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Christophe Rousset & Les Talens Lyriques - Lully: Roland (2004)

Christophe Rousset & Les Talens Lyriques - Lully: Roland (2004)
  • Title: Lully: Roland
  • Year Of Release: 2004
  • Label: Ambroisie
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
  • Total Time: 02:40:12
  • Total Size: 896 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1
01. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Prologue. Ouverture
02. Air. Le Ciel qui m'a fait votre Roi / On n'entend plus le bruit des armes
03. Premiere entree. Premier Menuet, Second menuet / Que la Guerre est effroyable! / Reprise
04. Au milieu d'une Paix profone / Du celebre Roland / Duo puis Choeur. Allons faire entendre
05. Second entee. Gigue
06. Gavotte / C'est l'Amour qui nous menace
07. Ouverture
08. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Act 1. Scene 1. Ah! Que mon coeur est agite!
09. Scene 2. Vous avez peu d'impatience
10. Scene 3. Ah! Quel tourment
11. Scene 4. De la part de Roland on vient jusqu'en ces lieux
12. Act 1. Scene 5. Air. Je ne verrai plus ce que j'aime / Le secours de l'absence
13. Act 1. Scene 6. Marche / Au geneeux Roland je dois ma deliverence
14. Act 1. Scene 6. Air puis Choeur. Triomphez, charmante Reine
15. Act 1. Scene 6. Air. Dans nos Climats sans chagrin on soupire

CD 2
01. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Act 2. Scene 1. Ritournelle / Un charme dangereux / Non, non, on ne peut trop plaindre
02. Scene 2. Belle Angelique, enfin, je vous trouve en ces lieux
03. Scene 2. Quelle cruaute! Quel mepris! / Peut-on vous mepriser sans crime?
04. Scene 2. Le Deit eteint ma flamme
05. Scene 3. Ou dois-je aller?...
06. Scene 4. Ritournelle / Agreables retraites / C'est Medor que je viens d'entendre
07. Scene 4. Fontaine, qui d'une eau si pure / Vivez, vivez, Medor
08. Scene 5. Aimez, aimez-vous / Aimons, aimons-nous
09. Scene 5. Entree. Gavotte
10. Scene 5. Qui goute de ces Eaux
11. Scene 5. Second Air / Choeur. Que pour jamais un noeud charmant nous lie
12. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Act 3. Scene 1. Ritournelle / Non, je d'entends vos conseils qu'avec peine
13. Scene 2. Faut-il encor que je vous aime?
14. Scene 2. En des lieux ecartes / Laissez-moi renvoyer des Peuples empresses
15. Scene 3. Ah! Je souffre un tourment plus cruel
16. Scene 4. Se peut-il qu'a ses voeux
17. Scene 5. Vous, qui voulez faire paraitre
18. Scene 6. Air
19. Scene 6. Chaconne et Choeur. C'est Medor qu'une Reine si belle

CD 3
01. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Act 4. Scene 1. Ritournelle / Va, ton soin m'importune
02. Scene 2. Air. Ah! J'attendrai longtemps
03. Scene 2. J'entends un bruit de musique champetre
04. Scene 3. Marche / Choeur. Quand on vient dans ce bacage
05. Scene 3. Menuet / Entree. Vivez en paix
06. Scene 4. J'aimerai toujours ma Bergere
07. Scene 5. Allez, allez, laissez-nous Soins facheux
08. Scene 5. Je suis trahi! Ciel!
09. Roland, opera, LWV 65: Act 5. Scene 1. Sage et divine Fee
10. Scene 2. Symphonie / Par le secours d'une douce harmonie / Heureux! Heureux qui se defend to
11. Scene 3. Air. O vous, dont le nom plein de gloire
12. Scene 3. Air et Choeur. Roland, courez aux armes
13. Scene 3. Quel secour vient me degager / Moderez la tristesse
14. Scene 3. Premier Air
15. Scene 3. Second Air
16. Scene 4 et derniere. Roland, il faut armer votre invincible bras / La Gloire vous appelle

Lully's 1685 Roland, on a subject apparently chosen by Louis XIV--its message is that loyalty to one's country and fighting battles is more important and noble than earthly love--was a great hit and played on-and-off in France and other European countries until 1750. The plot involves Angelique's vacillating love for Médor. She vacillates due to the fact that Médor is of "obscure lineage" and therefore beneath her station. He has undying, wild love for her. Roland adores Angelique also, but while she admires his knightliness, she is otherwise not interested. After Médor threatens suicide, Angelique gives in; they marry to great festivity at the close of Act 3.

In the last two acts all the attention is on Roland. He is seen with his pal Astolfe, who tries to reason with him. Roland discovers some writings on the wall of a grotto celebrating the love of Angélique and Médor and he falls into despair, and when a village wedding party passes by they happily tell him of the lovers' departure. Roland becomes enraged and then insane. In the last act, Astolfe summons Logistille, the wise fairy, and she puts Roland to sleep. Logistille sends for the ghosts of dead heroes to urge Roland on to action, glory, and war; when he awakens he is sane and ashamed of his previous weakness. With the encouragement of Terror, Glory, and Fame he races toward his country to do battle as the ghosts sing "Today cast off forever/The shameful bonds of love".

This recording, made during live performances in Lausanne in January, 2004, is exciting, thoroughly idiomatic, and energetic as led by Christophe Rousset. French Baroque opera, which was not meant for the general public, its format filled with dance music and odd mixtures of recitative, arioso, and brief aria, was bizarrely specific to its time and place and is not easy to "sell". Of course, its artifice is part of (perhaps most of) its appeal--it's as precious as a Fabergé egg. The dance and purely orchestral interludes are sometimes woven into the drama and sometimes not. The glorious Chaconne that closes Act 3, in which the happy couple is praised and entertained, is a plugged-in interlude, and it also works somewhat dramatically--but it is so ravishing that it doesn't really have to. And the scene in the fourth act, in which Roland comes upon the bucolic wedding party and learns of Angélique's elopement, is the perfect pairing of drama and divertissement. They are as crucial as the occasional emotion-filled scene, usually a solo for an angry, bereft, vengeful, wicked, or insane character, of which Roland's Mad Scene at the end of Act 4 is one. The maniacal, dark, runaway-train continuo with which it begins is remarkable, and unique; it is Lully at his best.

Anna-Maria Panzarella's Angelique is just about ideal, singing with a combination of elegance and plangency, with a flexible, genuinely pretty voice. Her uncertainty is vividly enough expressed to make us care. As her confidante, Témire, Monique Zanetti is both sympathetic and strong--and she also sings beautifully. Tenor Olivier Dumait sings Médor with a bit of effort, but his lovesickness may call for such nuance. The role of Roland is a pip--once he takes over in the fourth act he almost never stops--and his passion, disappointment, then anger and insane rage, which give way in the last act to genuinely heroic utterance, are stunningly handled by bass Nicolas Testé. Every so often a low note escapes him, but overall his is a grand portrayal. Salome Haller's singing of Logistille's music is ravishing, and the rest of the cast is superb. The highest praise goes to Rousset's Les Talens Lyrique and the busy Lausanne Opera chorus. The former's strings attack with verve and true drama, punctuated by the rare entrance of oboes, flutes, and a bassoon, and the latter colors the text as effectively as the soloists. This is a magnificent achievement. [7/2/2004] -- Robert Levine, ClassicsToday.com


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  • Rabisox
  •  wrote in 09:03
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Oh yes, I tried to buy it but it is nowhere to be found! Thanks!!