Hahn - Ô mon bel inconnu (YouTube)
I mentioned in an earlier post that the Palazzetto Bru Zane's recent issue of Reynaldo Hahn's Ô mon bel inconnu was declared pick of the month in the March edition of Opéra Magazine. The Palazzetto has been as generous as usual in posting it on YouTube. A treat, especially for those who can follow the French, but not for the 'woke'.
If all goes well, this link should lead to the playlist.
The Palazzetto Bru Zane's website, which is full of treasures, including a 'radio station' of French romantic-era music, gives this text, in English, about the work:
The hatter, Prosper Aubertin, dissatisfied with the daily grind of his
bourgeois life, dreams of having extramarital affairs. However, he is
annoyed to find propositions from his wife, daughter and maid among the
replies to an anonymous personal ad he had placed in the agony column.
To find out what these women really want, he invites them all to a villa
in the south of France. “This is a bourgeois tragedy. This tragedy
could have been called Know Thyself, and it could have ended very
badly. As I was writing it in Alexandrines and before offering it to
the Comédie-Française, I thought carefully for a good ten minutes… then I
made it into a comedy”, joked Sacha Guitry. This musical comedy is the
second lyric collaboration between the author and Reynaldo Hahn, after Mozart (1925). At this time, the composer was enjoying well-deserved fame in the light lyric genres: after Ciboulette (1923), he had scored success after success in the smaller theatres of Paris (Le Temps d’aimer, Une revue, Brummel) and Ô mon bel inconnu did not disappoint. Le Figaro singled
out the “elegance of tone and distinction of form” so characteristic of
Hahn in the interwar period, while regarding him as the rightful heir
of André Messager. Le Ménestrel was just as enthusiastic: “The
music of Monsieur Reynaldo Hahn fits the subject with a versatility and
sureness of touch which are something of a miracle. It shows an
incomparable refinement and tact and, at the same time, a wit which does
not preclude emotion. It is enhanced by a brisk, punchy and transparent
orchestration.” What more could anyone want? A perfect cast for the
first performance: headed by Jean Aquistapace and livened up by Arletty
in the role of Félicie.
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