BBC Music Magazine

And Love Said...

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Britten: On this Island;

Gurney: Five Elizabetha­n Songs; Leterme: Two Poems by Oscar Wilde; Milhaud: Two Love Songs, Op. 30; Walton: Three Songs from Façade; plus songs by Bridge, Mercury, Poldowski, Quilter, Tailleferr­e and Vaughan Williams

Jodie Devos (soprano),

Nicolas Krüger (piano)

Alpha Classics ALPHA668 68:58 mins Acclaimed for her pitchperfe­ct album of Offenbach arias (reviewed May 2019), Belgian soprano Jodie Devos, superbly accompanie­d by pianist Nicolas Krüger, now demonstrat­es a more intimate style. Less predictabl­y, several of these English-language songs are by non-british composers: for instance, Milhaud’s ecstatic pair

of Love Songs (setting Tagore), in turn contrasted with two astringent Oscar Wilde settings by young Belgian composer Patrick Leterme; written specially for Devos, these exploit her secure intonation and ability to hit stratosphe­ric notes.

Devos’s genuine affection for this repertoire shines through, whether in her spirited account of Quilter’s ‘Love’s Philosophy’ (the song with which she won her place at the Royal Academy of Music), or in the limpid enchantmen­t of Walton’s ‘Daphne’. Yet in other (less thoroughly prepared?) songs her vowel sounds are sometimes ‘mid-atlantic’ and often inconsiste­nt: in Bridge’s ‘Love went a-riding’ I hear at least three different pronunciat­ions of ‘us’.

With Britten’s cycle On this

Island, Devos’s sheer accuracy and panache outshines many sopranos on record. Yet I’m not always convinced she quite finds the tricky balance between the ‘art’ of Auden and Britten’s songs and the deeper emotions their manner only lightly mask. The ‘cute’ insoucianc­e with which Devos delivers ‘As it is plenty’ works alright, but I find the edginess of Elizabeth Atherton’s account with Malcolm Martineau (on Onyx) yet more credible. Still, a lovely recital overall. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

★★★★

★★★★

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