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English Bach Festival Chorus, English Bach Festival Baroque Orchestra, Nicholas McGegan - Rameau - Nais (1995)

English Bach Festival Chorus, English Bach Festival Baroque Orchestra, Nicholas McGegan - Rameau - Nais (1995)
  • Title: Rameau - Nais
  • Year Of Release: 1995
  • Label: Erato
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
  • Total Time: 54:22 + 51:36
  • Total Size: 918 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. Prologue
02. Scene 1:
"Attaquons Les Cieux" (Choeur)
02. Scene 2:
"Arretez, Monstres, Arretez" (Pluton)
03. Scene 3:
"Au Fond Des Gouffres Eternels" (Jupiter)
Scene 4: (Omisel Omitted / Enfallt)
05. Symphonie
06. Scene 5:
Sarabande
Air: "Ah ! Que La Paix Nous Promet De Douceurs" (Flore)
07. Ballet Figure - Gavotte Vive
Air: "Brillez De Mille Traits Nouveaux" (Flore)
08. Rigaudons 1 Et 2
"Dans Une Heureuse Intelligence" (Jupiter)
Act 1
09. Scene 1:
Air: "Que Ces Paisibles Bords..." (Neptune)
10. Scene 2:
"Palemon, I'amour Est Venge" (Neptune)
11. Scene 3:
"Accourez A Ma Voix" (Nais)
12. Scene/Scene/Szene 4:
"Peut-On L'entendre..." (Neptune)
13. Scene 5:
Air: "Tendres Oiseaux Eveillez-Vous" (Nais)
14. Scene 6:
"Avant Que Le Soleil Sorte" (Telenus)
15. Symphonie
16. Scene 7:
"Que Ce Jour Consacre..." (Asterion)
17. Ballet Figure (Chaconne)
18. Scene 8:
Ballet Figure
"Chantons Nais..." (Choeur)
19. Menuets I & II
20. Scene 9:
Tambourin
"Regne, Triomphe Dieu Des Mers..." (Choeur)

CD 2:
Act 2
01. Scene 1:
"Ah! Ne Me Suivez Point" (Nais)
02. Scene 2:
"Dois-Je Le Croire ?" (Nais)
03. Scene 3:
"Ma Jalouse Tendresse..." (Telenus)
04. Scene 4:
"Elle Rit Du Trait..." (Telenus)
05. Scene 5:
"Air: Les Ennuis De L'incertitude..." (Asterion)
06. Scene 6:
"Air: La Voix Des Plaisirs M'appelle..." (Tiresie)
07. Gavottes 1 Et 2
08. Sarabande
09. Ballet Figure - Musette Tendre
10. Ballet Figure - Gavotte 1 Et 2
11. Scene 7:
"Quel Oracle..." (Choeur)
12. Scene 8:
"De Coupables Concerts..." (Asterion)
Act 3
13. Scene 1:
"La Jeune Nimphe Que J'adore..." (Neptune)
14. Scene 2:
"O Ciel !..."(Neptune)
15. Scene 3:
"Allumez-Vous Rapides Feux..." (Telenus, Asterion, Choeur)
16. Scene 4:
"Les Fiots Les Ont Punis" (Neptune)
17. Scene 5:
"Coulez Ondes, Melez Votre Plus Doux Murmure" (Choeur) 1
18. Tambourins 1 Et 2
19. Contredanse Generale

Performers:
Nais - Linda Russell, Soprano
Neptune - Ian Caley, Tenor
Jupiter, Telenus - Ian Caddy, Baryton
Pluton - John Tomlinson, Basse
Tiresie - Richard Jackson, Baryton
Asterion - Brian Parsons, Haute-Contre
Palemon - Antony Ransome, Baryton
Flore, 2eme Bergere - Ann Mackay, Soprano
1 Re Bergere - Jennifer Smith, Soprano

English Bach Festival Chorus
English Bach Festival Baroque Orchestra
Conductor: Nicholas Mcgegan

It is only a short while since I reviewed a suite of dances from Rameau's opera, Nais. Now, hard on the heels of that disc (also conducted by McGegan, Harmonia Mundi, 7/95) comes a reissue of the entire work, albeit with judicious cuts. Nais was commissioned to celebrate the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, and first performed the following year. Thus it was a vocal counterpart to Handel's Music for the Royal Fireworks, both pieces marking the conclusion of the War of the Austrian Succession. The present recording was made in 1980 following performances at London's Old Vic Theatre and at Versailles under the auspices of Lina Lalandi's enterprising English Bach Festival.

Though, dramatically, Nais is unremarkable, Rameau and his librettist, Louis de Cahusac, with whom he collaborated on many occasions, made a special point of establishing a strong relationship between dance and action. As Graham Sadler, editor of the edition and author of an informative introduction points out, Cahusac himself provided detailed choreographic outlines for the dances which feature so prominently in this piece. And Rameau responded with music which, of its kind, is much closer to the spirit of opera-ballet than heroic opera, and is representative of his finest.

Nicholas McGegan has an effective understanding of French baroque style and brings out much that is graceful and enlivening in Rameau's score. Only the Prologue bears any relevance to the Treaty which occasioned the work, and this in strictly allegorical terms. Here, John Tomlinson and Ian Caddy are especially effective. In the opera itself Linda Russell is appealing in the title-role with Ian Caley an ardent Neptune in love with her. But, as so often with Rameau's vocal music in the tenor register, the uppermost notes sometimes betray a hint of strain. For the most part I enjoyed the purely instrumental numbers whose participants seem to revel in Rameau's uniquely colourful orchestral palette. Who wouldn't? From the moment that we hear the superbly inventive overture, through to the sparkling tambourins which occur towards the end of Acts 1 and 3, Rameau never for a second lets us down. Much as I enjoyed McGegan's dance suite from Nais, there is nothing like hearing these wonderful dances in their dramatic context so carefully considered by composer and librettist. Only the choral singing occasionally fails to measure up to the solo and instrumental contributions. But this is, notwithstanding, a welcome and long-awaited reappearance of an exhilarating score, completing Erato's impressive range of Rameau's operas on CD.' -- Nicholas Anderson, Gramophone (11/1995)





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