Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) - La Clemenza di Tito, K. 621 (1995)
Cover Front Album
Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Conductor Christopher Hogwood
Orchestra / Ensemble I The Academy of Ancient Music
Length 136:38
Format CD
Genre Vocal; Opera
Chorus I Chorus of the Academy of Ancient Music
Index 343
Out of Print No
Musicians
Soloist Heilmann; Bartoli; Jones; Bonney; Montague; Cachemaille
Credits
Producer Chris Sayers
Label L'Oiseau-Lyre
Track List
La Clemenza di Tito 66:45
01 Ouverture 04:30
02 Act I: Scene 1: Recitativo "Ma che? Sempre l'istesso, Sesto" 03:37
03 Act I: Scene 1: Duetto "Come ti piace, imponi" 02:50
04 Act I: Scene 1: Recitativo "Amico, il passo affretta" 02:14
05 Act I: Scene 1: Aria "Deh, se piacer mi vuoi" 05:26
06 Act I: Scene 1: Recitativo "Amico, ecco il momento" 00:28
07 Act I: Scene 1: Duettino "Deh, prendi un dolce amplesso" 00:53
08 Act I: Scene 2: Marcia 01:52
09 Act I: Scene 2: Coro "Serbate, o Dei custodi" 01:41
10 Act I: Scene 2: Recitativo "Tu della patria il Padre" 02:19
11 Act I: Scene 2: Marcia 01:52
12 Act I: Scene 2: Recitativo "Adesso, o Sesto, parla per me" 03:11
13 Act I: Scene 2: Aria "Del piu sublime soglio" 02:52
14 Act I: Scene 2: Recitativo "Non ci pentiam" 01:34
15 Act I: Scene 2: Duettino "Ah, perdona al primo affetto" 02:49
16 Act I: Scene 3: Recitativo "Che mi rechi in quel foglio?" 00:44
17 Act I: Scene 3: Recitativo "Di Tito al pie" 02:18
18 Act I: Scene 3: Aria "Ah, se fosse intorno al trono" 02:09
19 Act I: Scene 3: Recitativo "Felice me!" 00:26
20 Act I: Scene 3: Recitativo "Ancora mi schernisce?" 04:07
21 Act I: Scene 3: Aria "Parto, parto, ma tu, ben mio" 06:09
22 Act I: Scene 3: Recitativo "Vedrai, Tito, vedrai che alfin" 00:40
23 Act I: Scene 3: Terzetto "Vengo! Aspettate!" 02:13
24 Act I: Scene 4: Recitativo accompagnato "O Dei, che smania e questa" 03:31
25 Act I: Scene 4: Quintetto con coro "Deh conservate, o Dei" 06:20
La Clemenza di Tito 69:53
01 Act II: Scene 1: Recitativo "Sesto, come tu credi" 02:01
02 Act II: Scene 1: Aria "Torna di Tito a lato" 02:04
03 Act II: Scene 1: Recitativo "Partir degg'io, o restar?" 00:41
04 Act II: Scene 1: Recitativo "Sesto!... "Che chiedi?" 00:47
05 Act II: Scene 1: Terzetto "Se al volto mai ti senti" 04:41
06 Act II: Scene 2: Coro "Ah, grazie si rendano" 03:18
07 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "Gia de' pubblici giuochi" 01:54
08 Act II: Scene 2: Aria "Tardi s'avvede d'un tradimento" 01:36
09 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "No, cosi scellerato" 01:18
10 Act II: Scene 2: Aria "Tu fosti tradito" 03:01
11 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo accompagnato "Che orror! che tradimento!" 02:42
12 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo " Ma, Publio, ancora Sesto non viene?" 00:41
13 Act II: Scene 2: Terzetto "Quello di Tito e il volto?" 03:20
14 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "E pur mi fa pieta" 05:06
15 Act II: Scene 2: Rondo "Deh, per questo istante solo" 06:40
16 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "Ove s'intese mai" 01:39
17 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "Publio!" "Cesare!" 00:19
18 Act II: Scene 2: Aria "Se all'impero, amici Dei" 04:52
19 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "Publio, ascolta!" 00:30
20 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo "Non giova lusingarsi" 02:37
21 Act II: Scene 2: Aria "S'altro che lacrime" 02:06
22 Act II: Scene 2: Recitativo accompagnato "Ecco il punto, o Vitellia" 02:02
23 Act II: Scene 2: Rondo "Non piu di fiori vaghe catene" 07:05
24 Act II: Scene 3: Coro "Che del ciel, che degli Dei" 01:31
25 Act II: Scene 3: Recitativo "Pria che principio" 00:43
26 Act II: Scene 3: Recitativo "Sesto, de tuoi delitti" 01:37
27 Act II: Scene 3: Recitativo accompagnato "Ma che giorno e mai questo?" 01:24
28 Act II: Scene 3: Sestetto con coro "Tu, e ver, m'assolvi, Augusto" 03:38
Personal
Purchase Date 8/24/2002
Value $34.50
Store mdt.co.uk
Condition 100%
Librettist Caterina Mazzola
Nationality Austrian
Premiere Prague, September 6, 1791
"Form" Opera seria in due atti
Language Italian
Period Classical
Details
Studio Henry Wood Hall, London
Catalog Number 444 131-2
Live No
Recording Date 1/1/1991
Spars DDD
Reissue No
Sound Stereo
Notes
Tito: Uwe Heilmann
Sesto: Cecilia Bartoli
Vitellia: Della Jones
Servilia: Barbara Bonney
Annio: Diana Montague
Publio: Cilles Cachemaille

Notes, illustrations, text and translations

Essay: John A. Rice

Gramophone review:
"The appeal of La clemenza di Tito, if less immediate and less obvious than that of the other operas of Mozart's maturity, is still very powerful and very individual. Take no notice of those who talk of the stiff Metastasian plot: Tito is a classical-revival opera, a true child of its time, its emotions deeply human - Mozart was doing something new, not rehashing something old (as indeed the opera's continuing popularity after his time bears out). I am moved to make these points not only on hearing the music but also by the character of the present performance, and especially by the sheer emotional force that is evident in much of it, in the singing and also in some aspects of the direction.
"The singing first. Christopher Hogwood has assembled a quite remarkable cast, with certainly two, perhaps three, outstanding readings. First among them must be Cecilia Bartoli, who rightly establishes Sextus as the central character, the one whose actions and whose feelings are the focal point of the drama. The opening number is the duet Come ti piace, imponi, where the firm and pure sound of Bartoli's voice, in contrast with the contained hysteria of Vitellia's, at once defines the opera's basis. It is clear from her singing that she reads Sextus, for all his weakness in giving way to Vitellia, as a man of integrity, one of the noblest Romans of them all. You hear this same purity of line and sense, this same purity of spirit, in the grand aria Parto, parto, wonderfully sung: the final stretto is really superb, the triplets beautifully articulated; and listen to the interesting touch at the recapitulation of the main Allegro, slowed down and reflective, and very affecting without sounding at all affected. Lesley Schatzberger plays the clarinet obbligato here very finely, and also of course the basset-horn obbligato in Vitellia's last aria (as she also does, no less finely, on the Gardiner recording). Bartoli's performance reaches its climax, as it should, in the marvellous A major rondo, the Adagio, very slow and profoundly pathetic, the final stretto again determined and full of fire.
"Then there is Della Jones's remarkable Vitellia, on which I have already touched. Her first aria is quite carefully done, varied in tone and colour, and with some hints in her timing of a kind of malevolent wit-echoed later in her evil laugh that rings out as Sextus finally goes off to set the fatal plot in train. There are lots of interesting and emotionally suggestive touches in her singing, which is very committed and very passionate, if not perhaps immaculately tidy-but then, tidiness is no part of Vitellia's persona. The final rondo, Non piu di fiori, is done with real grandeur, as Vitellia rediscovers her Roman heritage of honour and rises to it, above petty ambition. Jones's rich bottom register is magnificent: and I might add that the top Bs and the top D in Vengo, aspettate-of which she gives a properly desperate account-have no fears for her. Then there is Uwe Heilmann as Titus, marked by much subtle and finely shaped singing and a keen awareness of how phrasing conveys sense. Occasionally the tone is inclined to be nasal, but that does not interfere with a very sympathetic and often moving reading. The dialogue recitative with Sextus in Act 2 is specially fine.
"Barbara Bonney makes a really lovely Servillia, soft-toned and warm: one only regrets that Mozart gave her only a single aria. Diana Montague makes a capable Annius, very cleanly and clearly sung, if without much individuality in her treatment of the music; and Publius's aria draws a distinguished piece of singing from Gilles Cachemaille. He sings in all three of the trios, too, with style and clarity; these are conducted by Hogwood at particularly high tension-as one would expect in Vengo, aspettate, but also, strikingly, in Quello di Tito e il volto, where Sextus's shudders of horror are palpable. Hogwood's keen awareness of what, expressively speaking, is going on in the music, and his refusal to be tied to a rigid rhythmic pulse in order to make it manifest, is one of the strengths of this recording.
The recitatives are sung with a great deal of life and awareness of meaning, not simply gabbled through at maximum speed. These, of course, are not Mozart's own work (he was too pressed for time as the premiere approached, and unwell) but almost certainly Sussmayr's, and they are decent routine work though lacking the kind of touch that Mozart himself brought to simple recitative with his subtler sense of timing, of key-change and its capacity to point up some crucial emotional shift, and of the effect of variation of pace. Usually, in La clemenza di Tito, the recitative is heavily cut; I believe this is the first time I have heard it in full. Gardiner, whose performance is cited above, cuts it extensively, and-bearing in mind particularly that his performances were recordings of concert performances-no one is likely to blame him for that. While some may feel that the inclusion of every note, as in the present version, is an advantage, others may not unreasonably take the opposite view. At any rate, a new track begins for each aria, which enables the listener to cut without difficulty. Hogwood is undogmatic about the use of appoggiaturas: here and there I would have favoured more, but my impression is that he has left it to the singers to do what comes naturally, and that is its own argument.
"There are now two very fine recordings of this opera with period instruments and to choose between them would be arbitrary. Both are excellently sung; had I to make a singer by singer comparison, I would probably rate them four to two in Hogwood's favour. Gardiner's performance does have the advantage of a stronger sense of continuity, derived no doubt from the fact of its having been recorded more or less live. Both give very fine accounts of this noble and underrated work."