BBC Music Magazine

David Lang

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Prisoner of the State

Julie Mathevet, Eric Owens,

Alan Oke, Jarrett Ott, Rafael Porto, John Matthew Myers, Matthew Pearce, Steven Eddy; Men of the Concert Chorale of New York;

New York Philharmon­ic/

Jaap van Zweden

Decca Gold 481 9453 60:34 mins American composer David Lang (b1957) has long struggled with the end of Fidelio: ‘I always want the townspeopl­e to sing about freedom, or about tyranny, or about justice, and instead they sing about how great it is for a wife to save her husband.’

Premiered in 2019, Prisoner of the State is a radical reworking of Beethoven’s opera, melding its narrative ‘skeleton’ with contempora­neous accounts of crime from 1805 (the year Fidelio premiered) alongside Lang’s own reflection­s on the modern penal system. The resulting opera is a powerful and timely work that places the chorus of prisoners at the heart of the story, and this wellrecord­ed disc has all the energy and fire of a staged performanc­e.

Lang’s music is compelling. His orchestral writing is often sparse, its luminous chamber-like textures and percussive interjecti­ons affording the vocal lines an arresting clarity. The New York Philharmon­ic bring taut control to the score and vocal performanc­es are excellent, with Eric Owens on particular­ly fine form as ‘The Jailer’. Reviews of the staged production questioned whether Lang had solved the dramaturgi­cal issues that beleaguer Fidelio, but this feels less pressing in this audio recording. Heard as more of an oratorio, the disc shines for its urgent and affecting theme, powerful score and heartfelt performanc­es.

Kate Wakeling

RECORDING ★★★★

PERFORMANC­ES ★★★★

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