Album Review: ‘A Tribute to Gilbert Duprez’

Delos Records has just released the debut solo recording of American bel canto tenor John Osborn. Listening to this spectacular recital makes one wonder why it took so long.
Album Review: ‘A Tribute to Gilbert Duprez’
Drawing of the French 19th century tenor Gilbert Duprez. (Public domain)
Barry Bassis
9/30/2017
Updated:
10/12/2017

Delos Records has just released the debut solo recording of American bel canto tenor John Osborn. Listening to this spectacular recital makes one wonder why it took so long.

Born in 1972 in Sioux City, Iowa, Osborn has won awards on both sides of the Atlantic, starting with the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions when he was 21 years old, after which he entered the Met’s Young Artist’s Program.

He has been acclaimed for opera performances, such as the lead role in Hector Berlioz’s “Benvenuto Cellini,” as well as singing the role of Pollione in Cecilia Bartoli’s recording of “Norma.”

Osborn made a strong impression at the Met several years ago when, in Rossini’s “La Donna del Lago,” he traded high notes with Juan Diego Florez.

Osborn’s new album is titled “A Tribute to Gilbert Duprez,” in honor of the early 19th century French tenor (1806–1896). Duprez is credited as the first to sing high notes in a powerful chest voice rather than in falsetto. Thus, when Luciano Pavarotti was hailed as the “king of the high C’s,” it was for applying a technique that Duprez had introduced in the prior century.

The recital album is comprised of arias from French language operas by Italian composers, with the exception of Berlioz.

The opening pieces are from “Jérusalem” (1847), a lesser known opera by Giuseppe Verdi that was actually a revision of the composer’s “I Lombardi.” Considered Duprez’s last significant part, the lead tenor Gaston is a warrior in the Crusades. In the first aria, “Je veux encore entendre ta voix,” the hero has been captured by the enemy and thinks back to his last time with the woman he loves. In “O mes amis, mes frères d’armes,” he is sentenced to die and professes his innocence.

Duprez appeared in the 1840 premiere of Gaetano Donizetti’s “La Favorite.” In “Ange si pur,” the lead tenor Fernand pours out his despair at discovering that the object of his affections, Leonor, is not so pure; she has been a mistress of the king.

“Les Martyrs” is a rarely performed Donizetti opera about the early Christians. In “Oui, j’irai dans leur temple,” the hero ignores his wife’s pleas and goes to the Roman temple with the intention of destroying it.

(Delos Productions, Inc.)
(Delos Productions, Inc.)

“Benvenuto Cellini” (1838) by Hector Berlioz is a fictionalized work about the 16th-century Florentine sculptor. In “La gloire était ma seule idole,” he declares that love is more important than his career. “Sur les monts, les plus sauvages” expresses Cellini’s dissatisfaction with city life and wish for the simple life of a shepherd.

The most familiar opera on the album is Donizetti’s “Lucie de Lammermoor,” although the work is usually performed in Italian. In “Bientôt l’herbe des champs croîtra,” Edgard laments Lucie’s madness and his own impending death.

Donizetti’s “Dom Sébastien” is another opera about the Crusades. “Asile héréditaire” finds the hero wounded on the battlefield, consoling himself with the knowledge that he has “the love of a woman and the heart of a soldier.”

Finally, Rossini’s “Guillaume Tell” deals with the Swiss rebellion against Austrian oppression. “Asile héréditaire” contains the rousing call to his troops by protagonist Arnold to take revenge on the conquerors and free the imprisoned William Tell.

Osborn’s singing throughout is exemplary, showing a mastery of 19th-century French style, clear enunciation, and ringing high notes. He also acts with his voice in arias that range from declarations of love to calls to arms. Osborn certainly proves that he is the right choice to honor the groundbreaking 19th-century tenor Duprez.

The Kaunas City Symphony, conducted by Constantine Orbelian, provides the ideal accompaniment. The Kaunas State Choir also adds excitement to “Asile héréditaire.”

The engineering of the album is excellent and, in the liner notes, Delos helpfully supplies the words of the arias in the original French with the English translations.

“A Tribute to Gilbert Duprez” is a must for lovers of bel canto opera.

Barry Bassis has been a music, theater, and travel writer for over a decade for various publications, including The Epoch Times.
Barry has been a music, theater, and travel writer for over a decade for various publications, including Epoch Times. He is a voting member of the Drama Desk and the Outer Critics Circle, two organizations of theater critics that give awards at the end of each season. He has also been a member of NATJA (North American Travel Journalists Association)