Armide was the final collaboration between Lully and librettist 
                Philippe Quinault. Though it wasn’t the final work written by 
                Lully, it was the final tragédie en musique. It was premiered 
                in 1686 at the public theatre in the Palais Royal; the premiere 
                having being much postponed owing to both Lully’s and Louis XIV’s 
                illnesses. In fact, Louis never saw Armide, the combination 
                of Lully’s involvement in a sex scandal - with a young man - and 
                the court’s increasing religiosity meant that Louis distanced 
                himself from his favourite composer.
                
Armide has 
                  appeared on CD before. In fact Philippe Herreweghe has recorded 
                  it twice but neither of these seems to be available at the moment. 
                  This new disc from Opera Lafayette has the virtue of being based 
                  on live performances - not staged but with dancers - which were 
                  critically well received.
                
The opera’s plot, 
                  taken from Tasso, deals with the sorceress Armide’s love for 
                  the knight, Renaud.
                
It opens with  her 
                  father, Hidraot (Francois Loup) and her attendants Phenice and 
                  Sidonie (Ann Monoyios and Miriam Dubrow) encouraging her to 
                  take a husband. She forswears love unless she can get a lover 
                  as brave as Renaud, whose forces have been attacking them.  
                  Act 2 is taken up with Armide using magic to put Renaud (Robert 
                  Getchell) to sleep. Instead of killing him she falls hopelessly 
                  in love. In Act 3 she summons up La Haine/Hate (William Sharp) 
                  to help her give up her love. La Haine fails and leaves, cursing 
                  Armide. In Act 4, Renaud’s followers Ubalde (Francois Loup) 
                  and the Danish Knight (Tony Boutte) are searching for Renaud 
                  and are held up by magical temptations put in their way by Armide. 
                  Finally Renaud is rescued by Ubalde and the Danish knight leaving 
                  Armide forever cursed by love.
                
The five act structure 
                  manages to include a substantial dance divertissement in each 
                  act. In the first act it is just general jollity, but in act 
                  2 the divertissement depicts Armide’s nymphs putting Renaud 
                  to sleep. Act 3 is the scene with La Haine’s followers. Act 
                  4 is almost entirely divertissement as the two knights encounter 
                  all sorts of magical creatures. Then finally in Act 5 Armide, 
                  full of dark foreboding, leaves Renaud to be entertained by 
                  a troop of Pleasures and Fortunate Lovers. Lully and Quinault’s 
                  trick was to tie these quite strongly into the plot and to provide 
                  a main character whose strong emotions keep the opera’s plot 
                  on course. Without a strong Armide, the opera would degenerate 
                  into a group of disparate dance episodes.
                
The eagle-eyed will 
                  have spotted that there is something missing from the above 
                  synopsis – the Prologue. For this performance conductor Ryan 
                  Brown has cut the opera so that it lasts less than 2 hours whereas 
                  Philippe Herreweghe’s uncut version lasts some 30 minutes longer. 
                  This involves the complete removal of the prologue and the trimming 
                  of Act 4. Ever since the work’s first performance there have 
                  been complaints that Act 4 was repetitious and lacking any relevance 
                  to the action. On his first recording Herreweghe cut it entirely. 
                  On this disc Ryan Brown has cut the final scene in the Act as 
                  well as performing minor surgery on some of the other divertissements. 
                  His major change is the removal of the entire prologue, which 
                  it could be argued is an essential part of the genre of tragédie 
                  en musique.
                
On my initial audition 
                  of this recording my first reaction was to note how perky the 
                  performance was. Ryan Brown’s account of the work seems entirely 
                  to lack the weighty gravity that you expect from a tragédie 
                  lyrique. In some ways, this is entirely to the good as the 
                  dance numbers really do dance. But in the more serious sung 
                  pieces and even the most tragic ones the singing is often underpinned 
                  by an accompaniment which is entirely too lively and jaunty 
                  for my taste. In the great scene in Act 3, where Armide summons 
                  La Haine, this spirit is entirely too happy in his work; he 
                  and his followers come over as a very jolly lot. Some of this 
                  is to do with the rhythmical foundation of the accompaniment, 
                  the length of dotted rhythms, but Brown seems to be using quite 
                  a small instrumental group.
                
All this had me 
                  scurrying back to Herreweghe’s second (1993) recording which, 
                  though technically unavailable, does crop up for sale on the 
                  internet. Herreweghe uses a rather bigger instrumental group, 
                  but more importantly his whole interpretation is weightier. 
                  His accompaniments are just as pointed as those by Brown, but 
                  Herreweghe and his group imbue Lully’s rhythms with a massiveness 
                  which underpins the performance exactly as it should.
                
Turning to the singers, 
                  Brown’s cast are a capable and talented bunch and if you buy 
                  this recording you will not have too much to complain about 
                  in the vocal department. Stephanie Houtzeel conveys much of 
                  Armide’s tragedy, though in her important Act 2 monologue she 
                  does not move as much as Guillaumette Laurens for Herreweghe. 
                  More importantly, Houtzeel’s vocal delivery is rather stylised, 
                  with minimal vibrato and a strange squeezing effect on the individual 
                  notes. As a vocal effect it is striking but for a whole opera 
                  it starts to pall. I kept longing for Laurens straight delivery 
                  and super French declamation. Another point is that Houtzeel 
                  is a mezzo whereas Laurens is a soprano. There are occasional 
                  moments when the role seems to go out of Houtzeel’s comfort 
                  zone.
                
Robert Getchell 
                  as Renaud has relatively small and passive part. But Getchell 
                  has an impressive high tenor voice which mellifluously gets 
                  round Lully’s lines though there are moments when he seems to 
                  get a bit tired. Though I have long been an admirer of Howard 
                  Crook, who is the Renaud on Herreweghe’s disc, in fairness I 
                  must admit that Getchell is entirely at home in the part on 
                  this disc.
                
The remainder of 
                  the cast are creditable and support admirably. Francois Loup, 
                  who appears as Hidrao and Ubalde, has a rather dry voice and 
                  delivers his part efficiently but without stirring you; likewise 
                  William Sharp who entirely fails to thrill as La Haine. Their 
                  counterparts on the Herreweghe recording are possessed of admirably 
                  resonant voices and deliver Lully’s lines in thrilling manner.
                
Apart from vocal 
                  characteristics, the biggest difference between the performances 
                  on the two discs is in the character of their declamation of 
                  Lully’s vocal lines. Herreweghe’s cast have a stylish and vivid 
                  way in this tricky field, injecting their vocal lines with passion 
                  and power. Brown’s cast, on the other hand, do not quite have 
                  the measure of how powerful Lully’s music can be in tandem with 
                  Quinault’s words. Or perhaps this is all a matter of style and 
                  I should simply accept that this new disc performs Lully in 
                  a lighter modern manner.
                
The CD booklet contains 
                  a good article and plot summary but you have to go to the Naxos 
                  web-site for the libretto.
                
As this is the only 
                  recording available I would like to be more enthusiastic. At 
                  Naxos price you can afford to pay out £10 for this set and still 
                  wait around for a better one to come along. My recommendation 
                  is to go hunting for Herreweghe’s disc, where for my money, 
                  the style is better and far more apposite. Brown and his forces 
                  give you a creditable and approachable version of the opera; 
                  Herreweghe gives you a powerfully moving one. 
                
Robert Hugill