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Charpentier: Orphée aux enfers

Vox Luminis; A Nocte Temporis/Lionel Meunier, Reinoud van Mechelen, et al (Alpha Classics)

Our rating

5

Published: February 20, 2020 at 10:37 am

CD_ALPHA566_Charpenteier

Charpentier La Descente d’Orphée aux enfers Déborah Cachet, Zsuzsi Tóth, Stefanie True, Clara Coutouly, Victoria Cassano, Reinoud van Mechelen, Raphael Höhn, Philippe Froeliger, Lionel Meunier, Geoffrey Buffière; Vox Luminis; A Nocte Temporis/Lionel Meunier, Reinoud van Mechelen Alpha Classics ALPHA 566 82:22 mins

Charpentier’s two works inspired by Ovid’s retelling of the myth of Orpheus make for a captivating diptych. The three-voice cantata Orphée descendant aux enfers is a masterpiece of poetic concision, painted in soft sfumato shades, while the (probably incomplete) two-act chamber opera La Descente d’Orphée aux enfers captures the intensity and latent tragedy of the myth with slender resources and the subtlest of gestures. In both works, Charpentier’s yearning melodies and wistful harmonies are always tempered by French Baroque etiquette.

It’s hard to follow Les Arts Florissants’s classic 1996 account of La Descente which pairs the young, velvet-toned tenor Paul Agnew with the sensuous soprano of Sophie Daneman, but this new recording is every bit as beautiful. Haute-contre (high tenor) Reinoud van Mechelen is a seductive Orpheus – small wonder that his limpid, pliant, expressive voice and eloquent diction enchants both his nymph-bride Eurydice (brought to life here by the dewy-voiced Déborah Cachet) and the god Pluto (stylishly sung by Geoffroy Buffière). Mechelen also co-directs (with Lionel Meunier) the period ensemble A Nocte Temporis, and the sensitive interplay of voices and instruments has all the intimacy of chamber music (fitting for a work originally performed in the private salons of the Parisian Duchess of Guise). The players offset the pastel colours of the opera’s pastoral opening with the sombre shades of Inferno, and they thrillingly evoke the dancing of nymphs, shepherds and phantasms with playing that turns from graceful to furious. Alpha Classics’s recording is luminous and detailed.

Kate Bolton-Porciatti

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