Steffani: Niobe, Regina di Tebe

Karina Gauvin,Philippe Jaroussky

Steffani: Niobe, Regina di Tebe
Format
Audio
Published
16 January 2015
ISBN
0825646343546

Steffani: Niobe, Regina di Tebe

Karina Gauvin,Philippe Jaroussky

Agostino Steffani’s sumptuous 1688 opera Niobe, Regina di Tebe has proved a revelation to audiences since its first modern production in 2008. The spellbinding French countertenor Philippe Jaroussky, who appeared in its US premiere at the Boston Early Music Festival in 2011, stars in this new recording, with Canadian soprano Karina Gauvin in the title role of the proud, but tragic Theban queen.

Niobe, Regina di Tebe by Agostino Steffani (1654-1728) has proved a revelation to audiences since its rediscovery and its first modern production, staged in 2008 at Germany’s Schwetzingen Festival. Its sumptuous, expressive music has also attracted such virtuoso singers as countertenor Philippe Jaroussky - who describes it as “a beautiful bridge between Monteverdi and Handel” - and soprano Karina Gauvin, the two stars of this new recording, made in Autumn 2013 in collaboration with the Boston Early Music Festival and Radio Bremen.

Jaroussky, taking the role of King Anfione of Thebes, appeared in the first US performances of Niobe in Boston in 2011, prompting the New York Times to say that: “[in a] finely balanced cast … the clear standout was the countertenor Philippe Jaroussky, who sang powerfully and sweetly and created a nuanced portrayal.” As the Boston Globe observed later in the year, “His voice combines a limpid purity of timbre, a weightless agility, and an elegant control of nuance that allows him to shade a single phrase with a multitude of colors.”

When Niobe, first seen in 1688, was staged at London’s Royal Opera House in 2010, The Independent enticingly summarised the work and its appeal: “Lust, ambition and grief are expressed extravagantly yet succinctly … The arias are brilliant and abundant, propelled by athletic ground basses, interrupted by prowling kettle-drums, or sinuously laced with viola da gamba … Composer, diplomat and theologian, Steffani knew how to tickle the interest of his audience, spiking Niobe’s maternal hubris with adultery, magic spells, political intrigue, romantic sub-plots and the stock sardonic nurse who is there to comment on human folly. The opera was premiered in Munich’s carnival season, and it shows. So do the diverse musical influences in Steffani’s life: the stile antico training of his boyhood, an early baptism in Venetian opera, and a pivotal journey to Lully’s Paris.”

Based on the Metamorphoses of Ovid, the opera offers a dramatic and tragic climax: punishing Queen Niobe for her disrespectful display of pride, the gods kill her 14 children. Such is her grief that she turns to stone, while her husband, King Anfione kills himself. As Opera Today wrote after Jaroussky’s performance in Boston in 2011: “Jaroussky sang all this movingly in his pure countertenor, none the less exciting for his prevailing calm. His style of ornament hewed scrupulously to the earlier, French style rather than the rapid divisions he performs in Handel’s operas, lingering to express ‘tormenti’, weeping his ‘pianti’, and at last (having stabbed himself) dying on a delicious fading melisma.”

“What I like about my character, Anfione, is that he is a King who would like to give up his power and just compose music,” explains Jaroussky. “He’s a little bit like Orfeo. In the middle of the opera, just by singing he magically builds new walls to defend his city … His music is particularly beautiful. Niobe is a huge, challenging work, and it has me singing through my entire range. It’s in a very special style: very virtuosic and very touching. Steffani was a very original composer who helped to advance the style between the periods of Monteverdi and Handel. Sometimes his music sounds like Cavalli, sometimes like the young Handel - it’s very inspiring.”

In addition to Karina Gauvin - especially celebrated in Handel and praised by The Sunday Times for “her glinting soprano, bright-edged yet deliciously rounded and sensual … used with rare understanding for character” - the cast includes the American soprano Amanda Forsythe as the young priestess Manto (she in fact sang the role of Niobe in Boston in 2011) and the Swiss tenor Terry Wey as the Thessalonian prince Creonte. Sharing the musical direction are Paul O'Dette and Stephen Stubbs, co-directors of the Boston Early Music Festival. “Our discovery of this unknown masterpiece has been very exciting,” says O'Dette. “Niobe is an extraordinary piece - with breathtaking music and intense drama.”

Review

Just another Baroque opera? Agostino Steffani’s Niobe, Regina di Tebe, based on Ovid’s Metamorphoses, offers a complex plot involving gods, mortals, jealousy, and revenge. Niobe, Queen of Thebes, declares herself superior to the goddess Latona because she has borne fourteen children. To avenge this insult, the god Apollo and goddess Diana kill Niobe’s children, and King Anfione (husband of Niobe), seeing their lifeless bodies, kills himself in despair. At the death of her husband and children Niobe, weeping, turns to stone, and her grief is so great that her petrified eyes continue to produce tears.

Italian-born but Germany-based Steffani offers a sumptuous score, drawing not only on German and Italian styles, but with a strong French influence, evident during the overture and in the frequent use of gavotte and minuet dance metres for the arias. Although lengthy (almost four hours), the singing is unfailingly beautiful and the drama gripping, making this recording an enjoyable and engaging listen. Soprano Karina Gauvin (Niobe) stands out for her luscious tone and sensitive characterisation, and countertenor Philipe Jaroussky (Anfione) dazzles with his virtuosic coloratura. Steffani may be obscure compared his contemporaries, but his little-known Niobe is so much more than just another Baroque opera.


Alexandra Mathew

This item is not currently in-stock. It can be ordered online and is expected to ship in approx 4 weeks

Our stock data is updated periodically, and availability may change throughout the day for in-demand items. Please call the relevant shop for the most current stock information. Prices are subject to change without notice.

Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to a wishlist.