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Mozart Arias For Male Soprano
Michael Maniaci, Boston Baroque, Pearlman
Mozart Arias For Male Soprano
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Boston Baroque, conducted by founding music director Martin Pearlman release an all-Mozart release Mozart: Arias for Male Soprano. For the project, which marks their 20th release on Telarc, the ensemble has united with the...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Michael Maniaci, Boston Baroque, Pearlman
Title: Mozart Arias For Male Soprano
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Telarc
Original Release Date: 1/1/2010
Re-Release Date: 1/26/2010
Genre: Classical
Style: Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 888072318274

Synopsis

Album Description
Boston Baroque, conducted by founding music director Martin Pearlman release an all-Mozart release Mozart: Arias for Male Soprano. For the project, which marks their 20th release on Telarc, the ensemble has united with the fascinating American vocal artist Michael Maniaci, a true male soprano, in their first recording together and his first solo recording with orchestra. This recording of "firsts" is also the premier recording of Mozart's arias for the castrato voice that gives audiences the opportunity to hear it as Mozart heard it: sung by an artist not only with soprano range, haunting vocal color, and brilliant coloratura, but also with male vocal power. The disc contains arias from Idomeneo, Lucio Silla, and La Clemenza di Tito, as well as the beloved motet Exsultate, jubilate. The recording is rounded out with two brilliant orchestral numbers, the overtures to Idomeneo and Clemenza. The first permanent Baroque orchestra established in North America, Boston Baroque is widely regarded as "one of the world's premier period-instrument bands" (Fanfare). The ensemble's performances and recordings of the Baroque and Classical repertoire have been hailed by audiences and critics in the Americas, Europe, Asia and Australia for their freshness, virtuosity, and exuberant appeal. Although Maniaci's voice is natural, his stunning performances give Boston Baroque the opportunity to add yet another "original" instrument - the male soprano voice - to their critically-acclaimed performing forces. Michael Maniaci has been lauded for "his natural male soprano that is probably the closest thing on earth to the sound of the castrati of long ago; and he uses it with a finesse that's rare among singers so young" (Toronto Globe and Mail). A voice type that was enormously popular in opera and religious music in the 17th century but completely disappeared over a century ago, the male castrato's true chest voice - unlike falsetto singers - was in the soprano or alto range, yet extremely powerful due to the male lung capacity. Up until now, all we have really known of this voice are the verbal descriptions of contemporary listeners and a single, scratchy recording made late in the life of the last castrato performer. Maniaci's voice gives us our first glimpse of the power and unique timbre of this voice in his hauntingly beautiful performances, and his extraordinarily agile coloratura and ornamentation. His vocal prowess is never more evident on this recording than in Mozart's popular and virtuosic "Exsultate, jubilate," a solo motet originally written for the castrato Venanzio Rauzzini in 1773 that most music lovers today have heard many times--but always as sung by a female. It is a fascinating treat to hear it sung by a male soprano.
 

CD Reviews

Great things are in store for Maniaci!
Janis Cortese | Los Angeles, CA United States | 01/31/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Does he sound like a falsettist? No -- no breathiness or flutey quality at all. His is a complete voice.



Does he sound like a boy soprano? No -- too powerful and far too rich.



Does he sound like a woman? No -- his voice is clearly a healthy male voice. It's a bit like a vocal shoo-fly pie with a meringue crust: light and sweet, but with a nice, thick stripe of darkness beneath it.



Does he sound like a castrato (to judge from the Moreschi recordings and men like Radu Marian)? No -- there's not a hint of that annoying ringtone pungency. His voice has the complexity and texture of a healthy voice in a normal adult body.



Maniaci's entirely unique -- the light and airy voice of a boy in the body of a rather burly adult man, which adds a richness and "belt" to the sound that I imagine no castrato could touch given the effect of castration on the male body (maintenance of a high position in the throat for the larynx, nearer the small resonating chambers of the head, and a general lack of dark undertones due to the otherwise narrow shape of the body). His musicianship is pleasantly modern and reminds me a bit of musical theater, he's got a deft and somewhat playful touch, and he's got a nice feel for rubato, sadly not a common thing for many classical singers. I'd love to hear what he can do with Haendel after hearing him interpret Mozart so well.



He is at the moment one of a kind although as rare as he is, Mother Nature never makes a miracle only once. Hopefully, Maniaci's rise to stardom will signal to the other rare men with natural soprano (or more likely alto) non-falsetto voices that the time has come to step forward, claim their voices, and make miracles of themselves as well. Bravo!"
This album is a must have for all Mozart fans
David | North Carolina, USA | 02/01/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Michael Maniaci is a male soprano, which is a voice category unfamiliar to many lovers of classical vocal music. Unlike a countertenor, his voice sits naturally in the soprano register. His voice is really all about the fact that his vocal chords experienced fewer changes than what most young men experience when going through puberty. There are very few male sopranos, and Mr. Manicaci is without question the best male soprano in our midst. Thus we have here a singer who perhaps comes closer to giving us at least some idea of what the famous castrati sounded like more than anyone else today. He can sing high C's with ease and the voice here displays great agility and brio. I've listened to this album multiple times, and the more I hear it the more amazing I find it. The first time I heard it I was impressed with this his obvious joy, passion, and real sense of theater. This young male soprano's voice is gorgeous, but Michael Maniaci also understands that there is theater in this music and we can *hear* that in his singing.



The selections are all wonderful and it's difficult to name a favorite. Perhaps the allegro of Exsultate, Jubilate just because there is so much infectious joy in Mr. Maniaci's singing. It makes me smile and it stays with me! The voice is perhaps at its most exciting in the upper register--you'll hear five high C's on this album! He sings selections from three operas, and I would travel to see him in any of them: "Idomeneo", "Lucio Silla" and "La clemenza di Tito." He sings everything with beauty and feeling for what the words are expressing. This is one highly talented, sensitive singer. Michael Maniaci has without question made a landmark CD that should bring greater understanding of the male soprano voice and what it can do when you have someone of his calibre singing these great arias.



The Boston Baroque, playing on period instruments under the expert direction of Martin Pearlman, also deserve special recognition. I know we're still in January, but I predict that this will be one of the best CDs of 2010. My favorite male soprano really makes me smile whenever I listen to this, and I believe he's making Herr Mozart smile as well!"
His beautiful voice
Margaret Moorman | 03/25/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"My daughter and I happened to catch Michael Maniaci singing a singlel aria in Handel's Julio Cesare, and we both sat up and took notice. Then as luck would have it, I saw him during the summer in a production of Gluck's Orpheus. We'd just seen Orphee at the Met, with the great countertenor David Daniels, and I was honestly shocked how much better Maniaci was. It was partly the production (done very straight, nothing arch, very sincere), which was superior, but it was mostly Maniaci. He is very special, and I leapt to buy this CD when a friend told me about it. It's beautiful (although I wish he would put out a second, of Gluck and Handel arias). I wish I were a music critic so I could write intelligently about why Maniaci is so good, but . . . I'm sure someone else will do that well."