The casual browser might assume from the large word
Farinelli and the picture of a bearded hipster dude in the graphics that this is another album devoted to arias connected with Italian castrato
Carlo Broschi, known as
Farinelli. But look more closely: the title, "El Maestro," is in Spanish. The album deals with
Farinelli's tenure in Madrid, where he held the title of chamber musician to King Philip V and was a sort of impresario. His performing career was over by this time, and the album is mostly instrumental (a couple of countertenor arias, one of them the
Farinelli hit Alto giove, are included), consisting of music by composers with whom
Farinelli was associated, and might have programmed in Spain. This may seem a slender concept on which to hang the relaunch of the venerable Archiv early music imprint, and about all you can say in its favor is that the music is a great deal of fun. The program mixes opera overtures of the middle 18th century with some engaging dances by Spanish composer
José de Nebra, the aforementioned arias, and independent symphonies by
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and
Johann Adolf Hasse. The music is all almost unknown, and it is for the most part zippy and extremely attractive. Start in with the very first track, the overture to La festa cinese (The Chinese Festival) of
Nicola Conforto, with its unique rhythmic drive, and then sample the overtures by
Jommelli and
Traetta, opera seria composers who are almost forgotten today but whom any fan of the time would have known. The
Concerto Köln, with a solid group of 28 players, gives this novel music a good deal of rhythmic zest, and it's hard not to conclude that even if the concept is strange, if that's what it took to get the music rediscovered, the effort was worth it. Archiv's studio sound is masterful.