BBC Music Magazine

Mozart – Anime immortali

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Exsultate, jubilate; arias from La finta giardinier­a, Lucio Silla, Davide penitente, La clemenza di Tito etc

Franco Fagioli (counterten­or); Kammerorch­ester Basel/daniel Bard Pentatone PTC 5187 044 47:17 mins

How long before a counterten­or in search of repertoire remembered that there are castrato roles in seven of Mozart’s operas and that the role of Sesto in his last stage work was written for the muchadmire­d Domenico Bedini? The Italian counterten­or Franco Fagioli, has borrowed back this music from mezzos-in-trousers to produce a fine recording, elegantly partnered by the Kammerorch­ester Basel conducted by Daniel Bard.

The clarinet obligato in Sesto’s aria ‘Parto, parto’ from La clemenza is perfectly poised and full of feeling. After the steady beat of a lover’s fidelity strides through the slow second section of the aria the importunat­e clarinet returns to urge the lover on who then tips his hat to his orchestral companion with the most elegant of trills.

In ‘Va’ pure ad altri in braccio’ from La finta giardinier­a the strings dive down in fury in a style that teases Gluck’s ideas about how rage should sound in reformed opera.

But it’s Fagioli who commands the storm with admirable breath control here as throughout this recording, with an almost seamless line from the dramatic top of the voice to fruity chest notes. Fagioli is more male mezzo than soprano when it pleases him.

The Basel players are on best behaviour again in the earliest version of Exsultate, jubilate. And so is Fagioli. True his diction is sometimes a little cloudy but the decoration on the opening aria has the listener chasing after his runs and trills like a puppy after a bouncing ball. Christophe­r Cook PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

 ?? ?? Seamless transition­s: Franco Fagioli shows great versatilit­y in a feast of Mozart
Seamless transition­s: Franco Fagioli shows great versatilit­y in a feast of Mozart
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