With Christopher Columbus (yes, him from 1492) joining Harnoncourt,
William Christie and Savall on the dedicatees’ list, Petibon’s new
release explodes like an alt-folk concept album. As Basle’s La Cetra,
plus certain South American obbligato instruments, Baroque and baroll
behind the French soprano, it can get loud – José de Nebra’s opening
zarzuela aria (1744) sounds like an attempt at all four Handel
Coronation Anthems in less than six minutes while Petibon’s contribution
mixes a tale of shipwrecked love with yelping early salsa-style
vocalises. For contrast there’s a serene ‘Greensleeves’ and a wonderful,
painfully impassioned (if exotically pronounced) ‘When I am laid in
earth’ – with most imposing continuo – to vary the emotional dynamic.
Then the mocking demons in Charpentier’s Médée and their grungy
accompaniment (the effect accentuated by the timbre of the ancient
instruments) sound like evident contemporaries of Purcell’s witches and
sailors. Andrea Marcon’s band rightly get a break of their own, a dance
actually, in further Charpentier before their whistles and thundersheets
kick up the storm that nearly overwhelms heroine Emilie in Les Indes galantes.
We may be on the way to a ‘new world’ – Petibon’s booklet interview
links up influences which include Brazilian rock radio, Michael Haneke’s
Don Giovanni and Cortés’s Conquistadors – and we
reach it eventually at Purcell’s ‘Fairest isle’ (the English again
rather special) but there’s sure plenty of well-acted vocal heartbreak
on the way. And folk rock – try the version of the traditional ‘J’ai vu
le loup’ or the Peruvian ‘Tornada La Lata’.
Like her equally Spanish-tinged ‘Melancolia’ album – but with
totally other colours – ‘Nouveau monde’ is a tightly thought-through and
arranged and compelling programme, a tour de force for its performer/
compiler, most atmospherically recorded (Rainer Maillard) in Basle’s
Martinskirche. Compulsive, repeatable listening.
(Mike Ashman)
Muchísimas gracias. Estoy curioso para oir!
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