BBC Music Magazine

Mozart Così fan tutte

-

Francesco Vultaggio, Héloïse Mas, Alexander Sprague, Biagio Pizzuti, Hamida Kristoffer­sen; European Opera Centre; Royal Liverpool Philharmon­ic Orchestra/

Laurent Pillot

Rubicon RCD1026 147:60 mins (2 discs) Così fan tutte, but not as we know it. Ian Woodfield in his book on the opera (reviewed March 2009) demonstrat­ed that Mozart and Da Ponte had toyed with the idea of swapping the partners of the now standard pairs of lovers, so the women are seduced only by their own lovers in disguise, rather than by each other’s lovers, and thus their guilt is diluted. As for the men, their fidelity is not tested at all – which means what has been called ‘an Enlightenm­ent experiment in love’ now has a flawed methodolog­y. Moreover, various deletions and adjustment­s have been made in this live recording to accomplish this.

Still, the young singers acquit themselves well. Nazan Fikret (Fiordiligi) projects bell-like vocal clarity in ‘Come scoglio’, ★éloïse Mas (Dorabella) is commendabl­y secure in ‘Smanie implacabil­i’, and Alexander Sprague (Ferrando) performs with buffa-esque panache throughout. Biagio

Pizzuti (Giglielmo) gets to sing the challengin­g ‘Rivolgete a me lo sguardo’ which is almost never performed or recorded. The John Eliot Gardiner version of this

(1993, Deutsche Grammophon) has a more nuanced orchestral accompanim­ent, and the brilliant ‘acting with the voice’ found in the 1991 performanc­e by Anton Scharinger (Phillips Complete Mozart, Vol. 23, CD 7) would be hard to beat. Like the plot of Così, this new version is an interestin­g ‘experiment’, but as with the original there are unsettling results. Anthony Pryer

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom