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DiDonato, Pappano: Joyce & Tony – Live at the Wigmore Hall (24/96 FLAC)

DiDonato, Pappano: Joyce & Tony - Live at the Wigmore Hall (24/96 FLAC)
DiDonato, Pappano: Joyce & Tony – Live at the Wigmore Hall (24/96 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Performer: Joyce DiDonato, Antonio Pappano
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Erato
Catalogue: 2564610789
Release: 2015
Size: 1.38 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

01. Haydn: Arianna a Naxos, cantata, Hob.XXVIb / 2
02. Rossini: Beltà crudele
03. Rossini: Les soirées musicales: No. 8 La danza

Santoliquido: I canti della Sera
04. I. L’assiolo canta
05. II. Alba di luna sul bosco
06. III. Tristezza crepuscolare
07. IV. L’incontro

08. Curtis: Non ti scordar di me
09. Foster: Foster / Arr. Krane: Beautiful Dreamer
10. Kern: Leave it to Jane, Act 2: The Siren’s Song
11. Kern: Oh, My Dear!: Go Little Boat
12. Nelson: 4 Irish Songs: I. Lovely Jimmie
13. Dougherty: Love in the Dictionary
14. Kern: Show Boat, Act 1: “Life upon the Wicked Stage”
15. Moross: The Golden Apple, Act 1: “Lazy Afternoon”
16. Bolcom: Cabaret Songs, Volume 1: Amor
17. Villa-Lobos: Magdalena, Act 1: “Food for Thought”
18. Kern: Show Boat, Act 1: “Can’t help Lovin’ dat Man”
19. Rodgers: Babes in Arms: My Funny Valentine
20. Kern: All the things you are (from Very Warm for May)
21. Berlin: I love a piano
22. Arlen: Over the Rainbow
23. Lowry: Lowry / Arr. Krane: Bright Jewels for the Sunday School: “How Can I Keep From Singing?”

London’s Wigmore Hall is an intimate venue – its auditorium holds 550 people – but it is one of the world’s great concert halls. Its acoustic is legendary, and great singers of the past who have appeared there include Enrico Caruso, Nellie Melba, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Victoria de los Ángeles. To open its season is a special honour for a musician, and in September 2014 that honour went for the second time to American mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato. Her pianist for the occasion was none other than Sir Antonio Pappano, who generally devotes his time in London to his duties as Music Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. The Times described the pair as “mezzo diva supreme” and “golden maestro and piano accompanist to the stars”.

These two CDs were recorded live at the Wigmore Hall season-opener and at the repeat concert two days later.

The first item on the programme was Haydn’s dramatic cantata Arianna a Naxos (which, back in 2003, also launched DiDonato’s debut recital at Wigmore Hall). As the Guardian wrote, DiDonato excelled in presenting “the abandoned heroine’s progression from grief to fury with all her vocal skills to the fore and Antonio Pappano – rarely heard these days as an accompanist, but an absolute master of the art – seconding her every gesture.” The Times described the interpretation as “incandescent … Daring vocal pirouettes, vivid acting, wide dynamic swings, amazing breath control.” Then came two songs by a composer who has played a defining role in Joyce DiDonato’s operatic career – Rossini (her unforgettable collaboration with Pappano on Il barbiere di Siviglia at Covent Garden is captured on a Warner Classics DVD 5099969458194) – and four luscious late-Romantic numbers written in 1908 by the little-known Neapolitan composer Francesco Santoliquido.

DiDonato, who nicknames herself ‘Yankee Diva’, is from Kansas, and the London-born Pappano moved to Connecticut as a teenager, so it was fitting that the rest of the programme was dominated by American composers. Notable among them were: Stephen Foster, known as “the Father of American Music”; Jerome Kern, whose ambitious Show Boat ushered in a new epoch in American musical theatre; Richard Rodgers, whose work with lyricist Lorenz Hart exemplifies the sophisticated side of Broadway, and William Bolcom (b.1938), whose eloquent and often witty songs draw on both classical and popular idioms. The transatlantic theme extended into the encores – all three of them: Kern’s ‘All The Things You Are’, a glory of the American Songbook; Irving Berlin’s subtly raunchy ‘I Love A Piano’, and finally DiDonato’s signature number ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow’ by Harold Arlen. It features, of course, in the 1939 film classic The Wizard of Oz, which opens (in black-and-white) on a farm in the mezzo-soprano’s home state. Famously, when the heroine, Dorothy, steps out into the brilliant Technicolor of the Land of Oz, she says: “I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.” In September 2014, Joyce DiDonato was most emphatically at Wigmore Hall in London, creating magic with Antonio Pappano.

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