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Mozart: Grabmusik & Bastien und Bastienne
Anna Lucia Richter (Der Engel), Jacques Imbrailo (Die Seele), Anna Lucia Richter (Bastienne), Alessandro Fisher (Bastien), Darren Jeffery (Colas)
The Mozartists, Ian Page
Ian Page and his crack team – singers and players – are clearly having a lot of fun, which comes across in this excellent recording. It’s a treat to experience these faint anticipations of greatness...
Mozart: Grabmusik & Bastien und Bastienne
Anna Lucia Richter (Der Engel), Jacques Imbrailo (Die Seele), Anna Lucia Richter (Bastienne), Alessandro Fisher (Bastien), Darren Jeffery (Colas)
The Mozartists, Ian Page
Purchase product
Ian Page and his crack team – singers and players – are clearly having a lot of fun, which comes across in this excellent recording. It’s a treat to experience these faint anticipations of greatness...
About
Continuing their complete Mozart opera recording cycle, Classical Opera’s latest release shines a light on two early opera works by Mozart.
Grabmusik was reported to be the product of a test set by the prince of Salzburg, who: “... not crediting that such masterly compositions were really those of a child, shut him up for a week, during which he was not permitted to see any one, and was left only with music paper, and the words of an oratorio ... During this short time he composed a very capital oratorio, which was most highly approved of upon being performed.” Performed for Holy Week the title can be translated as ‘Cantata on Christ’s Grave’ (literally ‘Grave Music’), and the
anonymous text takes the form of a dialogue between a tormented soul, who is desperately lamenting the tragedy of Christ’s death, and an angel.
Bastien und Bastienne is the only one of Mozart’s operas to have been written for performance in a private house rather than a theatre. Commissioned at some point in mid-1768 by the renowned and controversial German physician Franz Anton Mesmer, it tells the tale of two young shepherds, Bastien and Bastienne, being reconciled in love the fortune teller and magician Collas after Bastien has briefly been lured away by the attractions of a noble lady from the city. This new recording is uses Mozart’s original 1767 setting of the libretto by F. W. Weiskern & J. H. F. Müller, the provenance of which was only established in 1980s.
Contents and tracklist
Awards and reviews
Awards Issue 2018
Ian Page and his crack team – singers and players – are clearly having a lot of fun, which comes across in this excellent recording. It’s a treat to experience these faint anticipations of greatness in such winning performances.
December 2018
The potential danger is to bring too great an element of sophistication, one here avoided in an enchanting performance…Pages directs the admirable Mozartists with the now familiar mix of crisp, pointed rhythms and warm sensitivity, allowing Mozart’s youthful spirit to speak for itself while never overloading his engaging score.
16th September 2018
The playing in this early Singspiel fizzes with life, the singing is splendid and the work, childlike yet expert, charms. But what makes the disc exceptional is the rarely heard Grabmusik...admirably sung by Anna Lucia Richter and Jacques Imbrailo.
16th September 2018
[Bastien and Bastienne] is a bucolic tale with bucolic music to match, but much of it charming and bearing the promise of the glories to come, particularly in the duet writing.