2019-03-25 featured press

Operawire – Jonas Kaufmann, Elīna Garanča & Philippe Jaroussky Headline Théâtre Champs-Élysée’s 2019-20 Season

2020-03-23, Operawire, by Francisco Salazar

Performance Date: Jan. 21, 2020

Philippe Jaroussky performs a recital of Schubert lieder with pianist Jérôme Ducros.

Performance Date: Jan. 24, 2020 […]

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2021-03-21 featured press

concerti – „Alter Sänger, junger Dirigent“

2019-03-21, concerti, by Christian Schmidt

Jaroussky nach zahlreichen internationalen Preisen auch das. Dabei denkt der 41-Jährige auf dem Höhepunkt seiner Karriere auch darüber nach, seine ­musikalische Laufbahn radikal zu verändern. […]

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2019-03-13-featured-press

Avrotros – Nieuw Klassiek: Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky zingt aria’s van Cavalli

2019-03-14, Avrotros, by N. N.

De opera’s van de Italiaanse componist en organist Francesco Cavalli zitten vol fantasie, humor en emotie en waren hun tijd – hij schreef ze in de 17e eeuw – ver vooruit. De diversiteit en complexiteit van de muziek werken als een magneet voor de Franse countertenor Philippe Jaroussky. “De opera’s bieden een variëteit die we niet vinden in opera’s uit de 18e eeuw.” Het nieuwste album van de zanger staat volledig in het teken van Cavalli en geeft een blik in zijn volledige oeuvre.

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2021-03-08_2 featured press

iClassical – Sparkling performances of Cavalli Opera Arias from Jaroussky

2019-03-08, iclassical.co.uk, by N. N.

[…]

This is a wonderful programme of fine singing and music making that will give lasting listening pleasure to lovers of baroque opera and the counter-tenor voice. For fans of Philippe Jaroussky this will be an essential addition to the growing collection of fine discs from this award-winning baroque singer. Vinyl fans should note that Warner have also made this release available on an LP.

iClassical rating: 4 1/2 out of 5 stars

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2019-03-01_03 featured press

Concerti – “Old singer, young conductor” – Translation to English

2019-03, Concerti, by Christoph Schmidt

“Yet another life goal of mine for many years has been to become a conductor. In three or four years, I am going to conduct my very first Baroque opera – something I am really happy about. That means, I am going to be a singer and a conductor at the same time. At first, both activities will mix, and by and by, I want to sing less and less in favor of expanding my time at the baton. I want to take more responsibility for my musical message.”

Translation to English
This is a fan translation; no infringement of copyright is intended. We believe it fulfills the criteria for “fair use,” discussion and study. Translation by *L

Interview Philippe Jaroussky

“Old singer, young conductor”

Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky has just released a project very close to his heart, is at the zenith of his career – and already has the next goal in mind.

By Christoph Schmidt, March 21, 2019

It doesn’t occur very often, that an asteroid is named after an opera singer. After numerous international awards, Frenchman Philippe Jaroussky also accomplished this one.

At the height of his career, the 41-year-old is also thinking about radically changing his musical career. All while the 41-year-old, on the peak of his career, is thinking about radically changing the course of his career.

At the beginning of the new year, you wanted to take a sabbatical. What do you do, if you do not sing?

Philippe Jaroussky: I stopped singing just before Christmas, with my next concerts being in March. However, I still had plenty to do and prepare: I needed to think about future projects and make decisions; I had to look after my academy, and last but not least, I had to put some thought into the upcoming programs in the near future. It’s nice to do these things in such a relaxed way because it allows you to focus. While on tour, I don’t find any peace for that kind of thing. Sometimes it’s just good not to sing, even though that’s my passion, because a break allows you to take a look at yourself from the outside and imagine what it would be like not to sing.

How often do you take such a break?

Jaroussky: It’s only my second time. It helps me to relax the voice and refresh the technique. Afterwards, I enjoy making music again all the more and, hopefully, I can pass on this joy even better to the audience. As soon as I start practising again during my morning shower, I realize: I’m ready to start again!

Do you also practice your baritone or exclusively the head voice?

Jaroussky: When I started, my singing teacher trained both registers because the baritone is closer to my speaking voice. It can be very useful to understand the mechanisms of the voice in this natural range in order to apply what you discovered to the countertenor voice. Since I’m not a tenor, the lower range of the countertenor voice are not exactly my specialty; it’s something I am working on continuously. Because on stage, for an opera, you also need the chest voice – and there, you only have one shot at an aria. When you’re recording a CD, it’s altogether different, and I end up doing nothing but singing for seven or eight hours a day; in a sense, it’s an entirely different job.

Almost every year, you release a new album. However, the death of the medium of the Studio CD has been foretold. How do you manage to help keeping it alive?

Jaroussky: My record label and I sometimes say we really should slow down. My last solo album was released in November 2017; in between, I have also been present on other recording. Fortunately, there is still a multitude of projects. Needless to say, as a singer, you want to record the most in the phase of your life when you feel in top shape. After all, I don’t know how long I am still able to record CDs.

Your new album, “Ombra mai fu,” quotes an aria from Francesco Cavalli’s opera Xerxes, which became famous by Handel. Who do you think is the better composer?

Jaroussky: Of course Handel’s “Serse” is the best version. Also, for the majority of audiences, Monteverdi is certainly more famous than Cavalli is. However, I chose the title to provoke a little – because, after all, the first version of this aria is the one by Cavalli! That makes you curious. It’s interesting that, for example, the first violins are not playing colla parte with the soloist, but higher. That’s ingenious and has its own charm.

Which other qualities do you perceive in Cavalli?

Jaroussky: I discovered him right at the beginning of my career, when I was in my early twenties. Even then, I was beguiled by the charm of this music;  he has a distinctive personal style. It’s no wonder that currently, almost all of his operas are being performed. On the CD, I wanted to create a digest of the best arias and duets from all his operas, also to show the variety of his composing – from lamenti to extremely comical scenes. Even during his lifetime, his music was very popular. It is much simpler than Händel’s, and more fragile. Cavalli was writing very fast, and sometimes, he only notated the voice, and the bass line. Who, when, with whom, and with which instruments is actually playing together often remains for the musician to decide. Solely the instrumentation turns it into kind of a new creation. When it comes to Händel, most is fixed. That’s why I love early Baroque music so much – because it educates you in imagining the right sound, and prompts you to interpret the libretto.

You are considered a specialist in the field of Early Music. Are you also interested in contemporary repertoire?

Jaroussky: Of course; I have often had the opportunity to sing new pieces, because the countertenor has actually evolved into a modern voice type once more. My next CD project is going to include contemporary music, only with piano accompaniment, but it’s too early to talk about it.

You are now 41, have won numerous classical prizes and are performing all over the world. What ambitions, goals and challenges could someone like you still have?

Jaroussky: When you’re young, you have a lot of dreams. At the time, I never dared to hope I would sing at La Scala one day. You’re right; I’ve achieved much more than I thought. But more important is that you can choose what and with whom you sing. The audience is very grateful, and I would like to experience these moments more intensely, just because I do not know how much longer I can enjoy them.

Sounds a little hedonistic.

Jaroussky: That may be true, but if you want to sing, actually enjoying it is paramount. Yet another life goal of mine for many years has been to become a conductor. In three or four years, I am going to conduct my very first Baroque opera – something I am really happy about. That means, I am going to be a singer and a conductor at the same time. At first, both activities will mix, and by and by, I want to sing less and less in favor of expanding my time at the baton. I want to take more responsibility for my musical message.

Does that also give rise to your motivation for your music academy that you founded for children and young adults?

Jaroussky: I come from a family that was completely unmusical. My teachers told my parents to make music – so I started the violin. That changed my life. Twenty years later, I now have the chance to influence the lives of other children, positively, if I can. I was often asked if I thought that more should be done for musical education. I always agreed, but never actually did anything towards that ideal. I try to make up for this lack now at least with fifty students per year. And they don’t have to pay a cent for it.

Is that your kind of work-life balance?

Philippe Jaroussky: You can learn something from this for yourself! When you teach, you are forced to organize your thoughts, to express opinions, to sing something to the students. Some impulses also come from the pupils and students themselves. This shapes and enriches their own music-making immensely. And last but not least, it is a tremendous pleasure to be a teacher!

See Philippe Jaroussky’s “Ombra mai fu” from his eponymous album:

Album Tip

Ombra mai fu – Arien von Cavalli

Philippe Jaroussky (Countertenor), Emoke Barath (Sopran), Marie-Nicole Lemieux (Alt), Ensemble Artaserse

Erato

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2019-03-01_2 featured press

Crescendo – Musical Mask Player – Translation To English

2019-02, Concerti, by Dorothea Walchshäusl

“Listening to Cavalli, it’s astounding how candid and courageous the material is. Despite all the tragedy, the pieces are full of humour and, by the way, they are are very sexually explicit – one part in the love duet, unequivocally, is about sex (laughs). Which means: the music is almost 400 years old; however, sometimes there’s more freedom there to be found than in our present time. That’s incredibly exciting. “

Translation to English
This is a fan translation; no infringement of copyright is intended. We believe it fulfills the criteria for “fair use,” discussion and study. Translation by *L

Musical Mask Player

Philippe Jaroussky

By Dorothea Walchshäusl – February 21, 2019

Philippe Jaroussky’s play with parody and irony in Venetian opera

With his warm countertenor voice, Philippe Jaroussky has sung his way to the top. On his new album, the 41-year-old artist now devotes himself to the Italian composer of early Baroque Francesco Cavalli, and fascinates with an exciting musical masquerade. A conversation about the creative sound-creator, new forms of masculinity and carnival in Venice.

CRESCENDO: You once called the countertenor Fach a new form of masculinity. What do you mean by that?

Philippe Jaroussky: I do believe that the countertenor is a symbol for a new form – or rather, a new old form (laughs). The division of the voices into female and male Fachs arises from the romantic categorization. The castrato voice always stood out as a special kind of voice. However, the castrati quite absolutely interpreted very strong characters. They had high voices, but that didn’t mean they didn’t take on male parts as well. It is certainly no coincidence that after the end of the Second World War, the countertenors suddenly played a role again. The war had been so terrible that people no longer wanted the rigid role models – the man who goes to war, and the woman stays at home with the children. The rediscovery of the countertenor and of high voices in music was a way to say: Women can be strong and men can show their sensitive side. A man can cry and a woman can fight.

You have discovered your voice relatively late as your instrument. How did that feel?

When I started to sing, I suddenly felt a great freedom. I had to fight much less than with the violin, but at the beginning I also felt veritably naked. After all, you cannot hide behind your instrument. But I worked hard, and found great fulfillment in singing. I never wanted to be a, or sing like a woman. The countertenor range is just the voice I feel at home with.

“When I started to sing, I felt veritably naked.”

As an opera singer, you dive into new characters again and again. How are you feeling about that?

We opera singers are sometimes almost too busy merging with a certain role. For me, the most important thing is to achieve a connection to the music. The music should influence how I sing, and not the other way around. When I’m learning a new role, I start with the score and let the feelings the music triggers in me pass into my voice. It’s a very intuitive process and sometimes exciting new things come of it: a really fast-paced aria gains a certain sweetness, or a slow aria gains something very dominant.

On your new album, you will be able to devote yourself to various arias and duets by Francesco Cavalli. Additionally, there are richly orchestrated orchestral works. How did you come across this composer?

My first contact with Baroque music in the opera was Monteverdi. Shortly afterwards, I discovered Cavalli’s music, and from the beginning, was fascinated by the variety of timbres, contrasts and moods. The collaboration with Gabriel Garrido and René Jacobs was pivotal for me as well. I learned so much from them and discovered how rich Cavalli’s music is. With only a few notes, he creates wonderful melodies full of charm. The operas of Cavalli have great dramatic potential, and with good reason, they are being playing extensively at many opera houses for several years now.

“Cavalli operas have great dramatic potential”

The operas of Cavalli were mainly on scheduled for Carnival time in Venice. Have you ever experienced the Venetian Carnival yourself?

I’ve been to Venice many times, but never during carnival. And I’m not sure that nowadays’ version truly represents what it used to be like. However, on myalbum, I wanted to highlight the contrast of the time. On the one hand, carnival was a moment of abundance and luxury, but at the same time there were also a grim side to it. After all, there were plenty of illnesses at the time, as well as severe epidemics like the plague. All the more, people wanted to enjoy life right now, because they did not know whether they would live to enjoy another year. Cavalli’s music reflects exactly that. Both sides – the light and the dark mask, the wealth, the poverty and death – are present in his operas. I wanted that yin and yang represented on the album. Carnival was the time of the year when people behind their masks were all on one level. That’s the reason for its great social significance. The rich could go incognito; the poor were a little less poor and everyone celebrated together.

“One possible lesson from Cavalli is: We should all be much freer and braver, and complain and lament less.”

Cavalli was a pupil of Monteverdi. How independent is his music?

First of all, it is clear that Monteverdi has created a style. Cavalli does not change it, but he remains faithful to the school of Monteverdi. However, during Cavalli’s time, there had been a substantial change: The first public theaters were opened! Until then, opera had been an entertainment exclusively for the rich. rich people. Cavalli now made opera accessible to everyone, and that’s probably why humor and comedy play such a big part in his music. Cavalli didn’t only want to portray kings and princes – he wanted to show people’s everyday lives and truly represent society including the common people.

His operas feature a multitude of different characters, and you can veritably feel the Venetian society. In this respect, only Cavalli finally made the style of Monteverdi really popular, and his catchy melodies resemble today’s pop music. Listening to Cavalli, it’s astounding how candid and courageous the material is. Despite all the tragedy, the pieces are full of humour and, by the way, they are are very sexually explicit – one part in the love duet, unequivocally, is about sex (laughs). Which means: the music is almost 400 years old; however, sometimes there’s more freedom there to be found than in our present time. That’s incredibly exciting.

Sometimes I feel like we’re getting less and less free. One possible lesson from Cavalli is: We should all be much freer and braver, and complain and lament less.

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2019-03-01 featured press

Das Opernglas – Great Fun – Translation to English

2019-03, Das Opernglas, by Yeri Han

“When I will have done my first tentative steps towards conducting, maybe then, when it’s time, it won’t be quite as sad for me, to little by little, sing fewer performances – who knows!”

Translation to English
This is a fan translation; no infringement of copyright is intended. We believe it fulfills the criteria for “fair use,” discussion and study. Translation by *L

2019-03, Das Opernglas, by Yeri Han

Philippe Jaroussky

The Interview

Great fun

Just in time for the carnival season, Philippe Jaroussky surprises in some cheeky costumes. His new album offers the matching program. Yeri Han wanted to know more.

The last time we talked to each other was almost four years ago. In the meantime, a lot of good things have been happening for you. Where do you currently see yourself, and what are you looking forward to the most?

2019 will be a big trade Hänel year for me. For once, because I have the opportunity to sing “Alcina” in Salzburg, next to Cecilia Bartoli, with whom I am going to give my house debut at La Scala in Milan this autumn – as Sesto in “Giulio Cesare”. These will be my only two stage productions this year, but they are really big, fantastic projects! Then there is also the start of my Cavalli tour for my new Album, as well as the release of yet another album that is planned to go on sale in January 2020, and for which I am going to do a big German tour. With this new project, I am going to explore new avenues that may be unexpected for some. They’re in for a surprise.

Another project that continues to gain importance in my life is my “Académie Jaroussky” that I founded in 2017. Each year, we are giving lessons to 25 young talents with free master classes in the categories violin, cello, piano and singing. It is incredibly moving and uplifting to witness, how the children learn to play their first pieces. It makes me incredibly happy!

You already mentioned your upcoming debut at La Scala. What special significance does this debut hold for you?

As a young singer, you keep dreaming about singing “somewhere”. I’ve done enough of that in the meantime; I sang in so many places all over the world, most of which I never had imagined. The Scala never was a defined goal, but obviously, it means a lot, especially as it always irked me that, in spite of basically singing exclusively in Italian and frequently with Italian ensembles, I almost never sing on Italian soil. So it is almost fair to say that “Giulio Cesare”, after 20 years, is my Italian debut.

That’s one of the paradoxes of my job, and a little frustrating for me. I often gained the impression, that the Italians don’t like programs with works written for castrato voices. And after all, the matter has some ambivalence. On one side, it is about pure beauty and music, on the other, historically, it’s about mutilation of children. I often had the notion that it makes Italian audiences uncomfortable. Because of that, I hope that this “Giulio Cesare” is going to be one of the big events of the season, and a good opportunity to introduce baroque repertoire to the Italian audiences as well as inviting the listeners to engage themselves with the topic of the castrati.

How is it in other countries; do you have the feeling that a part of the audience is still a little wary of countertenor singing there as well? Can you relate to the scepticism?  

I can very well understand that some people quite plainly don’t like the specific timbre of countertenors very much, and even in Baroque music prefer mezzo-sopranos or sopranos. At the same time, there needs to be some credit given to fact that a lot has changed during the last 20 years; not only, that now there are far more countertenors around, who vary wildly concerning their vocal techniques, vocal ranges, and personalities, but across the board, a lot has changed. At the start, it has been said that our voices were quite small – which is untrue. It’s also been said we all sound alike – which is of course false as well. I still remember doing “Sant’Alessio” under the baton of William Christie; we were seven countertenors in total, and some members of the audience told me they had been afraid of hearing the same voice all the time – a fear that fortunately proved to be unfounded. Nowadays, there are countertenors whose voices have more facets than that of a many female singers.

Do you have any idea yet how the new “Giulio Cesare” at the Scala will look like?

No not yet. But I am pleased that Robert Carsen will be in charge of for the new production as a director. I like the feeling of knowing in advance that you are going to work with someone you already know. It means much less stress – because opera productions are stressful as a default. You travel there, and you are still unfamiliar with the costumes, the general aesthetic of the production, or what you have to do on stage. Then you are surrounded by a multitude of people who you never met before; there are a lot of rehearsals; you are nervous before the premiere, … A stage production really means a lot more stress than a concert tour!

Right at the beginning, you were mentioning your album shortly to be released: there you focus entirely on opera arias of Francesco Cavalli. What tempted you about this repertoire in particular?

For me, singing Cavalli is a little like returning to my musical roots. At the very beginning of my career, I was given the chance to sing three Monteverdi operas with Jean-Claude Malgoire. So Monteverdi and early Baroque became my first contact with operatic music in general. Shortly after, I met Gabriel Garrido and his ensemble Elyma, who have been playing a lot of Cavalli even back then – in fact, thy belong to the very first who were interested in this wonderful music. Since then, I always had this thought on my mind that once in my life, I wanted to realize a Cavalli project – and during the last years, it started to become more and more palpable: “Cavalli is in the air!” (Laughs) And not only because of the wonderful music. But also because the dramaturgical potential his operas have to offer – and there are 27 in total! They aren’t quite unlike Monteverdi’s – very lively, a bit like theatre plays, without any long arias, full of contrasts, with an abundance of comical passages, erotic and salacious bits, and veritably grotesque plot turns. I thought it was delightful to finally being able to show with my album how modern, funny, and free the genre of opera could be in its infancy. In Cavalli’s music, there are incredibly tragical passages with sublime lamenti – and right in the next scene, there’s capering about and fun. It is never limited to just one sentiment; everything is very rich in contrasts and lively.

“How modern, witty and free the genre of opera could be in its infancy!”

The cover as well as the promo pictures for your new album suggest you are a fan of carnival?

Well, I am not a fan of Venetian carnival in particular, but I definitely like to slip into a costume and become someone else. Even in, in private, I prefer it more subtle: the opera stage allows us to be eccentric. I’m not a born actor, but quite early on, I realized that Make-Up and costumes assist me a lot when it comes to become one with a role. With the cover, we wanted to give a cue to a modern take of carnival in Venice. I suppose you have seen that I am wearing a white shirt; but what seems to be the frills of a cravat, in reality, is a plastic bag. The cover, with white being the predominant colour, is supposed to be a contrast to the back, which is kept in black. A little like Yin and Yang. Venice was well known as a rich town, famous for its carnival season, when the rich and the poor mingled in the anonymity of the masks. That’s also mirrored in Cavalli’s operas: his operas feature gods, kings, wealthy merchants – but then there are poor people as well, which results in a wide range of society being depicted. We consciously decided on “Ombra mai fu”, because we wanted to tickle people’s attention and curiosity a little who might not be as familiar with Cavalli as they are with Händel and other composers of the 18th century. However, it’s Cavalli who wrote the very first “Ombra mai fu,” with exactly the same libretto we’re familiar with from Händel! So this track is surely going to cause some confusion and curiosity.

Which changes do do perceive yourself in your voice?

There definitely have been some, that’s why it isn’t entirely by chance that I am doing the Cavalli project at this point. It’s a lot less viruosic than, for example, my Händel album from two years ago; it contains fewer coloraturas – which doesn’t mean that it is easier to sing. Also it’s a lot more text based. In the future, I don’t want to focus this much anymore on the big castrato roles, but work to establish a repertoire that is a bit more “human”. Cavalli, for example, does not focus on any spectacular high notes or virtuosic coloraturas; it’s more about the vocal expression. And something else that is particularly nice about the music of the time: Not everything is notated, so as a performing artist, you have some freedom when it comes to embellishments or the choice of instruments. Which means, you get to pick the musical colours all by yourself. That was a lot of fun!

What plans and thoughts do you have for the future?

For quite some time now, I have had that dream to conduct and most probably, within the next four years, I am going to be able to do my first project in that direction. It makes me very happy, but I am nervous as well, because it is somewhat the start of a second career. And without wanting to start sounding sad or melancholy: it’s not easy to get older as a singer. Inevitably, there will be a moment, where you will be on stage, but suddenly, you don’t sound as exciting or brilliant anymore than you did in years past – and no one dares to say it out loud. And even if I love to sing: this business comes with with a huge amount of pressure. Only a few, I think, really can imagine, what it means to be uncertain, when you go on stage and sometimes, you are not sure whether you’re in top shape. I withstood this pressure now for twenty years – and they have been twenty fantastic years with wonderful projects and collaborations with a plethora of amazing artists! However: whether I am able to do the same in ten years from now, …? When I will have done my first tentative steps towards conducting, maybe then, when it’s time, it won’t be quite as sad for me, to little by little, sing fewer performances – who knows!

The new album: OMBRA MAI FU

Opera arias by Francesco Cavalli

Excerpts from Il Xerse, Statira, Erismenea, Calisto, Eliogabalo, Ercole Amante, Ormindo, Gli amori d’Apollo e di Dafne, Orione, Eritrea, Giasone, Doricla, Calisto, La Virtù dei Strali d’amore, Pompeo Magno

Release: 8. März


2018-10-19 featured press

Shangay – Philippe Jaroussky: “The gay world is very hard on countertenors”

2018-10-19, Shangay, by Nacho Fresno

“La música sinfónica, instrumental o una ópera, provoca sentimientos que nunca te va a dar la música pop. La experiencia que estamos proporcionando al público con Only the Sound Remains nunca se podría tener con el pop. Los sentimientos que se tienen al escuchar a Schubert o Stravinski, es imposible… Y cuando afronto ese repertorio, yo también, como cantante, voy a sentir esas cosas.”

~

“Symphonic, instrumental or opera music provokes feelings that pop music will never give you. The experience that we are providing to the audience with Only the Sound Remains could never be had with pop. The feelings that you have when listening to Schubert or Stravinsky, it is impossible … And when I face that repertoire, I also, as a singer, I will feel those things.”

Source/Read more: [x]

Translation to English

This is a fan translation; no infringement of copyright is intended. We believe it fulfills the criteria for “fair use,” discussion and study. Translation by *L

2018-10-19, Shangay, by Nacho Fresno

Philippe Jaroussky: “The gay world is very hard on countertenors”

October 19, 2018

By Nacho Fresno

He is one of the best countertenors in the world: Philippe Jaroussky is among the top five of these singers who, in recent years, have become the superstars of opera. And, as you would expect from a singer of his rank, he doesn’t like to mince his words – at least when it comes to the topic of being gay.

He is in Madrid to star in the Spanish premiere of “Only The Sound Remains” at the Teatro Real – a contemporary opera by Finnish* composer Kaija Saariaho.* A story – or a love story? – between two men, navigating between life and death: “There are very sensual scenes between the two characters, because one, the spirit, is in despair about being one and wants to enter the body of the other, who is a monk. It gives the show a very special dimension,” he says.

Heavily involved in LGBT visibility, he is deeply concerned about what recently happened in Paris, where there have been three homophobic attacks in less than a month. “Friends of mine, very close friends, have suffered and showed enormous courage,” he says, worried.

[original: “Amigos míos, muy cercanos, las han sufrido y han tenido un coraje enorme al ahora de enfrentarse a ellos’”]

He knows the fame of countertenors is founded in the belief of many that they were ‘natural heirs’ of the castrati, who in Baroque, were world megastars. An obvious example is Farinelli, who came to Spain when he was contracted by the court of Felipe V, to cure the monarch’s depression. At the time, the singer had already had a triumphant career in Vienna and London. He was appointed director of the court theaters and stayed in our country.

“The castrati probably had a stronger voice than we have. But being a countertenor is a way of telling the world that being a man today is not talking with a low voice, playing soccer or waging war… That’s an old idea of ​​what it means to be a man. And that is the reason for the sustained success of countertenors since twenty years ago now. A part of the audience recognizes themselves in this alternate way of proposing what it means to be a man,” he assures us about the legend that persecutes singers of this vocal range.

We met Philippe at the Teatro Real, a few days before the premiere, so he could talk to us about everything. About “Only the Sound Remains,” but also about the Baroque, about the great opera divas, or about of the fascination that Classical music awakens in the gay world.

And yes, also about contemporary opera. In the montage that premieres at the Real, he plays with the sound through amplification, giving a new dimension to his voice, which is one of the most desired by opera houses around the world.

The American Peter Sellars, one of the world’s most sought-after stage directors by theaters around the globe, stands out by giving the opera classics a new perspective. His point of view, always groundbreaking, leaves no one indifferent. Here, he faces a new work – a coproduction of the Real with the Opera National de Paris, the Nationale Opera & Ballet of Amsterdam, the Canadian Opera Company of Toronto and the Finnish National Opera of Helsinki.

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‘Only the Sound Remains’ premieres in Spain at the Teatro Real. (Photos: Javier del Real)

SHANGAY ⇒ Everyone says that Only the Sounds Remains is a show that cannot be defined. Challenge question: would you define the opera for Shangay?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ [laughs] To understand this work, a fundamental thing is that it is a meeting between two characters. There are two men on stage. Let’s say it’s the meeting of a young spirit and a monk who knew each other in the past and had, let’s say (it’s my interpretation, but I’m sure it’s like that) a very strong friendship-relationship that resembles a homosexual relationship – maybe not as we would define it today, but as we can imagine that it would have been in past times. Also, this spirit had been the ‘favorite’ of the emperor at that time in Japan. There are very sensual scenes between the two characters, because the spirit is desperate, and wants to enter the body of the monk. This adds a very special dimension. There is a very close link between Davone* [Davone Tines is the baritone who is the co-star of the show, together with the dancer Nora Kimball-Mentzos] and me. A meeting between two characters, yes, but also between two singers, two human beings. I couldn’t name another opera where this happens with similar subtlety to their relationship. It is very interesting to see this show and analyze the relationships between people – who perhaps in this time are sometimes too superficial.

“There may still be a part of heterosexual men who think that having a sensitivity to the arts is showing something too feminine. I do not know…”

SHANGAY ⇒ Can you elaborate?
PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ Well, sometimes we “consume” people as if we were going to buy. I am not only talking about sex, but friendship as well. I have the impression that there are more and more people who only relate to others based on whether they benefit their lives. That can be something tangible, or in any other sort of way. But it seems to me that friendships, with depth, real friendships, are becoming more and more difficult. We are from the ‘Generation Facebook’ and we have many friends. But what is a friend? What is a strong relationship between two people? It seems to me that this is one question our performance addresses.

SHANGAY ⇒ You move from the Baroque repertoire, in which you are a world star, to contemporary opera without anesthesia. In the Baroque repertoire, there are also many hidden homosexual relationships …

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ Sure! In many of the librettos. There are many gay relationships in the classics!

SHANGAY ⇒ Contemporary compositions are a risky and difficult field, less appreciated by the audiences. And there are scores that a singer has to study and learn, which are then represented on fewer occasions … And on top of it, it means throwing yourself into a pool with less water – compared with your usual repertoire that ensures success.

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ My career is marked by singing what I like to sing. It is that simple. Most of it has been Baroque, but if we look at the path from the beginning, I’ve been a violinist for twelve years, I’ve played piano for ten … I started studying composition because I’ve always worshipped composers. For me, the composition is at a much higher level than the interpretation. It’s a miracle: starting from scratch and composing. It’s like painting or writing a book. For me it is the top tier, to create something. I create nothing. I have always admired creators. A singer can contribute something special to a work. But the work is the work, regardless of who sings it. Callas may have given much to the character, but Tosca is Tosca. As I have that fascination for the creators, for the current ones I feel it even more – because nowadays, it is very difficult to create something. And Kaija [Kaija Saariaho, the composer of the opera] has a language of her own. Unique. I feel a great admiration for her. As a singer, I feel a great frustration, because I would like to be able to compose. I have ideas, I write, but I do not have the capacity to create an instrumentation. And I would like to be able to say that I want to use my fame, my career, to defend things that I believe in. It would be very easy to dedicate myself only to having the maximum success. Very easy: I’m going to sing the same twenty or thirty arias in recitals, pieces that I know very well, and it works. That’s it! Arias I’ve been singing for twenty years, and the audience goes crazy.

SHANGAY ⇒ You are directly involved in this risky project …
PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ It isn’t so much. Obviously, people are not getting frantic, or cheer, as in an opera by Vivaldi. The audience does not have the same reaction. Let’s say, not the kind of reaction that is a little hysterical. Music, especially Classical music, is not just for fireworks. There is always another, deeper reading. When I listen to a quintet, Schubert is a much deeper experience, almost philosophical – something I do not have if I listen to Lady Gaga’s album, or a pop album. Symphonic, instrumental or opera music provokes feelings that pop music will never give you. The experience that we are providing to the audience with Only the Sound Remains could never be had with pop. The feelings that you have when listening to Schubert or Stravinsky, it is impossible … And when I face that repertoire, I also, as a singer, I will feel those things. Doing a project like this can be a risk. But for me, it is also a way to find a different kind of audience. Naturally, Baroque music is now very successful. But there is another audience. For example, I have a friend who never studied music, does not know how to read it and, nevertheless, only listens to contemporary music. He goes to all the concerts in Paris. What does this mean? Well, there’s an audience for it, and it’s an audience that does not know me. It’s very interesting, that audience that does not come to the theater to listen to me.

SHANGAY ⇒ Why have the creations of contemporary music – unlike theater, sculpture, painting or literature – failed to connect with a mainstream audience? Why doesn’t that communion exist?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ I do not agree with that idea. You have to be clear which time we’re talking about. Maybe it was like that in the past. Now there are creators, like Kaija, who compose in a way that everyone can understand. Maybe thirty or forty years ago, we had a lot of super special music, super difficult and super experimental. I think that now, contemporary music has moved closer to the audiences. It may take a little more time for them to come back.

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A moment of the rehearsal of ‘Only the Sound Remains’ at the Teatro Real.

SHANGAY ⇒ Let me alter the question: what was at fault for this communion to break up, and the resulting divide during large parts of the 20th century? What was the reason for the divorce between the creators and their audiences?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ I’m telling you: there are many reasons for that divorce. One is that the music was more experimental, more like a demonstration. Very difficult to play, exploring all the sounds, with games, associations. Something, shall we say, more demonstrative. I think that’s why it lost a part of its audience. When someone goes to see an opera or a concert, they want to listen and feel – not see a demonstration. It’s the same for a singer; you have to do more than just sing spectacular notes. Contemporary creation had lost that feeling of being ‘touched’ by music. Now, whoever listens to Kaija will have emotions. It is impossible not to have strong emotions by listening to this music that does not want to prove anything. It all serves the feeling. There is now a whole generation of composers who take advantage of all the previous experimentation, but return to a field that the audience can understand. That’s why this opera seems super interesting to me. A form of modern music that is new, but has the ability to be direct and reach the heart of the audience. We need something more. I know her work and her way of working. It’s like a Van Gogh painting: from afar, it’s a wonder, and up close as well – even more. The more I sing this work, the more I like it – because I discover details. That’s why I recommend to anyone who comes to spend an hour, no more, to get to know to her music. They will enjoy it much more! Search for it on YouTube, and discover it.

“The diva is an idealization of a woman. And maybe gays like that a lot because it comes close to the idea we have of a mother.”

SHANGAY ⇒ Opera is fertile ground for icons, many of them for the gay audiences. Many singers are gay as well. What is it about this world that arouses so much fascination? Every opera house or Lied cycle venue looks like a gay bar.

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ Yes, it’s true. For France as well. I think there is a reason – it’s maybe a bit of a cliché, I know – but it still might be difficult for a heterosexual man to assume a form of sensitivity to the arts. It’s the idea – I insist it is a cliché – that a straight man goes to football matches, likes sports … But it’s still like that. That a hetero says “I love opera” is weird. It happens to me. When a boy says to me, “I love La Callas,” I think that, of course, he is gay. I also think that I do not have a very gay audience. To a much higher degree it is women, like Bartoli, who have. The gay opera world is hard on us, the countertenors; we are not big voices. I also think that the image of a strong woman is a big factor. We have an idea of a woman that is maybe a little bit different. The diva is an idealization of this woman. And maybe gays like that a lot because it comes close to the idea we have of a mother. Of the ideal mother, the woman of our life. The diva is a little that, the woman of our life. The idealization of a woman who has magic, a very strong personality. I think it’s a sensitivity to art, to culture, and also a way that allows us to take on aspects of our personality. There still might be a part of heterosexual men who think that having a sensitivity to the arts is making them seem too feminine. I do not know … I have many heterosexual friends who clearly like opera. But it is still easier for us to take on this aspect of our personality.

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A scene from the editing of ‘Only the Sounds Remains’ that is directed by Peter Sellars.

SHANGAY ⇒ The countertenor’s sanctuary is that he is supposed to be the natural heir of castrati. What is your take on that?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ It is that we do not know what the castrati voices really were. The history of these singers has fascinated me from the beginning. It has always touched me. I read a lot about it. To imagine the hard life of a castrato, who came from such a poor world… The tragedy, the sacrifice, it added something to their voices. Not only concerning the physical aspect, but also mentally. Not knowing how they really sang allows everyone to have their own idea of ​​what Farinelli was like. I, for example, know that he sang much more like a man than a woman, because I have seen their scores. The castrati probably had a stronger voice than we have. But being a countertenor is a way of telling the world that being a man today is not talking with a low voice, playing soccer or waging war… That’s an old idea of ​​what it means to be a man. And that is the reason for the sustained success of countertenors since twenty years ago now. A part of the audience recognizes themselves in this alternate way of proposing what it means to be a man.

SHANGAY ⇒ Isn’t that also a bit of a cliché?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ Yes. However, there are a lot of clichés in the gay world as well. There are many gays who only want to be among men. It is very reductive. Sometimes I like to go to bars with friends, but sometimes I tell myself, ‘there are only men in this bar.’ We have to open a little more.

SHANGAY ⇒ Have you ever been recognized in a bar?

PHILIPPE JAROUSSKY⇒ Yes, sometimes. [laughs]

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Peter Sellars, stage director, and Ivor Bolton, musical director of the Teatro Real, at one point during the rehearsal.

*) corrected

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2018-10-19 featured press

Shangay – Philippe Jaroussky: “El mundo gay es muy duro con los contratenores”

2018-10-19, Shangay, by Nacho Fresno

“La música sinfónica, instrumental o una ópera, provoca sentimientos que nunca te va a dar la música pop. La experiencia que estamos proporcionando al público con Only the Sound Remains nunca se podría tener con el pop. Los sentimientos que se tienen al escuchar a Schubert o Stravinski, es imposible… Y cuando afronto ese repertorio, yo también, como cantante, voy a sentir esas cosas.”

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2018-10-18_03 featured press

Platea Magazine – Philippe Jaroussky protagoniza “Only The Sound Remains”, de Kaija Saariaho, en el Teatro Real

2018-10-18, Platea Magazine, n. N.

Entre el 23 de octubre y el 7 de noviembre, subirá al fin la ópera de la compositora finlandesa Kaija Saariaho al escenario del Teatro Real, en una coproducción de este con la Nationale Opera & Ballet de Ámsterdam, la Opéra National de Paris y la Canadian Opera Company. […]

Foto: Javier del Real.

Teatro Real Peter Sellars Philippe Jaroussky, Ivor Bolton Kaija Saariaho

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