Salieri - Tarare
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Label: Aparte
Cat No: AP208
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 3
Genre: Opera
Release Date: 21st June 2019
Contents
Artists
Cyrille DuboisJean-Sebastian Bou
Karine Deshayes
Judith van Wanroij
Enguerrand de Hys
Tassis Christoyannis
Jerome Boutillier
Philippe-Nicolas Martin
Les Chantres du Centre de musique baroque de Versailles
Les Talens Lyriques
Conductor
Christophe RoussetWorks
TarareArtists
Cyrille DuboisJean-Sebastian Bou
Karine Deshayes
Judith van Wanroij
Enguerrand de Hys
Tassis Christoyannis
Jerome Boutillier
Philippe-Nicolas Martin
Les Chantres du Centre de musique baroque de Versailles
Les Talens Lyriques
Conductor
Christophe RoussetAbout
Often unfairly overshadowed by his brilliant contemporary Mozart, Salieri here composed a genuine masterpiece on the only libretto ever written by Beaumarchais.
Salieri has a taste for exoticism and, like Mozart in Die Entführung aus dem Serail, he transports us into a fantasy Orient seen through the eyes of the pre-revolutionary philosophy of the Enlightenment.
The indefatigable Christophe Rousset, unswerving in his efforts to revive scores that are rarely performed or have mysteriously languished in the shadows, directs a fivestar cast: the Captain of the Guard Tarare (Cyrille Dubois) enters the palace of the Sultan Atar (Jean-Sébastien Bou) in order to rescue his beloved, the slave Astasie (Karine Deshayes). Behind the love triangle, one senses Beaumarchais’s indictment of authority in his depiction (in 1787!) of the people’s revolt against the Sultan’s tyrannical power - so much so that it is astonishing that the plot escaped the royal censor’s net.
The music follows the story’s misunderstandings, plot twists and spectacular scenes to produce an opera that prefigures Romanticism, exhilaratingly performed by Les Talens Lyriques and Les Chantres of the Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles. A release that should restore Salieri’s prestige once and for all.
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Prologue: Overture
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2Prologue: De l'orbe eclatant du soleil
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3Prologue: Quel charme inconnu nous attire?
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4Prologue: Prives des doux liens
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5Prologue: Un mot encor
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6Prologue: Que sont ces deux superbes ombres
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7Prologue: Futurs mortels, prosternez-vous
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8Prologue: O bienfaisante deite
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9Act 1: Overture
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10Act 1: Dans les plus beaux lieux de l'Asie
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11Act 1: Je suis heureux
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12Act 1: Seigneur, c'est ce guerrier
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13Act 1: Que me veux tu, brave soldat?
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14Act 1: Astasie est un deesse
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15Act 1: Qu'as-tu donc fait
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16Act 1: Charmante Irza
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17Act 1: Vertu farouche et fiere
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18Act 2: Seigneur, le Grand-Pretre, Arthenee
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19Act 2: Qu'il faut combattre
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20Act 2: Ah! d'une antique absurdite
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21Act 2: Qu'une grande solennite
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22Act 2: De quel nouveau malheur suis-je encor menace?
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23Act 2: Tarare! connais-moi
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24Act 2: Oui, j'oserai!
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25Act 2: Sur un choix important le ciel est consulte
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26Act 2: Ainsi qu'une abeille
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27Act 2: Grande marche
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28Act 2: Qui veut la gloire
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29Act 2: Apprends, fils orgueilleux des pretres
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30Act 2: Brama! si la vertu t'est chere
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31Act 3: Les jardins eclaires!
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32Act 3: Tarare le premier arrive au rendez-vous
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33Act 3: Calpigi, quel spectacle offrais-je a ma sultane?
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34Act 3: Marche
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35Act 3: Peuple leger mais genereux
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36Act 3: Minuet
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37Act 3: Galants qui courtisez les belles
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38Act 3: Dans nos vergers delicieux
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39Act 3: O mon Tarare, o mon epoux
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40Act 3: Saluez tous la belle Irza
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41Act 3: Calpigi, ta fete est charmante!
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42Act 3: Je suis natif de Ferrare
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43Act 3: O Tarare!
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44Act 3: Je suis sauve, grace a ton coeur
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45Act 3: On vient; c'est le sultan
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46Act 3: Dieu tout-puissant!
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47Act 4: Spinette, comment fuir de cette horrible enceinte?
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48Act 4: O ma compagne! o mon amie!
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49Act 4: Spinette, allons, point de faiblesse
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50Act 4: Ami, ton courage m'eclaire
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51Act 4: Marchez, soldats, doublez le pas
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52Act 4: Sur deux tetes la foudre
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53Act 5: Fantome vain!
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54Act 5: Que veux-tu, roi d'Ormus?
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55Act 5: Je ne puis mourir qu'une fois
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56Act 5: Ainsi donc, abusant de vos charmes
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57Act 5: Avec tes decrets infinis
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58Act 5: Ne m'impute pas, etranger
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59Act 5: Le trepas nous attend
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60Act 5: Le trone est pour moi sans appas
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61Act 5: Quel plaisir de nos coeurs s'empare!
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62Act 5: Nature, quel exemple imposant et funeste!
Europadisc Review
Among the most significant developments in the current Salieri revival have been the acclaimed recordings of his French operas of the mid-1780s, Les Danaïdes and Les Horaces, by Christophe Rousset’s excellent period-instrument band Les Talens Lyriques and starry Francophone casts. Now they complete the trilogy with Tarare (1787), arguably the most important and successful of Salieri’s Parisian operas, which enjoyed even wider triumph in a revised Italian version as Axur, re d'Ormus (1788). Tarare was a collaboration between Salieri and the great Pierre Beaumarchais, author of Le Barbier de Séville and Le Mariage de Figaro, in his only original opera libretto. Salieri was very much the junior partner, subjugating the music to the text in accordance with both Gluckian ideals and Beaumarchais’s own personal standpoint. The result is a work that for the most part avoids arias and other set-pieces but covers a range of recitative and arioso styles in a boldly experimental mould that in many ways anticipates (by more than six decades!) the Wagnerian concept of music-drama.
Framed by an allegorical prologue and epilogue, the opera tells the tale of a despotic Asian king, Atar, and his fateful jealousy of his general Tarare, whose wife Astasie he abducts. Atar eventually plans to have Tarare killed, but his subjects turn on him and he commits suicide, with Tarare reluctantly accepting the throne himself. Several minor principals, including the high priest Arthenée, the chief eunuch Calpigi and his wife Spinette, contribute to the twists and turns of the plot, and the overall message (two years before the French Revolution) is clear: it is character, not condition (or birthright) that determines a person’s greatness. The exotic setting provides an excuse for plenty of janissary-style percussion, and a first impression might be that of a collision of the world of Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail on the one hand with the narrative machinations of Figaro and Così on the other.
If for all its early success the opera has a fault, it is that in the main action the women make no appearance until the fourth of five acts – a serious flaw when compared to Mozart’s Da Ponte operas. However, when performed by such an exemplary cast such reservations recede. Tenor Cyrille Dubois is outstanding in the title role, with some stratospheric high notes fearlessly delivered, and bass Jean-Sébastien Bou brings formidable bluster to the part of the tyrant Atar. Mezzo Karine Deshayes brings plenty of nobility to the character of the captive Astasie, while soprano Judith van Wanroij shines as the allegorical figure of Nature in the Prologue, and brings an engaging coquettishness to the Neapolitan Spinette. Character tenor Enguerrand de Hys almost steals the show with his Act 3 set-piece ‘Je suis natif de Ferrare’, and baritones Tassis Christoyannis (as Arthenée and the Genius of Fire) and Jérôme Boutillier (captain of the guard Urson) make assured contributions.
In a plot that mercifully avoids the bloodsoaked excesses of Les Danaïdes and Les Horaces, the choir (from the Centre de musique baroque de Versailles) and the impressively-sized orchestra of Les Talens Lyriques deliver plenty of local colour, with choruses, marches and dances peppering the action. Rousset’s unerring, fleet-footed direction keeps things moving along nicely, with crystal-clear textures captured perfectly by Aparte’s recording team. This is an important addition to the discography of classical-era opera, easily outclassing Jean-Claude Malgoire’s currently unavailable video version. The three discs avoid splitting acts and are handsomely housed in packaging (numbered in limited-edition style) that includes the complete libretto and translations. The only serious omission is that there are no track numbers alongside the text, but whether you follow the libretto or just sit back and enjoy the music, there’s so much to savour here that this is a minor quibble. With this and their two previous releases, Rousset and his colleagues have given Salieri’s reputation a welcome boost and a long overdue corrective. Essential listening indeed!
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