Scottish Opera - HMS Pinafore - MusicWeb International
HMS Pinafore was the first real success of the Gilbert and Sullivan
partnership in 1878 because of its catchy melody lines, clever lyrics and
excellently framed stage plot. Itself a parody on the social classes of
Victorian England, it has itself been parodied, adapted and re-dressed over 100
years, and its popularity doesn't show any signs of waning. The D'Oyly Carte
Opera Company kept it in front of the public's gaze for over a 100 years. They
teased out and perfected nuances from its score, diction being uppermost following
Gilbert's desire to have very word of his witty lyrics heard. That trend has
continued.
This recording was made at the semi-staged
performance as part of the 2015 Edinburgh International Festival where it was
well received. One remembers its high standard of presentation from the BBC
broadcast. It is good to see therefore that Linn have released this recording
of the event. Spoken dialogue is replaced by a carefully and
succinctly-tailored commentary by Tim Brooke-Taylor that does not unduly hold up
the flow of musical items and leads nicely from one number to the next.
The singers are first class and well suited to
their roles - Toby Spence is well-suited the tenor role of Ralph (providing a
pleasing and unexaggerated falsetto to the end of his ballad, "A Maiden Fair to
See". John Mark Ainsley as Sir Joseph gives the character an affected aloofness
with sufficient dryness to provide believable comedy. Elizabeth Watts is
superbly-toned and sings Josephine's arias in a charming manner. The rest of the
cast do equal justice, with soloists and chorus singing with excellent tonal
balance, energy and commitment under Richard Egarr's leadership.
The whole presentation is well-rehearsed and the
orchestra is excellent. Occasionally the brass and certainly ‘that delicately
modulated instrument', the timpani, are occasionally heavy. It was nice to see
that Scottish Opera follow the D'Oyly Carte with the need for excellent
diction, but occasionally I felt Josephine could have annunciated better; sadly
she sacrifices diction at the expense of maintaining her luscious tone yet the
lyrics are important. In many a recording we find there are woodwind lines that
fail to come across, but here there is absolute clarity from every section
thanks to the sensitive engineering and balance by Philip Hobbs.
The CD is attractively presented in a French-style printed card case with booklet that contains excellent notes by Dr David Russell Hulme, plus a full synopsis. The soloists are only credited with small photo (their biographies have to be pulled from the Linn website and not all of them are listed). This is certainly a worthwhile recording to consider.