RAMEAU Castor & Pollux
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Jean-Philippe Rameau
Genre:
Opera
Label: Pinchgut Opera
Magazine Review Date: 06/2014
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 139
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: PG003

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Castor et Pollux |
Jean-Philippe Rameau, Composer
Anna Fraser, Cléone; Follower of'Hébé; A Spirit, Soprano Antony Walker, Conductor Cantillation Celeste Lazarenko, Télaïre, Soprano Hadleigh Adams, Pollux, Baritone Jean-Philippe Rameau, Composer Jeffrey Thompson, Castor, Tenor Margaret Plummer, Phoebe, Mezzo soprano Mark Donnelly, High Priest Orchestra of the Antipodes Pascal Herington, Mercury; Athlete, Tenor Paul Goodwin-Groen, Jupiter |
Author: Julie Anne Sadie
Stanley Sadie reviewed both the landmark CMW and EBF recordings in these pages. While praising the Farncombe interpretation, he thought it ‘perhaps a little too English, a little too sober and unaffected, and thus not quite catching the vein of originality, or eccentricity, that is part of Rameau’s musical personality’. While the EBF performed the 1754 version in London and Monaco, theirs was a studio recording (I should admit to having been a member of the orchestra), whereas Pinchgut Opera are recorded live, with the acoustical compromises that entails.
Pinchgut Opera, founded in 2002, nevertheless punches above its weight to judge by the palpable dramatic passion and pacing that characterise this performance (replete with occasional background stage noise and applause). Listening to these CDs is strangely akin to sitting in a seat with restricted view. Under Walker’s direction, the instrumental and choral contributions from the Orchestra of the Antipodes and Cantillation are richly varied and stylish. Listeners without scores will find it annoying that the tracks and titles of the instrumental dances were omitted from the booklet.
The vocal soloists are young but already experienced, though some are better French Baroque stylists. Anna Fraser contributes lovely cameos in Acts 2 and 4, and in the title-roles both Jeffrey Thompson and Hadleigh Adams project moments of genuine nobility, although the live performance drew a more emotionally volatile performance from Thompson than intended. Certainly an over-reliance on vibrato to project detracts from Margaret Plummer’s Phébé and Celeste Lazarenko’s Télaïre while, against a stirring orchestral backdrop, Pascal Herington’s Athlete struggles manfully with the melismas in the air that closes Act 2. Nevertheless, very enjoyable – and, unlike the EBF version, available on CD.
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