[ Decca Australian Eloquence / 2 CD ]
Release Date: Friday 12 April 2019
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A landmark in Baroque opera recordings, newly remastered.
This 'royal entertainment in music' was fashioned by Cavalli to a libretto by Giovanni Faustini for performance in Venice in 1644, two years after 'L'incoronazione di Poppaea' saw the light of day. Through the course of 'Ormindo' we follow the adventures of two pairs of lovers as they betray, deceive and flee from each other before the inevitable happy ending. A death scene in prison for the eponymous prince and his sweetheart Erisbe is marked by a grave pathos that sounds down the centuries - at least since Raymond Leppard exhumed the score from total obscurity.
Conducting 'Ormindo' at the 1967 Glyndebourne Festival, Leppard spearheaded the modern revival of Cavalli's fortunes. Critics noted the conductor's significant revisions and rearrangements but they were almost unanimous in their gratitude at hearing and seeing on stage the work of a pioneering opera composer for the first time and in performances that did full justice to both music and drama. Leppard and Glyndebourne assembled a sumptuous continuo section and cast, well-schooled for the time in the ornate language of seventeenth-century Venetian opera.
The popular and critical success of 'Ormindo' at Glyndebourne gave rise to a sequel with Leppard's similarly imaginative realisation of 'Calisto' which has also been reissued by Eloquence (482 9382). 'L'Ormindo' has long been unavailable and the package includes Raymond Leppard's original note and a synopsis.
'Leppard […] welds all his forces together to produce one of those wonderfully integrated performances that still characterizes Glyndebourne at its best.' Opera magazine, April 1969
'Every note here sounds perfectly wonderful. The Glyndebourne performers are all first-rate.' High Fidelity, June 1969
'Isabel Garcisanz as the Page nearly steals the show, although Anne Howells conveys much of the heroine Erisbe's fascination … Hugues Cuenod as Erice manages to be funny without ever being embarrassing because of his impeccable musical taste.' Musical Times, August 1969
"It's magnificent, but it's not Cavalli as we hear him nowadays. Who cares? Raymond Leppard's Glyndebourne version is lush and utterly beguiling with Anne Howells as a deeply satisfying Erisebe." BBC Music