Nicholas Kenyon 

Monteverdi, Sartorio, Rossi: La storia di Orfeo CD review – glorious Jaroussky

Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor), Emöke Baráth (soprano), I Barocchisti/Fasolis (Erato)
  
  

Philippe Jaroussky
Philippe Jaroussky sings Orpheus in some of his many guises. Photograph: Marc Ribes

Orpheus, with or without his lute, is one of the most resonant figures in musical history, the inspiration for dramas from Monteverdi to Birtwistle. This cleverly assembled disc limits itself to the 17th century, and ranges from the Mantuan Orfeo of 1607 through to Antonio Sartorio’s little-known successor of 1672. The presiding genius is countertenor Philippe Jaroussky who sings gloriously (though he is arguably not best suited to Monteverdi’s high tenor hero in his lavish Possente spirto). Jaroussky is well matched by Emöke Baráth’s crystal-clear soprano. Sartorio’s post-Cavalli idiom is sweetly melodic; I was much more taken by the strong, eloquent extracts from Luigi Rossi’s Orfeo of 1647.

La storia di Orfeo – album trailer.
 

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