Act I: Grief Increase By Concealing - Rosemary Joshua
Act I: When Monarchs Unite - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act I: Whence Could So Much Virtue Spring? - Lynne Dawson
Act I: Fear No Danger To Ensue - Rosemary Joshua/Maria Cristina Kiehr
Act I: See, Your Royal Guest Appears - Rosemary Joshua
Act I: Cupid Only Throws The Dart - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act I: If Not For Mine - Gerald Finley
Act I: Pursue Thy Conquest - Rosemary Joshua
Act I: To The Hills And The Vales - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act I: The Triumphing Dance - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act II: Prld For The Witches - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act II: Harm's Our Delight - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act II: The Queen Of Carthage - Susan Bickley
Act II: Ho Ho Ho, Ho Ho Ho! - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act II: But Ere We This Perform - Dominque Visse/Stephen Wallace
Act II: In Our Deep Vaulted Cell - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act II: Echo Dance Of Furies - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act II: Ritornelle - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act II: Thanks To These Lonesome Vales - Rosemary Joshua
Act II: Oft She Visits This Lov'd Mountain - Maria Cristina Kiehr
Act II: Behold, Upon My Bending Spear - Gerald Finley
Act II: Haste, Haste To Town - Rosemary Joshua
Act II: Stay, Prince And Hear Great Jove's Command - Robin Blaze
Act II: Then Since Our Charmes Have Sped - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act II: The Grove's Dance - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act III: Prld - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act III: Come Away Fellow Sailors - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act III: See The Flags And Streamers Curling - Susan Bickley
Act III: Our Next Motion - Susan Bickley
Act III: Destruction's Our Delight - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act III: The Witches' Dance - OAE/Rene Jacobs
Act III: Your Counsel All Is Urged In Vain - Lynne Dawson
Act III: Great Minds Against Themselves Conspire - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Act III: Thy Hand, Belinda - Lynne Dawson
Act III: When I Am Laid In Earth - Lynne Dawson
Act III: With Dropping Wings Ye Cupids Come - Clare College Chapel Chor/Timothy Brown
Rene Jacobs is one of the best conductors of the historically informed performance school, and he leads a vibrant performance of Purcell's masterpiece, one of the few Baroque operas to enjoy popularity in our time. The ope... more »ra requires a top-level Dido, and Lynne Dawson is generally satisfying in the role, overcoming a tentative Act I to deliver a moving lament in the last act. Competition is stiff, though, ranging from Janet Baker's classic Dido to more recent superb assumptions of the role by Veronique Gens and Lorraine Hunt. Though Dawson doesn't quite equal them, the performance as a whole is a match for any in the catalogue, avoiding idiosyncrasies and casting deficiencies found elsewhere. For example, Jacobs's Sorceress, Susan Bickley, depicts a chillingly evil creature without excessive campiness. Rosemary Joshua is a dulcet-voiced Belinda and Gerald Finley offers a manly, well-sung Aeneas. All in all, this is a highly recommendable version of an opera that's often hard to get right on recordings. --Dan Davis« less
Rene Jacobs is one of the best conductors of the historically informed performance school, and he leads a vibrant performance of Purcell's masterpiece, one of the few Baroque operas to enjoy popularity in our time. The opera requires a top-level Dido, and Lynne Dawson is generally satisfying in the role, overcoming a tentative Act I to deliver a moving lament in the last act. Competition is stiff, though, ranging from Janet Baker's classic Dido to more recent superb assumptions of the role by Veronique Gens and Lorraine Hunt. Though Dawson doesn't quite equal them, the performance as a whole is a match for any in the catalogue, avoiding idiosyncrasies and casting deficiencies found elsewhere. For example, Jacobs's Sorceress, Susan Bickley, depicts a chillingly evil creature without excessive campiness. Rosemary Joshua is a dulcet-voiced Belinda and Gerald Finley offers a manly, well-sung Aeneas. All in all, this is a highly recommendable version of an opera that's often hard to get right on recordings. --Dan Davis
A superb rendering of the lovely work - best Dido I've heard
Concert Music | Alpharetta, GA USA | 08/24/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"You must purchase this disc, even if you already own this opera (and especially if you own the Pinnock version). Lynne Dawson, who has sung Belinda with Pinnock, here takes on the role of Dido - and gives a perfect, larger-than-life performance. There is nothing I can say that will suffice to express the superlatives her singing deserves. Rene Jacobs does a masterful job of pace - my biggest complaint with Pinnock. Dido's Lament is slow and painful - the world stops spinning for 4 minutes every time I listen in! The Sorceress, sung by Susan Bickley, is outstanding, and the 2 other witches, sung by countertenors and performed as ugly as possible, are very well done indeed. The one performance I liked better on Pinnock's disc was the Aeneas of Stephen Varcoe - but Gerald Finley doesn't turn this into less than a stellar disc. The recording quality lives up to the normal Harmonia Mundi standards. You will not regret this purchase."
Impressive but Not Indispensable
Terry Serres | Minneapolis, MN United States | 09/01/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"There is a lot to recommend this performance, and I certainly prefer it to the fascinating but overrated Emmanuelle Haim account on Virgin. In my affections it cedes first prize to Hogwood on L'oiseau lyre with Bott.
Jacobs lies between Hogwood and Haim both in terms of issue date and instrumental approach -- neither as polite as Hogwood nor as aggressive as Haim. What distinguishes him is some dark sounds from the lower strings, right from the beginning and persisting throughout. He does make strong use of winds and strummed instruments, and the organ at a couple of telling intervals (the Spirit's appearance, as usual, but also Dido's lines just before her final recititive, "But Death, alas! I cannot shun"). Jacobs interpolates music adapted from the Fairy Queen for a chorus and dance to round out the incomplete Act II, but it is not entirely convincing. (Haim ends with Aeneas's soliloquy and Hogwood repeats the ritornelli from the beginning of the scene.)
Lynne Dawson sounds a mite long in the tooth for Dido, but her final confrontation and lament are vibrant with anguish. It is a strong characterization and performance.
Gerald Finley is superb as Aeneas. What a relief to hear a baritone -- and a strong, limber one at that -- in this role, which simply lies too low to bring forth interesting sounds from the tenors to whom it is usually entrusted. He isn't brimming with period inflection but is infinitely more involved than Bostridge for Haim, who busies himself with a thousand whistle-stops on individual words without making a coherent emotional impression.
Susan Bickley as the sorceress is even more attractive in tone than Felicity Palmer for Haim -- her voice is well nigh as beautiful as Dawson's in fact, lending the impression that she is more a romantic rival than a bête noire. She does put some bite into her lines but mostly leaves the vocal dirty work to her witches, portrayed by two countertenors, the characterful Dominique Visse and the eery Stephen Wallace, who actually contrast and harmonize beautifully amidst their antics. Also, Jacobs adapts two choruses of the witches to make one anticipate and one echo the famous echo chorus ... an interesting but superfluous conceit. Elsewhere, Jacobs takes other willful innovations in the dances and choruses that are interesting but don't consistently work. (One place where it does is at Belinda's "Thanks to these lonesome vales," which the chorus repeats after each couple rather than at the end.) The chorus is a heartfelt participant in the drama, and its finale, "With drooping wings" -- delicately textured with one, maybe two, voices per part, at least on the entrances -- is heartbreaking. But then Jacobs overdoes it by repeating the chorus rather than ending on the instrumental repeat that sometimes follows.
"
Potentially, very good. Potentially. However ..........
Steven Guy | Croydon, South Australia | 03/24/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Parts of this recording are very good. I like a lot of things about this recording. The cast includes some fine singers. Rosemary Joshua, Gerald Finlay, Maria Christina Kiehr and Robin Blaze, to name a few. The orchestra performs well and the choir is good.
However, some of the singers let this recording down. I am mainly talking about Dominique Visse, who I normally admire very much. Dominique Visse turns parts of this recording into a freak show. Why this was allowed to happen is a mystery to me. The duets with the other countertenor sound ridiculous, it is as if monsieur Visse was throwing a tantrum.
There are a number of better recordings of the great opera on the market - Christie, Pinnock, Hogwood, Gardiner and Mackerras have all made some very good recordings of this work."
Mixed package
S Duncan | London | 04/16/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)
"So many Didos...so many excellent roles. It's about finding which one works for you. No doubt each one will have its share of attractions and disappointments, as this one does for me.Beginning with Dido herself, Dawson is superb. Her singing is invested with feeling. The lament, with its haunting pleas, is particularly well done; the penultimate "remember me" ending with a sigh to match her ebbing life's blood. The beautifully macabre aside, Dido is matched by Joshua's bright and mellifluous Belinda. In fact, the female roles are very well done. Special mention needs to be made of Bickley's biting sorceress. Her vocal talent is used to display the sorceress' venom and spite, rather than the more common hysterics.Aeneas and the sailor are sound performances from Finley and Brown, respectively. They get high marks without needing any distinction points. Their contributions are, after all, comparatively small. But they are more than adequate. Then, of course, we have a splendid performance from Blaze as the countertenor Spirit...ethereal and mystifying as it should be. Indeed, we would expect most countertenors to have more or less the same impact...then Visse opens his mouth. This is what has scarred the recording in a way that goes beyond the dramatic effect intended by the composer and librettist.Visse, it seems, has decided to be the Drama-queen of Carthage and outdo the sorceress. The result is nothing of Senessino's legendary upstages, but an overdone, raucous and embarrassingly camp display (borrowing the word from the editorial review). Visse, and Visse ALONE, has removed 2 stars from what should be a 5-star recording. This should not have been: his cohort witch, Wallace, by comparison gave a splendid account of the countertenor voice in this role. In addition, this recording has an unexpected and beautiful 'filler' ("Then since our charmes have sped"). Moreover, the conducting is excellent (Jacobs is here in his element).Should you manage to overcome Visse's marring of your sport, this recording should be thoroughly enjoyable. Alas the flaw."
Great, but with a few exceptions
Bruno L. Garzon | Chicago,IL | 12/29/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Rene Jacob's recording of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas is sure to go down in the list of great recordings, but I do have a few issues to pick with it. Rene Jacobs direction is a tad weird. He takes the solos rather fast and the choruses very slow. Otherwise he and the orchestra of the age of the enlightenment fit together great. Lynne Dawson's Dido is one of the best I have ever heard. Much better than Emma Kirkby or Kirsten Flagsted (even though I recognize the historical significance of Kirsten.) Rosemary Joshua's Belina is a tad generic. Gerald Finley's Aeneas is THE best no rival. Susan Bickley's witch is a tad boring and doesn't really sound like she wants venegance. The rest of the cast is great (especially the 2 witches- I'm a countertenor so I love to see them incorporated into D AND A.) Overall a great effort."