Tippett: The Midsummer Marriage review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week

London Philharmonic Orchestra/Edward Gardner
(LPO, three CDs)

Gardner captures perfectly the overflowing exuberance of Tippett’s score, with Toby Spence and Jennifer France an ideal Jack and Bella

It’s 17 years since Michael Tippett’s first and finest opera was last seen on a British stage, and more than half a century since the only previous commercial recording of The Midsummer Marriage. Conducted by Colin Davis, that was based on the 1967 Covent Garden production, while this new version, which overall seems to me at least the equal of its predecessor, is taken from the concert performance at the Royal Festival Hall in London a year ago with which Edward Gardner inaugurated his tenure as the London Philharmonic’s principal conductor.

With the possible exception of King Priam, first performed in 1962, all five of Tippett’s operas demand some suspension of dramatic disbelief. But The Midsummer Marriage’s heady mix of Jungian symbolism, fertility-rite eroticism and Golden Bough mythology, imposed on a plot that owes a great deal to that of Mozart’s Magic Flute, demands the most allowances. What redeems the unwieldy dramaturgy and costive libretto is the music, which includes some of Tippett’s finest invention; it’s a work that inspires enormous affection in the composer’s admirers, and, for Gardner, conducting the fabulously iridescent score was clearly an ambition fulfilled.

Certainly, this performance, powered by the sumptuous playing of the LPO and the contributions of its chorus, is charged with a special intensity in every bar. Gardner’s concern to make every rhythm buoyant and every orchestral texture as transparent as possible ensures that the four ritual dances in the second and third acts (which have become a concert item in their own right) rightly become the pivots for the whole drama.

The soloists are generally good, too. Robert Murray as Mark and Rachel Nicholls as Jenifer – the Tamino and Pamina of the situation, if you like – are fine singers, though perhaps miscast here: Murray’s role ideally needs a tenor with a bit more heft, Nicholls’ role a more flexible, lyric soprano (it was sung by Joan Sutherland at the 1955 premiere). But as Jack and Bella, the Papageno and Papagena equivalents, Toby Spence and Jennifer France seem an ideal pairing, and more than almost anyone else in the cast project their characters as believable, three-dimensional human beings. Ashley Riches brings a sardonic humour to the blustering King Fisher, Jenifer’s businessman father; Claire Barnett-Jones manages to make something meaningful out of Sosostris’s portentous third-act aria. And through it all, the overflowing exuberance of Tippett’s score carries everything before it.

Contributor

Andrew Clements

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
LPO/Gardner The Midsummer Marriage review – Tippett’s opera thrills in stupendous performance
In his opening concert as the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s principal conductor, Edward Gardner brought home the heady, almost narcotic quality of Tippett’s music

Tim Ashley

26, Sep, 2021 @1:10 PM

Article image
Peter Grimes review | Erica Jeal's classical album of the week
Britten’s opera sounds huge and thrilling in a nuanced recording with sparkling interplay between singers and orchestra – it’s rarely sounded better

Erica Jeal

03, Sep, 2020 @2:00 PM

Article image
LPO/Gardner/Ehnes review – next principal ignites the spark
There were poised accounts of Walton and Bartók, but it was in Nielsen’s ‘Inextinguishable’ Symphony that things caught fire

Erica Jeal

10, Oct, 2019 @1:55 PM

Article image
Early Opera Company-Curnyn Amadigi review | classical album of the week
There are glorious and nuanced performances in a new recording of this lesser-known Handel opera, courtesy of Christian Curnyn and his Early Opera Company

Erica Jeal

15, Sep, 2022 @2:28 PM

Article image
LPO/Gardner review – magical outing for Tippett’s ‘unplayable’ piano concerto
Coleridge-Taylor’s stately, long-lost Solemn Prelude and a crisp, exploratory interpretation of Elgar’s first symphony completed a trio of English compositions

Martin Kettle

27, Jan, 2023 @2:13 PM

Article image
Jurowski Conducts Stravinsky Vol 1 review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Stravinsky’s famous ballets The Firebird and The Rite of Spring are balanced on this impressive live set with valuable lesser-known pieces

Andrew Clements

14, Jul, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
Skalkottas: Violin Concerto; Concerto for Violin, Viola and Wind review – little-known works give glimpses of greatness
Violinist George Zacharias’s belief in this hugely demanding music shines through, but the stylistic differences between the concertos is bewildering

Andrew Clements

13, Apr, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Franck: Hulda review | Andrew Clements’s classical album of the week
Franck’s 1885 opera comes to life in a new recording based on concert performances. If the drama doesn’t convince, that’s not the fault of the superb cast

Andrew Clements

10, Aug, 2023 @2:15 PM

Article image
Bittersweet symphonies: UK classical music 2023 in review
Amid the funding woes there were still bright spots this year, from Bach to Byrd, and the Rite to Rachmaninov, while the streaming world continued to evolve and expand

Andrew Clements

14, Dec, 2023 @4:35 PM

Article image
Bluebeard’s Castle review – Bartók’s opera wields devastating power in contrasting performances
Gerald Finley and Susan Bullock are at their best in a disquieting small-scale reimagining for Theatre of Sound; while Edward Gardner and the London Philharmonic’s more traditional take is equally sensational

Tim Ashley

07, Nov, 2021 @1:08 PM