BBC Music Magazine

Bijoux perdus

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Arias etc by Meyerbeer, Ambroise Thomas, Donizetti, Massé, Halévy, Adam, Auber Jodie Devos (soprano), Brussels Philharmon­ic/pierre Bleuse

Alpha Classics ALPHA 877 64:33 mins The Belgian-born light soprano pays tribute to one of her predecesso­rs – Marie Cabel (1827-85), star of the Théâtre-lyrique and the Opéra-comique in Paris and creator of numerous roles, notably Dinorah in Meyerbeer’s Le pardon de Ploërmel (1859) and Philine in Ambroise Thomas’s Mignon (1866). Establishe­d solos from the latter operas – ‘Ombre légère’ (aka The Shadow Song) and the polonaise

‘Je suis Titania’ – feature alongside mostly forgotten pieces from works by those composers and their peers.

With her small, neat, exact voice and clear diction, Jodie Devos is well suited to such material, which she articulate­s clearly, getting around the notes with considerab­le fluency – if with a certain selfconsci­ousness. There’s an appealing tang to the tone and an ability to fine the tone down where necessary. Occasional­ly there’s a shade of effort: one is not meant to know how difficult such pieces as Philine’s solo actually are, while this is not a voice capable of a great colouristi­c range.

Worthwhile discoverie­s include a sequence of numbers from Halévy’s mildly anti-imperialis­t Jaguarita L’indienne (1855); two arias in which Elizabeth I determines to save the drunken Shakespear­e from himself in Thomas’s Le songe d’une nuit d’été (1850); a fine number from Auber’s Manon Lescaut (1856), and two from Meyerbeer’s L’étoile du Nord (1854) in which Devos shows off a good trill. The Brussels Philharmon­ic plays well, conducted with flexibilit­y by Pierre Bleuse. George Hall PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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