Elsa Dreisig: Mozart x3
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Label: Erato
Cat No: 9029641225
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Opera
Release Date: 28th January 2022
Contents
Works
Cosi fan tutte, K588Artists
Elsa Dreisig (soprano)Kammerorchester Basel
Conductor
Louis LangreeWorks
Cosi fan tutte, K588Artists
Elsa Dreisig (soprano)Kammerorchester Basel
Conductor
Louis LangreeAbout
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Cosi fan tutte, K. 588, Act 1 - 'Temerari, sortite' (Fiordiligi)
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2Cosi fan tutte, K. 588, Act 1 - 'Come scoglio immoto resta' (Fiordiligi)
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3Cosi fan tutte, K. 588, Act 1 - 'Ah, scostati! Paventa il tristo effetto' (Dorabella)
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4Cosi fan tutte, K. 588, Act 1 - 'Smanie implacabili' (Dorabella)
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5Cosi fan tutte, K. 588, Act 1 - 'In uomini, in soldati' (Despina)
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6Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 3 - 'E Susanna non vien' (Contessa)
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7Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 3 - 'Dove sono i bei momenti' (Contessa)
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8Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 4 - 'Giunse alfin il momento' (Susanna)
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9Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 4 - 'Deh, vieni, non tardar, o gioia bella' (Susanna)
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10Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 2 - 'Voi, che sapete' (Cherubino)
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11Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act 2 - 'Crudele_Ah no, mio bene!' (Donna Anna)
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12Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act 2 - 'Non mi dir, bell'idol mio' (Donna Anna)
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13Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act 2 - 'In quali eccessi, o Numi' (Donna Elvira)
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14Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act 2 - 'Mi tradì quell' alma ingrata' (Donna Elvira)
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15Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act 2 - 'Vedrai, carino, se sei buonino' (Zerlina)
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16Idomeneo, K. 366, Act 1 - 'Estinto è Idomeneo...' (Elettra)
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17Idomeneo, K. 366, Act 1 - 'Tutte nel cor vi sento' (Elettra)
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18Lucio Silla, K. 135, Act 3 - 'Pupille amate' (Cecilio)
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19La clemenza di Tito, K. 621, Act 2 - 'Ecco il punto, o Vitellia' (Vitellia)
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20La clemenza di Tito, K. 621, Act 2 - 'Non più di fiori' (Vitellia)
Europadisc Review
Entitled Mozart x3, it contains three different soprano arias for three distinct characters from each of the three Da Ponte operas, as well as an aria apiece from his three greatest opera serie (perhaps it should have been called Mozart x3²?). The result is a disc that not only demonstrates Dreisig’s own versatility and musical range, but also Mozart’s consummate inventiveness and ability to bring a range of characters, comic and tragic, vividly to life and endow them with a depth of human feeling still unparalleled in operatic history.
The disc opens with three arias from Act 1 of Così fan tutte, the last of the Da Ponte operas (1790). After a call to attention with the recitative ‘Temerari, sortite fuori’, Fiordiligi insists (rather prematurely, as it turns out) on her constancy to her departed Guglielmo in her extravagant ‘Come scoglio’: the perfect vehicle for the dusky lower end of Dreisig’s voice, while also showcasing the edgy strings and pungent oboes of the Basel players. The earlier aria ‘Smanie implacabili’ for Fiordiligi’s sister Dorabella has a lighter feel to it, but is still invested with an emotional depth against the scurrying accompaniment. And then we swing into the maid Despina’s ‘In uomini, in soldati’, a delightfully twinkling account delivered by Dreisig with plenty of character.
Next comes Le nozze di Figaro (1786), starting with the Countess’s exquisite Act 3 ‘Dove sono’ and its preceding recitative ‘E Susanna non vien’, the character’s very human doubts and vulnerability caught perfectly by Dreisig in partnership with some fine solo oboe playing, before rallying in the concluding cabaletta. Even more vivid is Susanna’s deliciously teasing ‘Deh, vieni, non tardar’ from Act 4, where the velvety husk of Dreisig’s essentially bright-toned voice endows the music with an unmistakable sensuality. And in the page Cherubino’s ‘Voi, che sapete’, she demonstrates that you don’t need a mezzo for this soprano part, especially when you have as wide-ranging and passionate a vehicle as hers. The string pizzicati are particularly effective here, featherlight and with some lovely pianissimo playing.
Don Giovanni (1787) is an altogether darker comedy, as is evident particularly in the bereaved character of Donna Anna, who emerges in this performance of ‘Non mi dir, bell’idol mio’ not as a mere opera seria character (as she can sometimes come across), but as a wounded individual who needs time to come to terms with what has happened to her at the hands of the titular Don. The orchestral playing here, as throughout, is the best possible advert for using period instruments, bringing out all the delicate colours of Mozart’s supremely nuanced scoring. After the anger and hurt of Donna Elvira’s ‘In quali eccessi’ recitative (itself a character study in miniature), the aria ‘Mi tradì quell’alma ingrata’ goes like a breeze, with some truly marvellous woodwind interjections. Concluding the Da Ponte section of the disc, the peasant girl Zerlina’s ‘Vedrai, carino’ as she attempts to comfort her bruised fiancé Masetto has a wonderfully gentle bucolic edge, the voice sensitive yet radiant.
The trio of opera seria extracts starts with Elettra’s ‘Tutte nel cor vi sento’ and its preceding recitative from Idomeneo (1781), a moment of heightened emotion, the extremities of Elettra’s feelings underlined by the edgy nervousness of the accompanimental figuration. It’s a thrilling account, including a gloriously rasping held dissonance from the horns halfway through, showing that, for all Mozart’s genius in the Da Ponte operas, you should never underestimate his powers in the more rarefied classical world of his ‘serious’ operas. Next comes a peach of an aria from Lucio Silla (1772), the least widely known work on the disc. Originally written for the castrato Venanzio Rauzzini, Cecilio’s ‘Pupille amate’ is given an accompaniment of solo strings which brings out all the intimacy of his tender, comforting words to his beloved Giunia, and it’s endowed with marvellous warmth of tone in Dreisig’s performance. Finally, Vitellia’s ‘Non più di fiori’ from Mozart’s final opera La clemenza di Tito (1791) is, together with its recitative, yet another example of the composer’s ability to conjure up a world of feeling in microcosm. And, as in ‘Pupille amate’, one can admire the warmth of Dreisig’s voice, but also its agility – and some splendidly woody basset horn solos!
Vocal ornamentation throughout is stylishly tasteful rather than self-indulgent, while the whole disc is enlivened by the Kammerorchester Basel’s vibrantly alert playing, under Louis Langrée’s expert, lively direction. This is their disc almost as much as it is Dreisig’s. In her introductory booklet note, she writes that ‘Mozart is the genius who really knew how to write a woman in her complete dimension’, and this album serves as vivid proof of that from start to finish. Enthusiastically recommended!
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