Scene!
£17.05
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Label: Berlin Classics
Cat No: 0300646BC
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 15th June 2015
Contents
Works
Ah, perfido!, op.65Cantate 'Miseri Noi!, Misera Patria', Hob.XXIVa:7
Scena di Berenice, Hob.XXIVa:10
Infelice, op.94
Ch'io mi scordi di te ...Non temer, amato bene, K505
Misera, dove son? ...Ah! non son' io che parlo K369
Artists
Christiane Karg (soprano)Arcangelo
Conductor
Jonathan CohenWorks
Ah, perfido!, op.65Cantate 'Miseri Noi!, Misera Patria', Hob.XXIVa:7
Scena di Berenice, Hob.XXIVa:10
Infelice, op.94
Ch'io mi scordi di te ...Non temer, amato bene, K505
Misera, dove son? ...Ah! non son' io che parlo K369
Artists
Christiane Karg (soprano)Arcangelo
Conductor
Jonathan CohenAbout
Emotional scenes that tear at the heart strings: concert arias are great dramas reduced to a few minutes and focussed on one single character. But what is the origin of the genre? And what inspired the great composers, stimulated by great voices and great moments in literature or even by the operas written by their fellow musicians? What they composed were moving, dramatic scenes for the concert hall, and they gave their all in creating them.
Christiane Karg is one of those fascinating voices, and who knows which concert arias Haydn or Mozart might have written for her? She is certainly one of today’s most interesting German singers, with an international profile.
After studying in Salzburg, her career initially took off in Hamburg and Frankfurt. Her solo career has since taken her to the Semperoper in Dresden, to Salzburg, Covent Garden and Glyndebourne, and the list of her stage partners is clear evidence of her elevated status.
Following her highly acclaimed Strauss Lieder album, her fourth CD is a new orchestral recording on which the soprano chooses the tried and trusted Arcangelo ensemble with its conductor Jonathan Cohen to accompany her, as was the case on her 'Amoretti' album. After winning the coveted Echo Award for her debut album, 'Amoretti' gave her the breakthrough into the CD market.
'Scene!' is the title of her new CD, and it demonstrates how her voice has developed – something she describes in the booklet in these terms: “After my CD of Mozart and Gluck arias I thought it was the right time to take a step outside the Classical world and to explore the fach in more detail, without suddenly turning into an Isolde.”
What fascinates her about these particular arias? “Large‐scale emotions in a small space with lost souls at the centre – forlornness that can also turn to hatred. That’s what it’s about and that’s what I want to demonstrate.”
Well then: curtain up for Christiane Karg!
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Beethoven - Ah, Perfido!, op.65
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2Mozart - Ch'io mi scordi di te … Non temer, amato bene, K505
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3Haydn - Miseri noi, miseri patria, Hob.XXIVa:7
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4Haydn - Scena di Berenice, Hob.XXIVa:10
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5Mozart - Misera, dove son!, K369
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6Mendelssohn - Infelice, op.94
Europadisc Review
All but one of the quasi-operatic scenas on this recording set texts wholly or partly by Pietro Metastasio, the great opera seria librettist, and they each encompass a range of emotions – from scorn and desperation to resignation – that demand a quicksilver ability to capture and change the emotional temperature within just a few bars. Composed for some of the most noted singers of their times, they provide Karg with ideal vehicles to display her dazzling capabilities.
Beethoven's grippingly dramatic Ah, perfido sets the tone, in a performance of such immediacy that the listener is hooked from the outset. The emotional twists and turns of the music are heightened not just by Karg's peerless singing, but by exceptionally vivid accompaniment from the period instruments of Arcangelo, with real depth (and, where necessary, delicacy) of instrumental timbre. There are many famous recordings of this work, but Karg's ranks with the very finest.
In Mozart's Ch'io mi scordi di te, Karg's frequent collaborator Malcolm Martineau puts in a star cameo turn with the obbligato fortepiano part (originally played by Mozart himself). The two Haydn items demonstrate just what intensity the composer could conjure up, not just in the better-known Scena di Berenice, but also in the marvellous Miseri noi, misera patria, which starts with a gently swinging motion that only Haydn could have penned, but builds to a lively climax with plenty of vocal fireworks.
Mozart's Misera, dove son, like Ch'io mid scordi di te, has links to the composer's Idomeneo, and for the most part it evokes an unforced nobility until the coruscating final bars, to which Karg rises magnificently.
Mendelssohn's Infelice pensier – the only work here not dating from the 1780s or 90s – was commissioned in 1834 by the Philharmonic Society of London. Christiane Karg performs the first version of this aria, deftly entwining her lines with those of the violin solo, beautifully realised by Alina Pogostkina. Here Mendelssohn's music extends the logical expressive line from classical intensity to early-romantic passion, with a thrillingly full-throttle concluding cabaletta.
For lovers of quality singing, this is simply unmissable, and a brilliant addition to Ms Karg's growing discography.
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