RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR
July
> WATCH IAN PAGE IN CONVERSATION WITH JAMES JOLLY
This was a fertile period in the boy’s creative development during which he could have experienced plenty of diverse music
David Vickers relishes an imaginative programme from The Mozartists and Ian Page with music Mozart composed and may have encountered on a childhood visit to London
‘Mozart in London’ Abel Symphony, Op 7 No 6 Arne Artaxerxesa – Amid a thousand rocking woes; O too lovely. The Guardian Outwitted – O Dollyb. Judithc – O torment great; Sleep, gentle Cherub! Arnold The Maid of the Mill – Hist, hist!d JC Bach Adriano in Siria – Ah, come mi balza il cor … Deh lascia, o ciel pietosoe; Cara la dolce fiammaf. Berenice – Confusa, smarritae. Ezio – Non so d’onde vieneg. Harpsichord Concerto, Op 1 No 6h Bates Pharnaces – In this I fear my latest breathd Duni The Maid of the Mill – To speak my mindi Mozart Va, dal furor portata, K21g. Symphonies – No 1, K16; No 4, K19; K19a Perez Solimano – Se non ti moro a latoj Pescetti Ezio – Caro mio bene, addioj Rush The Capricious Lovers – Overture; Thus laugh’d at, jilted and betray’di bd Rebecca Bottone, fEleanor Dennis, eAnna Devin, j Martene Grimson, cAna Maria Labin sops aHelen Sherman mez gBen Johnson, biRobert Murray tens h Steven Devine hpd The Mozartists / Ian Page Signum M b SIGCD534 (145’ • DDD • T/t) Recorded live at Milton Court, London, February 20‑22, 2015 Ian Page and the Classical Opera Company (since rechristened The Mozartists for concerts) launched their epic project ‘Mozart 250’ with a weekend of events at Milton Court in February 2015. Aiming to be an ambitious 27‑year survey charting the annual progress of Mozart’s musical genius in context alongside works by contemporaries, they started with the Mozart family’s 15‑month visit to London in 1764‑65 – a fertile period in the boy’s creative development during which he could have experienced plenty of diverse music in theatres, concert rooms, pleasure gardens and churches, and wrote his first symphonies and aria. Arriving only five years after Handel had died, music-making in the British capital city was thriving thanks to native talents such as Arne (and others), whereas imported Italian operas at the King’s Theatre featured music by Perez, Pescetti and most notably JC Bach – who was also pioneering public concert life in London in partnership with his compatriot CF Abel.
This double album is drawn from the copious amount of music recorded live across three days. There are excellent performances of some of the fledgling Mozart’s London pieces interspersed among an abundance of rarely investigated repertory that was researched and edited especially for the occasion; over a dozen of the pieces receive their premiere commercial recordings. Moreover, Page’s knack for choosing interesting singers yields contributions from eight highly capable soloists.
A limpid sleep scene and an agitated heroic showpiece from Arne’s oratorio Judith are sung with steely brilliance by Ana Maria Labin. Two airs from Arne’s Artaxerses (revived several times during the Mozarts’ visit) are performed with melodic intelligence and dramatic vivacity by Helen Sherman. Ben Johnson gives an authoritative account of the nine-year-old Mozart’s first aria, ‘Va, dal furor portata’ (K21), and displays impressive range and tenderness in JC Bach’s ‘Non so d’onde viene’. Originally sung in Naples by Anton Raaff (later Mozart’s first Idomeneo), this aria was rewritten for the London pasticcio Ezio (1764) – a motley entertainment that also featured Giovanni Battista Pescetti’s
16 GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018
Click on a CD cover to buy/stream from gramophone.co.uk