fri 29/03/2024

Serse, Fagioli, Il Pomo d'Oro, Barbican review - a night in counter-tenor heaven | reviews, news & interviews

Serse, Fagioli, Il Pomo d'Oro, Barbican review - a night in counter-tenor heaven

Serse, Fagioli, Il Pomo d'Oro, Barbican review - a night in counter-tenor heaven

Daredevil artistry brings Handel's tragi-comedy to life

Defying gravity: counter-tenor Franco FagioliStephan Boehme

What a scrumptious spread of musical virtuosity the Barbican has laid on with the aid of its international guests this week.

A couple of days after the Australian Chamber Orchestra conquered Milton Court, the ace Baroque ensemble Il Pomo d’Oro stormed the main hall with this concert performance of Handel’s farewell opera, Serse. Yes, it sounds deplorably old-fashioned to treat Handel’s musical dramas – Georgian-style – merely as the showground for vocal pyrotechnics. But the high-wire artistry of Argentinian counter-tenor Franco Fagioli, in the title role, could never count as simply some first-among-equals contribution to the team. The whole side, beyond doubt, sang on top form. Fagioli, though, is something else again. The full-spectrum tantrum of his final aria (“Crude furie degli 'orridi abissi”) became a quite spectacular hissy-fit. It climbed in a trice from near-baritone depths to stratospheric top notes, hit and kept with an almost contemptuous command. 

Handel wrote Serse in 1738 for Caffarelli – along with Farinelli, one of the pair of superstar castrati who stunned and seduced mid-18th century Europe with the scope and heft of their uncanny sound. Given the paucity of counter-tenors with the sheer horsepower to meet this role’s demands, the part of the petulant Persian emperor regularly falls to women as a breeches role. To hear a dramatic counter-tenor with Fagioli’s gifts scale its heights and depths, however, is to sense the frisson of almost diabolical delight that swooning fans of the great castrati might have felt. When reviewing the ENO’s Porgy and Bess recently, I wondered which other operas start with such a performer-taxing coup as Gershwin’s, as it kicks off straight into “Summertime”. One answer, of course, is Serse. Right after the overture, and a touch of recitative, Handel has the Persian ruler Serse halt on his campaign to conquer Europe and praise a sheltering plane tree with “Ombra mai fù”.  

Serse may be a bully, but he’s also an idiot

From the controlled crescendo of his opening note, creamily smooth but never dragging or cloying in the vein of some Handel recitalists, Fagioli declared his intent. Concert performance or not, he acted Serse, and never failed to bring out the comic bombast that Handel often channels into the high-handed king’s music. For Zarathustra’s sake: the great general is apostrophising a plane tree! It’s meant to look absurd. Somehow, as in this aria, Handel takes farcical or melodramatic moments – of which Serse has plenty – and loads them with a musical grace and tenderness that seems to belong on another, higher, plane of being.

This serio-comic mismatch between convoluted stage business and the soaring glories of the score creates a challenge for any concert version. Even with limited dramatic resources, Serse needs the sparkle of theatre to bring out its chiaroscuro contrasts. In this case, Il Pomo d’Oro’s players sat centre-stage, directed from the harpsichord by their brilliant young chief Maxim Emelyanychev, while the soloists walked on and off to sing their pieces up-front. Sometimes this slowed the pace. Serse’s moods must shift between light and shadow at a quicksilver lick as the Persian king, that ultimate entitled alpha-male, plots to forsake his Egyptian betrothed Amastre and steal the long-suffering Romilda from her fiancé, Serse’s brother Arsamene. Why? Because he can. At some point, I would love to see a frankly post-#MeToo production of Serse, with the casually controlling, and intimidating, king played as a fawned-over, harassment-addicted film director, cabinet minister – or maybe even retail tycoon?

Serse may be a bully, but he’s also an idiot. As flexible in his gestures as his stupendous voice, Fagioli fully inhabited the role. From his first major aria, “Più che penso alle fiamme”, his quivering, quavering outrage hinted at the adolescent, foot-stamping wilfulness that partners his brute coercive force. The past generation has witnessed a gratifying harvest of world-class counter-tenors. Still, it’s hard to think of another one who combines such dramatic agility and resourcefulness as a singing actor with a vocal range deployed with unstrained assurance over such broad sonic acres. The coloratura swoops, leaps and runs of his aria “Se bramate d’amar” – which closed the first half at the Barbican – crackle around more pensive, yearning passages. These require a restrained stamina and steadiness. Fagioli covered every stylistic base with unerring authority.

The rest of a top-notch cast offered mightily impressive foils to Fagioli. As Romilda, Latvian soprano Inga Kalna maintained a rich nobility and serenity, even if her acting sometimes felt a touch staid compared to the fleet-footed Fagioli. Not, though, in the sumptuous quarrelling duet “Troppo oltraggi la mia fede”, when Romilda and her put-upon swain Arsamene simmer and spit at (wondefully-scored) cross-purposes. Vivica Genaux’s Arsamene – written as a mezzo breeches role – came into his/her own as the deceptions and humiliations inflicted by the king prompt magnificent music of pain and rejection – above all, in the heartbreaking lilt of the Act II aria “Quella che tutta fé”. At the Barbican, the smaller roles grabbed plenty of limelight too. Francesca Aspromonte was not just a distracting minx but a woman of substance and passion as Romilda’s would-be rival, Atalanta. Aspromonte’s singing balanced the flirtatious, comic and lyrical sides of the role with admirable grace and wit. As Serse’s betrayed betrothed, Amastre, Delphine Galou made a somewhat sombre, but moving, woman wronged. And, among the low-voiced character parts, Andreas Wolf as Ariodate let his pair of arias punch well above their dramatic weight. Meanwhile Biagio Pizzuti – as the scheming manservant Elviro – wrung every ounce of fun out of a part that anticipates Mozart’s Figaro and Leporello by a full half-century. Prowling around the orchestra in his flower-seller’s disguise, squeezing his silky, muscular bass into a droning whine like a human hurdy-gurdy, Pizzuti always turned this Serse into a performance that sometimes felt more like a “semi-staged” show than a straightforward concert version. If the evening ever faced a problem, that lay perhaps in a slightly unequal distribution of dramatic flair among the cast. Musically, however, the quality never dipped, as Emelyanychev and his Pomo d’Oro specialists (pictured above by Julien Mignot) delivered a Baroque-band masterclass. It was fascinating, for instance, to see how the prominent onstage instrumentalists alter the way one hears those iconic Handelian numbers – how Daniel Zapico’s theorbo ornamentation, say, adds to the spine-tingling magic of “Ombra mai fù”, or how Atalanta’s provoking – and beautifully sung – dialogue with the violin on “Un cenno leggiadretto” turns up that teasing aria’s erotic heat. At its end, the leader even got a little kiss. 

As its pendulum swings between pantomime and near-tragedy, stopping at all stations in between, Serse calls for a staging that can make these seesawing tones look and sound truthful. At the Barbican, the performers did their often energetic best to enliven the inherently static conventions of any concert rendering. Their music, however, broke through every limit to set the imagination free. Fagioli, above all, made a barnstorming but quick-witted Serse to cherish and remember. Let’s hope the Barbican gets to host this gravity-defying voice again soon.  

The full-spectrum tantrum of Fagioli's final aria became a spectacular hissy-fit

rating

Editor Rating: 
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)

Share this article

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters