Discs of this type featuring star soloists, more often than not 
                a tenor, are not in short supply. This one, recorded a decade 
                ago as a vehicle for Roberto Alagna and first issued by EMI, scores 
                over many alternatives because of two factors: the programming 
                and the quality of execution.
                Any programme focusing 
                  on French chants sacrés of the nineteenth and early twentieth 
                  centuries is almost bound to include Gounod’s often performed 
                  Ave Maria, written after Bach’s famous prelude in the 
                  ‘Well-tempered clavier’. To place it at the beginning – as here 
                  – is apt and allows the musical content to diversify from that 
                  point. Gounod’s representation is extended with three further 
                  contributions that pay testament to the importance not only 
                  of his compositional voice but also his deeply felt beliefs, 
                  which he sought to convey through his music. Other composers 
                  whose names one would expect to appear within a disc of this 
                  type are represented (Berlioz, Franck and Fauré) along with 
                  others whose music merits more than the occasional airing it 
                  gets – outside France at least: Caplet, Boulanger and Jean-Baptiste 
                  Fauré, who during his lifetime was better known as a star baritone.
                There is much to 
                  merit the performances as well. The Toulouse orchestra under 
                  the equally experienced and alert baton of Michel Plasson offer 
                  assured accompaniments to each item. The orchestra is resonantly 
                  recorded to ensure depth of tone but not an unduly pronounced 
                  role in proceedings. Choral parts, where employed, tend on the 
                  whole to be slightly recessed in the church acoustic that is 
                  faithfully conveyed in the recording too, but this does not 
                  impede enjoyment of the carefully homogenised sound that the 
                  choirs produce. Texts are included, but are only on occasion 
                  needed to follow what is being sung.
                Alagna’s contribution 
                  then is the only thing left to comment on, and I need not detain 
                  you long if you know other discs he recorded at around the same 
                  time in his career. Given that the programme contains two versions 
                  of the Sanctus and three of Panis Angelicus some variety of 
                  expression is needed if the texts are not to lose part of the 
                  individuality they gain through different composers’ settings. 
                  True, in forte he has a tendency to push the tone a little 
                  too much perhaps, but at least he varies the effect to show 
                  awareness of line and allow for supple phrasing of the texts 
                  he sings. A pity perhaps that he did not assume more Berlioz 
                  around this time, since he displays many necessary attributes 
                  in abundance: vocal strength and sureness of line and an awareness 
                  of French style, even though the text is in Latin. These qualities 
                  mark out much of what he brings to the items by Gounod and Franck 
                  on this recording too. However it would be a mistake to think 
                  of Alagna as possessing only a forthright urgency; then (more 
                  so than now) he was able to shade down to the most winning of 
                  pianissimi that bring an Italian tenor sound to mind as much 
                  as a French one. The delicacy found in Lili Boulanger’s moving 
                  chamber-scaled Pie Jesu shows this quality at its finest.
                
              This is a welcome 
                and most warmly recommendable reissue.
                
                Evan Dickerson 
              
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