2017-06-15 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “En répétition avec ….. Heureux …”

2017-06-15, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

“En répétition avec ….. Heureux 😊 …” […]

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2017-06-10 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “Un grand merci à toi Matthieu et à tous tes musiciens …”

2017-06-10, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

“un grand merci à toi Matthieu et à tous tes musiciens pour ce beau moment de partage hier! …”  […] Source/Read more/Watch video: [x]

2017-06-30 featured press

SWR2 – Inspirierte Aufnahme

2017-06-30, SWR2, by Jürgen Kesting

“Die Fülle, das Übermaß der Verzierungen mag für alle, die das Ornament als Sünde wider den Geist des Musikdramas ansehen, erstaunlich, sogar irritierend sein. Aber was den höheren Sinn des Ornaments angeht, so sei Riemens Musiklexikon von 1907 zitiert: „Im kolorierten Kunstgesang emanzipiert der gesteigerte Affekt die Melodie mehr oder weniger vom Wort und seinem Rhythmus und nimmt reine musikalische Ausdrucksformen an.“ Dies hat Philippe Jaroussky auf sublime Weise sinnenfällig gemacht – eine inspirierte Aufnahme.”

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2017-05-23 featured press

France Info – “Philippe Jaroussky and Friends !” à l’auditorium de La Seine Musicale

2017-05-23, France Inter

MUSIQUE CLASSIQUE23 MAI 2017
“Philippe Jaroussky and Friends !” à l’auditorium de La Seine Musicale

 

[…]

Le concert de soutien
Pour cet événement, Philippe Jaroussky est accompagné par des solistes de renommée internationale : Karine Deshayes (mezzo-Soprano), Jérôme Ducros (piano), Christian-Pierre et Adrien La Marca (violoncelle et alto), Yoko Nakamura (clavecin), David Petrlik (violon), Geneviève Laurenceau (violon), mais aussi par la Maîtrise des Hauts-de-Seine. Pour mettre en lumière son Académie, Philippe Jaroussky présente un programme varié : de l’Orfeo de Monteverdi au Didon et Enée de Purcell, en passant par les grands classiques du répertoire tels que Carmen de Bizet ou encore La Belle Hélène d’Offenbach.

DISTRIBUTION
Date23 mai 2017
Durée51min
ProductionKarl More Productions
Réalisation Benjamin Bleton
Choeur la Maîtrise des Hauts-de-Seine

Solistes Philippe Jaroussky / Karine Deshayes (mezzo-Soprano) /Jérôme Ducros (piano) / Christian-Pierre La Marca / Adrien La Marca (violoncelle et alto) / Yoko Nakamura (clavecin) / David Petrlik (violon) / Geneviève Laurenceau (violon)

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2017-05-09 featured

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “Vous connaîtrez prochainement les noms de notre promotion ….”

2017-05-09, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

“Vous connaîtrez prochainement les noms de notre promotion …”

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2017-05-07 featured press

klassik-begeistert.de – NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Philippe Jaroussky Countertenor, … – Translation to English

2017-05-07, klassik-begeistert.de, by Leon Battran

“Philippe Jaroussky singt die Lieder in seiner Muttersprache wunderbar ätherisch und mit herausragender Textverständlichkeit. Sein Mezzosopran schwebt geisterhaft über dem Klanggrund des Orchesters. Seine Stimme lässt er erwachsen, erblühen und erstrahlen und überzeugt in allen Registern mit Wandelbarkeit und außergewöhnlicher Klangschönheit.” […] “Es ist die Wärme in der Stimme von Philippe Jaroussky, die berührt; die Aufmerksamkeit, die er jeder Note zuteil werden lässt. Er formt die Töne ganz ohne zu drängen oder zu pressen, mit behutsamer Leichtigkeit, als würde er Seifenblasen pusten. Und ebenso viele Farben spiegeln sich im Glanz dieser Stimme wider. Bravo, Monsieur! Cela, c’était superbe!”

*This is a fan translation. If you have any problems with this being online, drop us a line and we will remove it immediately.

Translation by Lankin*

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NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester
Philippe Jaroussky Countertenor
Dirigent Antonello Manacorda

Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, »Das Märchen von der schönen Melusine« / Konzertouvertüre F-Dur op. 32
Hector Berlioz, Les nuits d’été
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Musik zu »Ein Sommernachtstraum« op. 21 und 61

Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, 5. Mai 2017

By Leon Battran

Even if, as a countertenor, Philippe Jaroussky appears to be predestined for it, it can’t always be repertoire for castrati. This evening, he is merely a mezzosoprano, interpreting Hector Berlioz’ “Les nuits d’été” – songs originating from the heart of the 19th century – and Philippe Jaroussky demonstrates beyond any doubt that he’s just as home in French Romantic music as he is in Baroque.

The Frenchman is “Artist in Residence” during the current season at the Elbphilharmonie. Already at the two inaugural concerts in January 2017, he had delighted with Italian vocal works from around 1600. The Berlioz songs originate between 1840 and 1856 and were originally designed for different voice types. Les nuits d’été (Summer Nights) is regarded as the first cycle of orchestral songs in music history, making Hector Berlioz the inventor of this genre. Spring awakening, young love and happiness are introduced just as well as pain of separation, despair, and death.

Philippe Jaroussky sings the songs in his native language, wonderfully ethereally and with outstandingly clear diction. Like a phantasm, his mezzosoprano wafts over the foundation of the orchestra. He lets his voice grow, blossom and shine, convincing through all registers with great versatility and exceptional beauty of sound. Jaroussky’s appearance is professional and extremely focused. Whenever some minute lapses in intonation want to sneak in, he immediately corrects them already at the onset.

In Berlioz’ songs, the singer navigates through idyll and melancholy: frolicing through spring meadows, gathering fragrant flowers of May, forlornly sailing the surging sea, and strolling through a moonlit cemetery. An equally dignified as well as fragile drama pervades the cycle, which the French countertenor renders particularly palpable.  

The warmth in Philippe Jaroussky’s voice affects deeply, the attention he bestows on every single note. He forms his notes without any hint of coaxing or pressing, with gentle ease, as if he were blowing soap bubbles. And just as many colours are scintillating in the luster of this voice. Bravo, Monsieur! Cela, c’était superbe!

The audience is over the moon. There is applause after every piece. The enthusiastic audience even sticks to this pattern during the Instrumental Suite of Mendelssohn’s incidental music for “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The evening already started with Mendelssohn’s program music, to be specific, with his concert overture “The fair Melusina”; well proportioned musical poetry, crisply performed by the Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, providing a slim quarter of an hour of delicate enchantment.

Manacorda was at the baton. The Artistic Director of the Kammerakademie Potsdam stood in for Thomas Hengelbrock due to the latter’s illness. The Italian conducted the Midsummer Night’s Dream with reputable suppleness and verve, and somehow Italian. His conducting is very transparent, and positively pithy. Manacorda’s baton traces the music like with a paintbrush, sending a multitude of signals in various directions, swirls and atomises, tickling the musicians from afar or nudging them.

Particularly beautiful is the flowing intermezzo: the first part lyrical, elegant, beckoning; in the second part, changing to a rustic-style dance rhythm. The solo horn defrays the Notturno, in pastoral bliss. From then on, the music swells into greater drama, only to come to a rest on rocking sounds of the flute.

And then, at last, the famous trumpet fanfare, announcing: the wedding is about to begin! This wedding march comes along quite briskly, in a sporty-happy tempo, but at the same time festive enough to fit a New Year’s Eve concert. A single broad smile. There isn’t any better get-out dance. A last clang from the cymbals closes the what is probably the first summer night of the year in Hamburg.

Leon Battran, May 7, 2017, for

klassik-begeistert.de

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2017-05 featured press

Hamburger Abendblatt – Eine feine Nachtmusik – A Delicate Serenade – Translation to English

2017-05-06, Hamburger Abendblatt, by Joachim Mischke

“Mit einer Frauenstimme haben diese Nachtstücke immer etwas süffig Parfümiertes, das unverwechselbar klare Jaroussky-Timbre gab ihnen ein faszinierend uneindeutiges Flair. Manacorda bremste das Orchester aufs gerade noch Nötigste ab, modellierte mit Leichtigkeit hauchfeine Piani und breitete so unter Jarousskys Gesangslinien einen seidenweichen Klangteppich aus, in dem nichts einsank, nichts plump verloren ging. Dezenz ist Schwäche? Hier war sie Stärke. In jedem einzelnen Lied fand Jaroussky die eine Nuance, die es besonders aufrichtig machte. Hier ein zart schwebender Halteton, dort eine Nuance Innigkeit.” 

 

*This is a fan translation. If you have any problems with this being online, just drop us a line and we’ll remove it immediately. Translation by Lankin*

The article isn’t available online; here is the link to the newspaper’s culture department: [x]

A Delicate Serenade

The NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester with Philippe Philippe Jaroussky, Berlioz’ “Les nuits d’été,” and Mendelssohn’s music from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”

JOACHIM MISCHKE

HAMBURG

If Thomas Hengelbrock, principal conductor of the NDR, wouldn’t have had to cancel due to illness, he would have presented a concert at the Elbphilharmonie under the motto “Three Tonal Colours Of A Summer Night,” with equally fitting and appealing works by Purcell, Berlioz and Mendelssohn. Shoulda, coulda, woulda, … It was different in the end: Antonello Manacorda appeared on the stage of the large hall, the Mendelssohn part was being augmented with the “Melusina” overture. And Manacorda – otherwise artistic director of the small but exquisite Kammerakademie Potsdam, commended himself – very relaxed, very elegant – for further appointments at the Elbphilharmonie, where he debuted with his own orchestra merely a month ago. Clearly, he wasn’t just a fill-in to muddle through, but an interesting alternative, especially because the violinist/conductor Manacorda, just as the violinist/conductor Hengelbrock both share their background of the Ancient Music scene, with its different approach and concept of leadership.

Discreetness is a weakness? This time, it was a strength

At the same time, this endearing concert program was Philippe Jaroussky’s hard goodbye, whose time as artist in residence of the NDR in the first concert season of the Elbphilharmonie is ending this Sunday, as charming and convincing as it began. Berlioz’ soul-caressing song cycle with orchestra “Les nuits d’été” can be sung by different voice types; however, it wasn’t composed for a countertenor, a voice that, by default, is associated with pomp, affect, and baroque wigs, and less with salon-music-like sensitivity or the 19th century.

That was precisely the special appeal of the element that Jaroussky contributed, highlighted by his placement in the orchestra: he wasn’t flirting with his notes at the apron, neither above the brass at the end of the stage, but right in the middle, between the woodwinds section and the contrabasses – for reasons to do with the acoustics of the hall, but also for greater transparency concerning the score, to blend in as yet another timbre, one who also had to sing the poems.

Whereas with a female voice, these night-pieces usually come along somewhat light and sweet and perfumed; the unmistakable clarity of Jaroussky’s timbre gifted them with a fascinating ambiguous flair. Mancorda toned down the orchestra to the bare necessary, modelling with ease the most delicate piani, draping a tapestry of sound soft as silk around Jaroussky’s vocal lines, where nothing was submerged, nothing clumsily lost. Discreetness means weakness? Here it was a strength. In every single piece, Jaroussky managed to find the one nuance that rendered it the most sincere. A tenderly wafting portamento, or an intimate nuance. Especially during “Absence,” there was more guessing the airy and light music than actually hearing it.

In some respects, Mendelssohn is a lot like Mozart: it all seems perfectly easy, it all sounds quite harmless, but only before one is actually undergoing the attempt to play it playfully and easily. That Manacorda, an expert on Mendelssohn, chose the overture from “The Fair Melusina” as a preparation for the “Midsummer Night’s Dream” was only consistent. Both pieces call for an empathetic narrator rather than an authoritarian guide. The low and gentle, lustrous ripples, swirling around the theme of the hapless mermaid, Manacorda sets in scene in the style of a chamber music prelude.

It was easy to spot the subtle hint of what the sujet was going to evolve into about two decades later, in Wagner’s monumental, surging prelude to “The Rhinegold” (how fitting: Hengelbocks next project at the Elbphilharmonie, in three weeks, is going to be a concertante “Rhinegold.” With the same high standard, after the cheered Berlioz, the program continued with the music to “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Here both the conductor and the tutti displayed their security and attention to detail, clearly enjoying themselves. With a light touch, they sketched a collection of lovely atmospheric pictures, and Mancorda’s encouraging calm, in passing, seemed to free the solo horn player Claudia Strenkert from her slight nervosity at the beginning of her solo at the Notturno. It’s impossible to imagine a happier ending than the famous Wedding March for a concert that, without any ifs or buts, marks a success on the NDR’s timeline of the first months at the Elbphilharmonie.
(Image caption:) Countertenor Philippe Jaroussky at the curtain call at the large hall of the Elbphilharmonie

Image credit: Claudia Höhne

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2017-05-03 featured press

Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook – “Ein paar Monate nach der Eröffnung …”

2017-05-03, Philippe Jaroussky on Facebook

“Ein paar Monate nach der Eröffnung , bin ich zurück zu Elbphilharmonie Hamburg! Ich bin sehr glücklich!”

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2017-04-26 featured press

Cultura Estadão – Análise: contratenor Philippe Jaroussky faz apresentação notável na Sala São Paulo

2017-04-26, Cultura Estadão, by João Marcos Coelho

 

“Jaroussky, no pleno domínio de suas qualidades superlativas – seja de emissão, seja de expressividade interpretativa –, fechou com chave de ouro a noite com suas oito performances. Comoveu pelo amor que aflora em “Bel contento” e causou espanto pela incrível agilidade vocal na ária de bravura Rompo i Lacci, ambas de Flávio, Rei dos Lombardos. Juntos, orquestra e cantor uniram-se num pianíssimo dificílimo de se produzir com tamanha sutileza em Deggio Morire, o Stelle, de Siroe, Rei da Pérsia.”

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2017-10-07 featured press

La Presse – Philippe Jaroussky: chanter des histoires

2017-04-07, La Presse, by Caroline Rodgers

«C’était la première fois que j’entendais un contre-ténor en vrai. Je me suis dit que c’était magique et une petite voix intérieure me disait que je pouvais faire cela. Contrairement à bien des contre-ténors, je n’avais pas chanté dans des choeurs, enfant. Avec le chant, la grande découverte, pour moi, ça a été le texte, les émotions qu’il raconte.»

 

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