Is countertenor Philippe Jaroussky's voice losing some of its uncanny leaping creaminess as he enters his fifth decade? Maybe marginally, but that's more than counterbalanced by his recent efforts to move into the new (or older) territory of the 17th century. Here he takes on the music of Francesco Cavalli in a wonderful collection that can serve as an introduction to this composer as well as a display of Jaroussky's vocal gifts; many of Cavalli's operas are sampled. Cavalli is not exactly a household name, but this ...
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Is countertenor Philippe Jaroussky's voice losing some of its uncanny leaping creaminess as he enters his fifth decade? Maybe marginally, but that's more than counterbalanced by his recent efforts to move into the new (or older) territory of the 17th century. Here he takes on the music of Francesco Cavalli in a wonderful collection that can serve as an introduction to this composer as well as a display of Jaroussky's vocal gifts; many of Cavalli's operas are sampled. Cavalli is not exactly a household name, but this Venetian composer as much as anyone else turned going to the opera into the public event that it remains today. He combined the epic mode of Monteverdi with more modern aria types and humorous elements, both of which are abundantly on display here. They are handled nicely by Jaroussky, and he goes into new vocal territory when doing so. Sample the aria "Cieche tenebre" from the opera Pompeo Magno, which gives the countertenor's low register a workout and finds it in good shape. Jaroussky...
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