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A bigger-than-life opening to the EIF’s Queen’s Corridor collection from Jakub Józef Orliński – Seen and Heard Worldwide


A bigger-than-life opening to the EIF’s Queen’s Corridor collection from Jakub Józef Orliński – Seen and Heard Worldwide

United KingdomUnited Kingdom Edinburgh Worldwide Competition – Music from seventeenth Century Italy: Jakub Józef Orliński (countertenor), Il Pomo d’Oro. Queen’s Corridor, Edinburgh, 3.8.2024. (SRT)

Il Pomo d’Oro and countertenor Jakub Józef Orliński © Andrew Perry 7

The sunshine has been notably missing from this 12 months’s British summer season, with Scotland no exception; but it surely got here out for the beginning of August and, with it, the beginning of the Edinburgh Festivals. The festivals have been on the receiving finish of quite a lot of gloomy information not too long ago. There may be the final story about arts funding, after all, however then there are Edinburgh-specific tales concerning the shortage of lodging and phenomenal prices of it for guests and for performers. As if that wasn’t sufficient, one other bin strike is deliberate for subsequent week, timed to coincide with town’s busiest interval. Nobody is wanting ahead to seeing garbage piled excessive within the streets, and let’s not even take into consideration the odor.

Fortunately, nonetheless, town felt vibrant and comfortable over the festivals’ opening weekend, with plenty of guests and the terrific bustle that you simply solely get right here in August. And there was loads of bustle, power and vibrancy on this opening live performance of the Worldwide Competition’s Queen’s Corridor collection, pulling in a big-name singer to do his factor with some trusted collaborators.

It’s uncommon to talk of a celebrity countertenor, but when there’s one then Jakub Józef Orliński is it. His youth and beauty make him eminently marketable however, extra importantly, he’s a correctly expert artist and spending ninety minutes together with his voice is a uncommon pleasure. There’s a cool magnificence to it, luminous on the prime with out dropping heft on the backside, and he makes use of it terrifically. There may be agility, flexibility and many energy, however all the time a concentrate on the great thing about tone that’s so necessary to early and Baroque opera.

Moreover, he’s an clever performer, as a result of what he and his workforce created right here wasn’t a lot a standard live performance as a bit of immersive theatre. Operating with out interruption in a steady sequence, the succession of arias and instrumental music didn’t precisely inform a narrative, but it surely explored a complete collection of moods, largely revolving across the many vicissitudes of affection. Every gave Orliński an opportunity to reveal a distinct facet of his voice, from Ottone’s assured return to Rome in Monteverdi’s Poppea, by means of to a number of arias of desolation and disappointment. There was even some comedy in his portrayal of an previous lady in L’Adamiro, one nonetheless burning with ardour for her husband regardless of the ravages of the years.

He was solely half the story, although. His instrumental companions in Il Pomo d’Oro made up at the very least half of the programme’s success. A splash of Italian sunshine appeared to emanate from their sound, with gorgeously shiny violin taking part in and a delightfully saucy cornetto sound. Miguel Rincon’s vibrant theorbo taking part in deserves a particular point out, and he even managed a comedy duet with Orliński whereas he performed the guitar.

This was the identical programme Orliński did on the BBC Proms, and which shaped the idea of his Past album (overview right here). As on the Royal Albert Corridor, the Queen’s Corridor auditorium was plunged into darkness and Orliński moved across the corridor to sing, in addition to deploying a number of costume adjustments to embody totally different characters. All of it received somewhat a lot on the finish when he appeared so taken with the viewers’s response (‘who, me?!’) that he rolled out no fewer than 4 encores. And sure, there was even some breakdancing. Nevertheless it if all received a bit foolish then it nonetheless made for a massively entertaining morning. The morning Queen’s Corridor collection usually options the way more rarefied world of string quartets and solo pianos: how on earth will they compete after a larger-than-life opening like this one?

Simon Thompson

The Edinburgh Worldwide Competition runs at venues throughout town till Sunday twenty fifth August. Click on right here for additional particulars.

Monteverdi – ‘E pur io torno qui’ from L’incoronazione di Poppea; ‘Voglio di vita uscir’
Marini – ‘Passacalio’ from Per ogni sorte di strumento musicale Op.22
Caccini – ‘Amarilli, mia bella’ from Le nuove musiche
Frescobaldi – ‘Così mi disprezzate’ from Arie musicali, Ebook I
Kerll – Sonata for Two Violins in F
StrozziCantate, ariette e duetti, Op.2: L’amante consolato
Cavalli – ‘Incomprensibil nume’ from Pompeo Magno
Pallavicino – Sinfonia from Demetrio
Netti – ‘Misero core’, ‘Si, si, si scioglia si’, ‘Dolcissime catene’ from La Filli
Sartorio – ‘La certezza di tua fede’ from Antonino e Pompeiano
Netti – ‘Quanto più la donna invecchia’ and ‘Son vecchia, patienza’ from L’Adamiro
Jarzębski – ‘Tamburetta’ from Canzoni e concerti
Moratelli – ‘Lungi dai nostri cor’ from La Faretra smarrita

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