CHARLES-HUBERT GERVAIS Hypermnestre Tragédie. Paris, 1717
GCD 924007
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Katherine Watson – Hypermnestre Mathias Vidal – Lyncée Thomas Dolié – Danaüs Chantal Santon-Jeffery – Une Égyptienne, une Naïade, une Argienne, une Bergère, une Coryphée Manuel Núñez Camelino – Un Égyptien, le Grand Prêtre d’Isis, un Berger, un Coryphée Juliette Mars – Isis, une Matelote Philippe-Nicolas Martin – Le Nil, Arcas, l’Ombre de Gélanor
Purcell Choir Orfeo Orchestra György Vashegyi —
Production details
Total playing time 74:32 +71:27 Recorded in Budapest, Hungary, in September 2018 Engineered by Ádám Matz Produced by Benoît Dratwicki Booklet essay by Benoît Dratwicki English – Français – DeutschMade in Austria
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CHARLES-HUBERT GERVAIS (1671-1744)HypermnestreTragédie. Paris, 1717
CD I [74:32]
01-19 Prologue: Jeux en honneur d’Isis 20-34 Acte I 35-50 Acte II CD II [71:27]
01-22 Acte III 23-38 Acte IV 39-45 Acte V 46-57 Acte V (première version, 1716)
About this album
The remarkable Hypermnestre by Charles-Hubert Gervais is the latest unremembered early 18th-century French opera to be recorded afresh for Glossa, and conducted by György Vashegyi.
Gervais was a contemporary of Campra and Destouches, learning from Lully and paving the way for Rameau and, like Marais and François Couperin, open to the Italianising trends of “les goûts réunis”. A high-quality libretto from Joseph La Font tackles the story of Hypermnestra which proved so popular in the early eighteenth century. The Glossa recording contains both the original fifth act and the major revision of it from 1717 and Vashegyi drives the whole tragedy expertly to its bitter (and not-so-bitter!) end.
Musically, this tragédie lyrique provides powerful opportunities for the trio of leading characters, here taken by Katherine Watson (Hypermnestre), Thomas Dolié (Danaüs, her father) and Mathias Vidal (Lyncée, her betrothed), but they are ably supported by Juliette Mars, Chantal Santon-Jeffery, Manuel Núñez Camelino and Philippe-Nicolas Martin. No French opera of this time would have been complete without a generous helping of choral or instrumental music and Gervais – a master of melody, harmony and orchestration – serves these up in a dazzling set of divertissements and festive set pieces full of dances (including a massive passacaille); all this performed with great stylistic awareness and vivacity by Vashegyi’s Orfeo Orchestra and Purcell Choir.