RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR
Awards issue
Not many Semiramide conductors have made successful traversals of Wagner’s Ring but Mark Elder has, and it shows
Richard Osborne welcomes an outstanding recording of Rossini’s Semiramide, with the classy cast and orchestra responding superbly to Mark Elder’s inspired direction
Rossini Semiramide Albina Shagimuratova sop �Semiramide Daniela Barcellona mez �Arsace Mirco Palazzi bass �Assur Barry Banks ten �Idreno Susana Gaspar sop �Azema Gianluca Buratto bass �Oroe James Platt bass �Ghost of Nino David Butt Philip ten �Mitrane Opera Rara Chorus; Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment / Sir Mark Elder Opera Rara F d ORC57 (3h 54’ • DDD) Inlcudes synopsis, libretto and translation Semiramide is the last, and longest, of the 32 operas Rossini wrote for Italy. Based on Voltaire’s tragedy Sémiramis (1748), it tells of the Babylonian queen; the wiles of Assur, her former lover with whom she had conspired to kill her husband, the late king; and the Orestes-like return of her abandoned son Arsace. There are echoes, too, of Hamlet and Macbeth, plays admired by Voltaire in his youth. Rossini’s treatment is essentially neoclassical, more JacquesLouis David than Théodore Géricault, as this finely conceived and superbly executed new Opera Rara recording readily affirms.
Beguiled though we were by the somewhat abbreviated 1966 Decca recording featuring Joan Sutherland and the young Marilyn Horne, it was not until the publication of Philip Gossett’s new Critical Edition in 1990 that we realised how grand an experience a complete Semiramide can be. New York’s Metropolitan Opera saluted the edition with a powerful new staging (ArtHaus Musik, A/02 – nla) featuring June Anderson, Marilyn Horne and Samuel Ramey, a famous Assur; but with the complete opera occupying a full five hours in the theatre, this too had to be to cut.
Deutsche Grammophon made the first complete recording in 1992. Plausibly and powerfully cast, it ought to have worked but didn’t, due largely to Ion Marin’s reckless conducting. Twenty years later Naxos recorded it, live and complete, at the Rossini in Wildbad Festival; but this, too, proved unsatisfactory, upended by a vocally challenged Semiramide and some stand-andstare (as opposed to boy‑racer) conducting.
All this talk of conductors might seem odd given that with Semiramide ears are invariably turned to the voices. So let it be said that the new Semiramide, the lavishly gifted Russian coloratura Albina Shagimuratova, she of the shining high E, and Daniela Barcellona, our finest contemporary Arsace, are both superb. ‘Serbami ognor’ is sublime but go PH O T O G R A P H Y
D U N C A N
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22 GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018
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