BBC Music Magazine

Opera

Boismortier

Les voyages de l’Amour

Katherine Watson, Katia Velletaz, Chantal Santon Jeffery, Judith van Wanroij, Thomas Dolié, Éléonore Pancrazi; Purcell Choir; Orfeo Orchestra/György Vashegyi

Glossa GCD 924009 157:37 mins (2 discs)

The French composer Joseph Bodin de Boismortier (1689-1755) is remembered today mostly for his instrumental music, especially his flute sonatas; but there are a handful of stage works, all written for the Paris Opéra, of which Les voyages de l’Amour was the first, garnering some 18 performances following its premiere in 1736. For some reason the second act failed to please, and was quickly replaced by the composer and his librettist: on this recording both versions are included.

Cupid’s Travels is described as a ballet, but while there are numerous highly inventive dance movements it’s otherwise sung throughout, often to ornately decorated vocal lines. The plot is admittedly slight, and mildly repetitive. Cupid is determined to discover a lover who is faithful to him, and to that purpose voyages in disguise to a village (where he meets Daphné), a city (where he dallies with Lucile, or in the second version Dircé) and to a court (where he encounters Julie). The women at city and court disappoint him, however, so he returns to the village and to rustic Daphné, who represents true love.

Boismortier’s score is often delectable and both stylishly and entrancingly performed here by the rich and characterful Hungarian period-instrument orchestra and the healthy-sounding choir, with international principals among whom Katherine Watson’s Zéphire and Judith

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min readMusic
Welcome
We were excited to get our hands on the world-premiere recording of Fausto, Louise Bertin’s 1831 operatic retelling of the Faust story. Given just three performances in the year of its composition, the work then vanished for nearly two centuries! Now
BBC Music Magazine6 min read
Music To Die For
‘I think it has to be Brahms,’ replies composer Michael John Trotta, when asked by BBC Music to name his favourite Requiem. ‘It’s partly to do with how he brought the language into the vernacular and included additional texts. And then there’s that t
BBC Music Magazine4 min read
UK Summer Opera
Lewes, Sussex, 16 May – 25 August glyndebourne.com There’s more to Glyndebourne than black-tie picnics on the lawn and bosky evenings of operatic opulence: last December’s One Voice Festival of Singing convened some 2,000 schoolchildren; Glyndebourne

Related Books & Audiobooks