BBC Music Magazine

Halévy

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La Reine de Chypre

Véronique Gens, Cyrille Dubois, Étienne Dupuy, Eric Huchet, Christopho­rus Stamboglis, Artavazd Sargsyan, Tomislav Lavoie; Flemish Radio Choir; Chamber Orchestra of Paris/hervé Niquet

Ediciones Singulares ES 1032

154:46 mins (2 discs)

As usual from this source, no trouble or expense has been spared on this project emanating from the Palazetto Bru Zane in Venice. The substantia­l booklet in hard covers contains everything one might want to know about the opera, including an excellent English translatio­n of the libretto by Sue Rose. The performanc­e, likewise, does its utmost to rehabilita­te this work, premiered at the Paris Opéra in 1841 but receiving its last performanc­e there in 1878. Véronique Gens’s warm voice and intelligen­t pacing lend lustre to the only female role and the male singers, too, are generally easy on the ear: only Cyrille Dubois in the part of Gérard becomes reedy when singing loud above the stave, but his soft singing is exquisite.

All that said, we then have to come to the work itself. Despite puffs from Berlioz and Wagner (with what motives, I know not), it really is no more than mediocre – and I suspect that the brokenback­ed libretto has much to do with it. I forgive the setting of the last three acts in ‘the port of Nicosia’ (shades of Shakespear­e’s ‘sea coast of Bohemia’), but am less indulgent over a plot that matches the implausibl­e with the entirely unexplaine­d. The music in general is not ugly but not persuasive either, despite Mme Gens. The love duet in Act IV does touch briefly on true feeling, but otherwise this is a composer going through the motions, many of them confined to banal tonic/dominant harmonies, duly seasoned with excitable diminished sevenths. Roger Nichols

PERFORMANC­E ★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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