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L'infedeltą costante: Operatic Arias & Overtures
 
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L'infedeltą costante: Operatic Arias & Overtures [Super Audio CD - DSD, Import]

Joseph Haydn , Alan Curtis , Il Complesso Barocco , Anna Bonitatibus Audio CD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Product Details

  • Performer: Anna Bonitatibus
  • Orchestra: Il Complesso Barocco
  • Conductor: Alan Curtis
  • Composer: Joseph Haydn
  • Audio CD (October 28, 2008)
  • Please Note: Requires SACD-compatible hardware
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Super Audio CD - DSD, Import
  • Label: Deutsche Harmonia Mundi
  • ASIN: B001F2W528
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #363,858 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Assured Voice, Competent Accompaniment, January 2, 2010
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This review is from: L'infedeltą costante: Operatic Arias & Overtures (Audio CD)
As the liner notes explain in greater detail, most of Haydn's operas were composed for the court of Prince Esterhazy, for whom he worked exclusively and extensively for most of his career. Customary for the time, they were written with the singers, musicians and tastes of that court in mind, and their endurance beyond that time/setting has been extremly limited. As past recordings of his full length operas and this current recital will indicate, this is a shame since his operatic music ranges from endearingly charming to outright beautiful, and is always endowed with Haydn's sturdy, inventive construction and clever sense of humor.

Anna Bonitatibus's voice is a gem, a mezzo timbre similar in color to Bartoli's voice yet without some of that singer's more exaggerated gestures. Though at the same time not quite up to Bartoli's superhumanly flawless technique (few singers are), her voice is rich, poised, focused, and by turns bright or dark enough as the music/text requires. Her abilities as a gifted yet tasteful singing actress are fully highlighted in this recital: her singing in the two arias from "L'infedelta delusa" immediately bring out the comic nature of this piece without being over-the-top, she is terrifying in Alcina's number from "Orlando Paladino" (and only here appropriately underscored by the band), charming if vulnerable in the brief song from "L'isola di Alcina" (her ornaments in the da capo are truly impressive), and all of the recitatives are gripping. Haydn's music is a delight in the understated way it captures each piece's affect, especially the insertion aria for "La Frascatan" with its shifting tempos, oboe obbligato and chattering strings. Some people may think the inclusion of four (4!) instrumental overtures is overkill for a vocal recital, but I enjoyed these pieces and found that they helped set the mood for the excerpts from the respective operas.

Which brings me to the one weak spot on this disc, Il Complesso Barocco and conductor Alan Curtis. Their playing is sensitive, lovely and attentive to the details of Haydn's scoring, but I continue to have difficulty with this director's measured approach and overall lack of rhythmic "oomph". The accompaniment is always dependable, but I can't help wondering how Bonitatibus might have sounded with a more energetic band or conductor behind her, such as the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Rene Jacobs, Harnoncourt or Concerto Italiano. As food for thought, compare their playing of the Overture from "L'Isola Disabitata" with deMarchi and Academia Montis Regalis (though they recorded the whole thing, which as an opera is a bit of a snorer), or compare the threat aria from "Orlando Paladino" with Harnoncourt conducting Concentus Wein (who recorded the whole opera and it's incredible): the other bands don't resort to mannerism yet are so much more exciting! The cantata for voice and piano played Curtis only highlights the problem with his approach: intimacy and sensitivity can still 'MOVE'.

This is not to dissuade any buyers. Pick this up (even at a hefty import price!) and you won't be disappointed.
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