BBC Music Magazine

The Divine Muse

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Haydn: Arianna a Naxos; plus songs by Schubert and Wolf Mary Bevan (soprano),

Joseph Middleton (piano)

Signum Classics SIGCD 606 64:35 mins Muses are often just a pretext for objectifyi­ng women, but The Divine Muse offers a much more thoughtful take. In this recital, the muse can be a predictabl­e figure like Dido, Venus, Ganymede or Ariadne – but perhaps also the imagined goddess Weyla, real women the poets loved, God, Jesus and nature, so there’s plenty of variety.

Schubert and Wolf songs sandwich Haydn’s dramatic cantata Arianna a Naxos, and Geistliche­s Lied. Schubert, pleasingly, is represente­d by both Italian

(elegant or energetic) and German (impassione­d or introspect­ive). Some of the Wolf songs are searingly beautiful, such as his rarely-heard ‘Ganymed’ and ‘Gebet’. The Haydn makes a substantia­l filling.

And yet, overall, it doesn’t quite work because both the German and Italian words are sung with the same limpid evenness. German poetry needs more bite and clarity, the lines jump-starting off the consonants, even tipping into ugliness or despair. Wolf’s magnificen­tly twisted soundworld, especially, needs more grit. That said, the Italian-language settings respond excellentl­y to Mary Bevan’s silken, untroubled sound. This makes it a recital of two halves. Despite her beautiful voice – and it is truly beautiful: resonant, creamy and warm, refined and elegant – Bevan seems to float above the raw, heart-wrenching emotion in the German verses. Joseph Middleton’s assured, sensitive and technicolo­ur playing tells a more insightful story. This imbalance slightly prevents this recording from being the glorious feast this fine pair of musicians could offer. Neverthele­ss, the selected songs make a thought-provoking and rewarding combinatio­n. Natasha Loges PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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