nevertheless, the light touch that helped him succeed with this hour-long comedy – based on Sheridan’s play St Patrick’s Day – is characteristic of Bizet’s other student works, such as his delightful Symphony in C, and even later pieces.
Bizet Carmen
Bizet Carmen
Sex-free Carmen is an oxymoron. This was the opéra-comique that broke the mould and scandalised Parisian audiences in the 1870s, the work that remapped the route from desire to death in the opera house. Suddenly Emile Zola’s voluptuous, immoral Nana had gatecrashed Ambroise Thomas’s expressive Mignon, making for a very different kind of party.
Bizet: Clovis et Clotilde
This Casadesus version of Clovis et Clotilde comes some 20 years after his first (recorded on Warner), and if he was hoping for a more sonorous acoustic this time, he must have been pleased. But otherwise it’s hard to feel the reprise has been justified.
Bizet’s cantata, which won him the Prix de Rome in 1857, contains some lovely moments and a few characteristic things, even if the influences (of Gounod, Donizetti, Weber) are still detectable.
Bizet: Carmen; plus interviews with John Eliot Gardiner, Jérôme Deschamps and Agnès Terrier
Hard on the heels of the Met Carmen comes this intimate Paris Opéra-Comique production, recalling its premiere in the company’s old house. Significantly the sleeve names moving spirits John Eliot Gardiner, producer Adrian Noble, orchestra and chorus – but only one singer, Anna Caterina Antonacci.