2017-01-18 featured press

kultur-port.de – Händels „Alcina“ – Operncoup mit Jaroussky, Petibon und Prohaska – Translation to English

2017-01-18, kulturport.de, by Hans-Juergen Fink

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Händel’s “Alcina” – An Operatic Coup With Jaroussky, Petibon And Prohaska

(five stars)
by Hans-Juergen Fink – Wednesday, 18 January 2017 at 10:10 h

With sorcery and love, the sorceress Alcina is fighting a desperate battle against the horrors of old age. For his Baroque opera, Händel set this psychological drama to ravishing music; for Aix-en-Provence 2015, director Katie Mitchell envisioned a sombre, disturbing, but also surprising and amusing imagery. The cast: a feast for the ears and eyes.

Recently, at the beginning of November, Philippe Jaroussky was at the Hamburger Laeiszhalle. Joined by the Freiburger Barockorchester, he performed for the concert series “Das Alte Werk” hosted by the NDR, with a programme comprising the repertoire on his latest CD, “Sacred Cantatas,” featuring four cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach and Georg Philipp Telemann – where obviously he was minutely more at home with Telemann, a composer field-tested in opera, than with the very introvert music of the cantor at the Thomaskirche. On record though, you can savour Jaroussky’s angel voice at its absolute best, at both composer’s works.

Before the concert in November, the man with the clear, assertive voice had already sung the season opening of the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester – last early September at the Laeiszhalle; still a future project then: his participation at both the inauguration concerts of the Elbphilharmonie, where at the 11th and 12th of January, he sang renaissance madrigals from one of the balconies, accompanied by a harp.

In May, he returns once more to the spectacular new building at the harbour: he will be giving three early summer concerts with the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester and Thomas Hengelbrock, were he is going to lend his very own, unusual and unique sound to the song cycle “Les nuits d’été” by Hector Berlioz, originally written for low tenor or mezzosoprano.

The frequency with which Jaroussky is popping by in Hamburg doesn’t need to come as a surprise for anyone – after all, the countertenor superstar is artist in residence of the NDR Orchester during the season 2016/2017.

Baroque opera at its finest: Händel’s “Alcina” with Jaroussky

Who didn’t manage to get hold of tickets for any of the performances can draw some comfort from the CD “Sacred Cantatas,” and from the really magnificent opera on DVD or BluRay: Händel’s great Baroque “Alcina,” premiered in 1745 in London. Recorded in 2015 at the Festival in Aix-en-Provence. A recording of the ingenious production by Katie Mitchell, who stages an interpretation of “Alcina” where not a single one of the 187 minutes and not one of the many arias is even a tiny bit boring.

The story around the aging sorceress Alcina and her sister Morgana becomes a fascinating game between illusion (the youthful appearances of the two, Patricia Petibon and Anna Prohaska in the parlour), and reality, when their alter egos are played by older actresses once they are leaving the parlour at the centre of the dollhouse via the side doors, heading for their magic laboratories.

The two capture young men, who after some time, once love has cooled down, are ending up in showcases as taxidermy specimens. Naturally, the young knight Ruggiero (Philippe Jaroussky) is an ideal victim – if it wasn’t for his lover, who seeks him out and, dressed as a man, tries to free him. Pure drama in the sultry parlour of love of Alcina’s, with the passionate acting of Petibon’s and Prohaska’s adding compelling allure (with a hint of “Fifty Shades Of Grey.”)

Concerning playfulness and vitality, the young Alcina definitely surpasses Ruggiero’s lover. Not even remotely everything is acted out; cleverly, Katie Mitchell leaves many things to Händel’s incomparably touching music and the facial expressions of her actors. Devastatingly acted: Alcina’s break-down, when she realizes her magic is waning and Ruggiero is eluding her.

The orchestra in Aix – just like at the Bach/Telemann concert in Hamburg – was the Freiburger Barockorchester (with the Russian choir MusicAeterna.) Both are able to maintain the electrifying tension of the plot over the full distance, at every second. Conductor is the Italian Baroque specialist Andrea Marcon. A feast for the senses. Jaroussky sings pure drama – seductive, with effortless radiance, he elegantly musters the dazzling coloraturas. Definitely worth hearing and seeing are the two sisters/sorceresses as well as Kristina Bradic as Bradamante with her sensual mezzo. Special praise, however, goes to boy soprano Elias Mädler as Oberto. Mädler’s absolutely secure, thoughtful interpretation astonishes every listener.

An intelligent, musically captivating recording that has everything that comprises the magic of a Baroque opera like “Alcina.”

 

 

2017-02-17 featured press

Frank Egel Photography on Facebook – Philippe Jaroussky / französischer Opernsänger (Countertenor) für arte Magazin.

2017-01-17, Frank Egel Photography on Facebook

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2017-01-14 featured press

France 3 – Les Victoires de la Musique Classique

2017-01-14, France 3, by n. N.

Sur ce plateau d’exception, seront également invités le contre-ténor Philippe Jaroussky qui a conquis une place particulière dans le cœur du public, le créatif quatuor Ebène, le brillant violoniste Tedi Papavrami, l’accordéoniste et compositeur Richard Galliano, Le chœur de l’Opéra de Lille, l’octuor Les violoncelles français, le percutant duo piano-marimba de Thomas Enhco et Vassilena Serafimova, le jeune et remarquable clarinettiste Raphaël Sévère, Bogdan Talos, un ensemble de cuivres autour de Romain et Thomas Leleu, Emmanuelle Haïm et son ensemble Le Concert d’Astrée rythmeront les séquences de musique baroque avec la grâce et l’exigence qui sont sa signature…

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2017-01-12_09 featured press

ORF – Lob von Gauck abwärts

2017-01-13, ORF

Nach der krankheitsbedingten Absage von Jonas Kaufmann und Anja Harteros hielt neben Bryn Terfel vor allem Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky die Fahne der Stars hoch und stellte mit einigen Renaissance-Arien die akustischen Möglichkeiten des Ausnahmebaus unter Beweis, der auch Solisten, die in den oberen Rängen singen, raumfüllend verteilt.

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2017-01-12_05 featured press

Eye Bags on WordPress – Elbphilharmonie Opening

2017-01-12, Eye Bags on WordPress

Hengelbrock programmed this evening – and this evening is a big deal far beyond Hamburg or Germany – and he starts with BRITTEN, then has DUTILLEUX (and the piani in the strings are unbelievable there) and then Philippe Jaroussky, from one of the balconies, sings “Dalle più alte sfere”.

This is the most brilliant piece of programming ever – the opening number of the 1589 Medici Intermedi in Florence, where the primadonna of the court descended from the heavens (well, stage heavens cart, but still) as the celestial harmony, singing this very piece that was, then, the latest in vocal development. I have never heard this programmed in a concert out of very, very obscure special events among Early Music nerds, and even then, very rarely. […]

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2017-01-12_03 featured press

Zeit Online – Hamburg, deine Perle

2017-01-12, Zeit Online, by Rabea Weihser

Als der Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky kurz vor der Pause die Arie Amarilli Mia Bella von Giulio Caccini singt, lediglich von einer Barockharfe begleitet, wirkt das Publikum zum ersten und einzigen Mal gebannt und betört, der angespannten Situation völlig entrückt. Dafür bedankt es sich mit Bravo-Rufen.

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2017-01-11_06 featured press

Die Welt – Liebe Hamburger, Weltklasse geht leider anders

2017-01-12, Die Welt, by Manuel Brug

[…] Zum Glück werden die frühbarocken de Cavalieri- und Caccini-Solomadrigale von dem hinreißenden Philippe Jaroussky gesungen.  […]

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2017-01-12_02 featured press

Spiegel Online – Ode an die Freude

2017-01-12, Spiegel Online, by Werner Theurich

Der Bogen, den Thomas Hengelbrock im zweiten Teil des Konzerts schlug, raubte den Atem. Vom Barock zu Avantgarde und zurück, das Ganze meist in nahtlosem Übergang. Das erzeugte ungeheure Dynamik und Überraschungseffekte, zumal man nie genau wusste, wie es, auch technisch, weiterging. Da sang der makellose Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky seine himmlischen Arien von hoch oben aus der Empore, nur begleitet von Margret Kölls zarter Harfe. […]

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2017-01-12 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “Deuxième concert d’ouverture ce soir, …”

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

Deuxième concert d’ouverture ce soir, quelle joie de rencontrer Sir Bryn Terfel! […]

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2017-01-12 featured press

Süddeutsche Zeitung – Auf Tuchfühlung im Vulkankrater

2017-01-12, Süddeutsche Zeitung, by Reinhard J. Brembeck

“… Wer aber Jaroussky schon an anderen Orten und unter schlechteren akustischen Bedingungen gehört hat, weiß, dass dieser Mann immer so gut singt: androgyn, distanziert und mit einer leichten Drohung in der Tonfärbung, irgendwo zwischen Sadismus und Exzess. Die Akustik Yasuhisa Toyota[s] ändert rein gar nichts an Jarousskys phänomenalem Können. Sie erlaubt es aber dem Konzertbesucher, jede noch so feine Nuance seines Gesangs zu hören. Das allein ist schon grandios. Sollte Toyota etwa einen sehr, sehr großen Kammermusiksaal ertüftelt haben?” […]

“… However, who has listened to Jaroussky before, in other locations, and under worse acoustic circumstances, knows that this man always sings this well: androgynous, distanced, and with a slight menace to the colouring of the voice, somewhere between sadism and excess. Yasuhisa Toyota’s acoustics change nothing at all about Jaroussky’s phenomenal skill; however, it allows the listener to experience the slightest nuance of his singing, This alone is terrific. Could it be that Toyota devised a very very big chamber music hall?” […]

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