Henry Purcell (1659-1695) - The Indian Queen (1995)
Cover Front Album
Composer Henry Purcell (1659-1695)
Conductor Christopher Hogwood
Orchestra / Ensemble I The Academy of Ancient Music
Length 73:12
Format CD
Genre Vocal; Semi-opera
Chorus I Chorus of the Academy of Ancient Music
Index 417
Out of Print Yes
Musicians
Soloist Ainsley; Kirkby; Thomas; Finley; Williams; Bott; Crabtree; Podger; Berridge; Parker
Credits
Producer Chris Sayers
Label L'Oiseau-Lyre
Track List
01 First Music: Air - Hornpipe 02:17
02 Second Music: Air - Hornpipe 02:09
03 Overture 03:10
04 Trumpet Tune 00:39
05 Prologue: "Wake Quivera, wake" 02:13
06 Prologue: "Why should men quarrel?" 01:32
07 Prologue: "By ancient prophecies" 04:17
08 Prologue: Trumpet Tune 00:44
09 Act II: Symphony 03:59
10 Act II: "I come to sing great Zempoalla's story" 01:19
11 Act II: "What flatt'ring noise is this" 00:38
12 Act II: "Scorn'd Envy, here's nothing" 02:38
13 Act II: Trumpet Tune 00:36
14 Act II: "We come to sing great Zempoalla's story" 00:39
15 Act II: Dance 01:05
16 Act II: Second Act Tune 00:43
17 Act III: Dance 00:54
18 Act III: "Ye twice ten hundred deities" "By the croaking of the toad" 04:47
19 Act III: Symphony; "Seek not to know what must not be revealed" 03:43
20 Act III: Trumpet Overture 02:33
21 Act III: "Ah! Ah! How happy are we" 02:02
22 Act III: "We the spirits of the air" 01:35
23 Act III: "I attempt from Love's sickness to fly in vain" 03:12
24 Act III: Third Act Tune: Rondeau 01:13
25 Act IV: "They tell us that you mighty powers above" 05:31
26 Act IV: Fourth Act Tune: Air 01:23
27 Act V: "While thus we bow" 01:58
28 Act V: "You who at the altar stand" "All dismal sounds" 03:56
29 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: Symphony 00:53
30 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: "To bless the genial bed" "Come all, come at my call" 02:28
31 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: "I'm glad I have met him" 02:27
32 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: "The joys of wedlock sonn are past" "Sound, sound the trumpet" 03:45
33 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: "Make haste, make haste to put on love's chains" 00:45
34 Daniel Purcell (c.1661-1717) - Additional Act: Masque: Trumpet Air; "Let loud renown with all her thousand tongues" 01:29
Personal
Purchase Date 11/2/2002
Value $20.50
Store mdt.co.uk
Condition 100%
Librettist John Dryden
Nationality English
Language English
Period Baroque
Details
Studio Walthamstow Town Hall, London
Catalog Number 444 339-2
Live No
Recording Date 7/1/1994
Spars DDD
Reissue No
Sound Stereo
Notes
Indian Boy: John Mark Ainsley
Indian Girl (Quivera): Emma Kirkby
Fame: John Mark Ainsley
Envy: David Thomas
Ismeron: Gerald Finley
God of Dreams: Tommy Williams
Zempoalla: Emma Kirkby
Orazia: Catherine Bott
High Priest: David Thomas
Hymen: Gerald Finley
A follower of Hymen: Libby Crabtree
A married man: David Thomas
A married woman: Catherine Bott
Cupid: Emma Kirkby
Two followers of Envy: Julian Podger; Simon Berridge
Three followers of Cupid: John Mark Ainsley; Gerald Finley; David Thomas
Four aerial spirits: Julian Podger; John Mark Ainsley; Libby Crabtree; Helen Parker

Notes, illustrations, text and translation

Essay: Curtis Price

Gramophone review:
"Purcell’s fourth and last full-scale semi-opera, The Indian Queen, is often passed over in favour of its longer and more rounded predecessors, especially King Arthur and The Fairy Queen. The reasons are plentiful: Thomas Betterton, with whom Purcell collaborated, never finished his reworking of an early Restoration tragedy and even if he had torn himself away from his business interests in 1695, Purcell would not have been alive to set the remaining music for Act 5. As it happened, Henry’s brother Daniel set the masque from the final act after Betterton had hired an anonymous writer to finish his adaptation. No one can deny that neither verse nor music achieved the heights imagined in the original collaboration; given the quality of the masques in Purcell’s large ‘dramatick’ operas (including Dioclesian, of course), there is an undoubted sense of anticlimax. To cap it all, the story-line - the tale of a doomed queen - hardly encouraged rejouissance of a conventional type, or the full range of characterful scenes upon which Purcell thrived. More fundamental, as Curtis Price points out, is that the play was not ideal for conversion into an ‘opera’ in the first place. Purcell must have recognized that the subject matter (delivered in antiquated heroic couplets) was to provide him with few avenues for his imagination to reign. That there is so much fine music here is proof of the composer’s undaunted spirit and peerless ability.
The difference between the Purcell Simfony’s graceful and intimate performance and this new account from Christopher Hogwood is that the latter makes us realize that for all the constraints, the score is not inherently small-scale and that it warrants all the subtlety of colour that can be achieved using 12 soloists and a decent sized choir and orchestra. Needless to say, Hogwood conveys a consistent, logical and meticulous understanding of the score. The orchestral playing is crisp and transparent (as in the Symphony of Act 2), the Academy of Ancient Music’s articulation allowing the integrity of the inner parts to be heard to the full without compromising blend. Amongst a distinguished line-up of singers, John Mark Ainsley gets the lion’s share and is perhaps marginally more effective as the Indian Boy than as Fame, but such gloriously mellifluous and controlled singing can only enhance the reputation of this work. Emma Kirkby is in fine fettle and she executes the justly celebrated song "I attempt from love’s sickness" with her usual communicative panache.
"Then comes the pleasurably contrasted voice of Catherine Bott: "They tell us that your mighty powers" could not be in better hands. David Thomas as Envy, with his two followers in the Act 2 masque, highlights this brilliant scene as the work of a true connoisseur of the theatre. Mature Purcell is most strongly felt in the deftly ironic invocation by the conjurer, Ismeron, whose "Ye twice ten thousand deities" is delivered authoritatively by Gerald Finley, though the lulling to sleep, before the God of Dream’s gloomy non-prediction, is strangely unconvincing. Gardiner is particularly effective here.
"Taken as a whole, the quality of music shines very brightly in this reading. It is perhaps a touch calculated in places. I prefer the Purcell Simfony’s melting chorus "While thus we bow before your shrine"; indeed, there is a tenderness in that recording which is touching but Hogwood’s new version has to stand as the current favourite. The inclusion of Daniel Purcell’s Act 5 masque is interesting but not much more than that. He evidently excelled himself but he also reaffirms Henry’s superiority on all levels."