2016-08-30 featured press

Classique mais pas has been – Philippe Jaroussky : “Le public est plus exigeant” – Translation to English

2016-08-30, Classique mais pas has been, by youkaalii

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* This is a fan translation; no infringement of copyright is intended, no profit is being made. Translation by GM*

Philippe Jaroussky: The public is more demanding

INTERVIEW – The countertenor opens the festival Musique en Côte-basque with arias from baroque Italian operas that made him a star. Always open to audacious projects, Philippe Jaroussky has told us about his next challenge.

This summer you had to cancel some concerts. What is it like to lose your voice?

PJ: I had a bronchitis, this happens to me every ten years. I have already experienced this at the beginning of my career when I had less experience and more stress. This time I stayed calmer, even calmer than my fans on Facebook who seemed to be very worried (laughs). I prefer the public to be disappointed because they could not hear me than because they did hear me. And I don’t want to be a slave of my voice, to keep a normal life… or nearly normal.

Does the countertenor voice still provoke strong reactions?

The countertenor voice shows a different aspect of the male sensitivity. It is a voice that always provokes strong reactions – fascination or rejection – because it is not “natural”. My success was a big surprise. Although even after my final exams I planned to have a career in music I did not expect to be so exposed. I notice that the reactions changed over time. Proof of this is the new generation of countertenors who are emerging at the moment. These young singers can dream more about a career. The time is very open; never before has so much baroque opera been sung. The experience of the public is richer; the public is still fascinated but also demands dramatic qualities.

Which programme are you going to perform at Musique en Côte-Basque?

I’m returning to my first love, to arias of the first operas, from Monteverdi to Steffani passing Cavalli. The pieces are from 1640 to 1680, forty years of an immense musical richness going from the comical to the warrior to laments. I am surrounded by twelve musicians, and we link together arias and instrumental pieces.

On 29th July at the BBC Proms in London you sang… David Bowie.

A beautiful experience! I sang “Always crashing in the same car” (scroll down for video) in a ethereal version, a little like film music, very far from the original. I accepted because I am fascinated by Bowie. He was androgynous but his voice wasn’t. He needed his unbelievable costumes but at the bottom he was not so exuberant. I find this appealing; singing countertenor is a form of eccentricity.

You like taking unexpected paths, like singing the mélodie françaises. Is this sensible?

It is very tiring to be sensible (laughs). And I am daredevil enough… I will soon sing Les Nuits d’Eté from Berlioz, the entire cycle! [a cycle of mélodies for tenor or mezzosoprano, the editor]. I will attract critics, I know, but there is an irrepressible desire. They have great phrases, parts that are on the lower-middle register of the voice; this demands a patina. I have to work on things that I don’t do often and paradoxically this gives me more ease in the baroque repertory. Each style demands a lot of preparation. When I have to sing a big opera by Mozart, I don’t start preparing two weeks before the event! For Bérlioz I have given myself a year before singing Les Nuits d’Eté on stage.

2016-08-06 featured press

Forum Opéra – Forum Opéra – Philippe Jaroussky, beau oui comme Bowie

2016-08-06, Bachtrack, by Bernard Schreuders

L’arrangement du titre « Always Crashing in the Same Car » tiré de l’album Low (1977) que signait David Lang, avec accompagnement de harpe et de flûte alto, n’a pas convaincu le chroniqueur de la BBC, pour qui il ne fonctionne tout simplement pas, mais celui du Guardian salue l’audace de la démarche, qui réinvente entièrement la chanson, quand le journaliste du Telegraph confie avoir été surpris par la beauté du timbre et les sonorités chaudes de Philippe Jaroussky, non sans ajouter que David Bowie aurait certainement aimé cette réinterprétation pastorale de sa chanson. […]

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2016-08-02 featured press

Tribune de Lyon – Le Gstaad Menuhin Festival a 100 ans

2016-08-02, Tribune de Lyon, by Luc Hernandez

Là, les plus grands noms du classique vous attendent, et pour cet anniversaire, ce n’est pas un vain mot : Valery Gergiev, Lang Lang, Maxim Vengerov, Diana Damrau, Bertrand Chamayou, Philippe Jaroussky, et un grand pianiste qu’on ne voit que trop peu en France et singulièrement à Lyon : Andras Schiff, […]

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2016-07-30_02 featured press

BBC – Rebel Rebel: Celebrating Bowie at the Proms

2016-07-30, BBC

Bowie: Always Crashing in the Same Car (arr. David Lang) with Philippe Jarrousky
With the s t a r g a z e collective conducted by André de Ridder.

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2016-07-30 featured press

The Guardian – David Bowie Prom review: progressiveness for progressiveness’s sake

2016-07-30, The Guardian, by Jude Rogers

Maybe this is the Bowie many fans crave. Two other interpreters feel much more in tune with the spirit the maker of Blackstar left behind as the concert passes midnight.

Counter-tenor Phillippe Jaroussky’s take on Always Crashing In The Same Car is sparse and challenging, reinventing the song entirely. Then John Cale arrives, wearing an overcoat, scarf and a skirt. In the hands of a Velvet Underground member who influenced Bowie in the first place, Valentine’s Day becomes a dark, electronic elegy, Sorrow a buzzing, gothic anthem, and Space Oddity an excursion into trip-hop, lifted high by the House Gospel Choir.

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2016-07-29_02 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – Petite folie avant les vacances

2016-07-29, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

Petite folie avant les vacances…Chanter du David Bowie au Royal Albert Hall!

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2016-07-29 featured press

BBC News – Stars prepare for ‘celebratory’ David Bowie Prom

2016-07-29, BBC News, by Mark Savage

The rehearsals at Maida Vale’s Studio 3 (where Bowie once played an exclusive concert for Radio 2) run late into the night.

Artists including Neil Hannon, Conor O’Brien and French counter-tenor Philippe Jaroussky drop in to run through their performances, ahead of Friday’s dress rehearsal at the Royal Albert Hall. […]

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2016-07-20 featured press

La Provence – La magie selon Jaroussky

2016-07-20, La Provence, by Olga Bibiloni

“Je viens de chanter à Mexico, à San Francisco.La musique classique est universelle, présente dans le monde entier. Moi, j’ai bénéficié de l’effet Internet, je suis un peu la “génération Internet”. Quand certaines vidéos sur Youtube prennent de l’ampleur, vous savez qu’elles seront vues partout.” […]

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2016-07-02_02 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “Quel plaisir de retrouver la scène …”

2016-07-03, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

Quel plaisir de retrouver la scène il y a deux jours à Grenade après un mois d’absence! […]

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2016-07-featured-press

Dolores Delargo Towers on Blogspot – Who knows? Not me. We never lost control

2016-07-30, Dolores Delargo Towers on Blogspot

“Laura Mvula was effervescent and sassy on Girl Loves Me, and even more so her jolly version of Fame. Counter-tenor Philippe Jaroussky, however, brilliant though he may be on Vivaldi, Monteverdi, Bach and Saint-Saëns, would never in a million years have been my choice for Always Crashing In The Same Car. It just made a sinister, deep and dark song sound like a parody. “

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