Produkt
There's no hint of difficult second album about Lise Davidsen's new recording, made with the London Philharmonic and the conductor Mark Elder during last summer's lull in lockdown. If her Wagner and Strauss disc two years ago confirmed her position as a rising star of extraordinary potential, this consolidates it.
As a programme it feels like a bit of a grab bag, albeit an enjoyable one. She starts with the big aria for Beethoven's Leonore, the role in which she was making a big impression at the Royal Opera last year as lockdown began, and her joyous, uncertain yet undaunted heroine is exactly who you would want to be rescued by. There's great work from the LPO's horns here, too.
Davidsen's soprano has a brighter gleam and greater expansiveness than that of any other singer to have emerged on to the opera scene in the last decade. She's not a singer to signpost every moodswing; listen closely, though, and her attention to detail and to the colour of her sound is telling – and in Santuzza's aria from Cavalleria Rusticana she proves she can wear her heart on her sleeve when she needs to. Her aria from Cherubini's opera Medea (there are five composers here, not just the three in the album's title), brings an electric, fast-vibrating tone conveying barely controlled agitation; Desdemona's prayer, from Verdi's Otello, is beautifully controlled, its simple radiance hiding disquiet just underneath. The orchestra switches styles expertly.
Arguably, Davidsen leaves the best for last: Wagner's Wesendonck Lieder, five songs that are basically studies for an opera that many feel she was born to sing, Tristan und Isolde. She sounds vibrant and utterly focused, throwing out glorious high notes in Schmerzen, catching the pregnant, humid stillness at the heart of Im Treibhaus. Davidsen's voice may be big but it doesn't hold you at a distance; it draws you in.
(Erica Jeal ; theguardian.com)
Liedtexte abgedruckt
- Lise Davidsen (Sopran)
- Rosalind Plowright (Mezzosopran)
Recording Locations: Henry Wood Hall, London, 1-4 August 2020 ; The Colosseum, Watford, 15 October 2020