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SEEN AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
              
              Vivaldi,  La Fida Ninfa : (The 
              Faithful Nymph) – concert version, Miguel Delibes Cultural Centre, 
              Valladolid, 26. 4. 2008 (JMI)
              
              
              The present fashion for baroque opera has allowed many forgotten 
              works to be dusted off and offered to today’s public all around 
              Europe and further afield, normally in concert performances, as 
              here. Musicians like William Christie, René Jacobs, Alan Curtis, 
              and here, Jean Christophe Spinosi have made whole careers out of 
              this. There are so many candidates from the entire oeuvre of 
              Baroque opera, that while there seems to be continued public 
              interest, there will be no shortage of new revivals.
              
              For two or three years, Spinosi has had great success with 
              Vivaldi’s La Griselda, so it looks as if he has decided to 
              continue with the same composer’s output, since he has put himself 
              to the trouble of bringing the Fida Ninfa to light, whose 
              modern premiere was five years ago at the Ambronay festival. 
              
              In its original existence, this opera was the subject of a special 
              marketing campaign by Vivaldi himself. Vivaldi secured a first 
              performance in Verona in 1732 to mark the inauguration of the 
              later much destroyed and rebuilt  Teatro Filarmonico. The Verona 
              Academy, who commissioned the first performance, included in its 
              number Marchese Scipione Maffei, who had written the libretto, and 
              he was unsurprisingly the prime mover in engaging Vivaldi. (I 
              should say that my opera programme confusingly and surely 
              incorrectly attributed the libretto to Luigi Giusti, author of the 
              libretto to Vivaldi’s Montezuma.)
              
              Unfortunately, Maffei’s libretto is prolix, boring and frankly 
              absurd, full of shepherds, nymphs, woods and mountains, but 
              decidedly short on events. Moreover, the finale bears no relation 
              to the preceding three hours, including the appearance of several 
              classical gods for no better reason than Maffei’s own love of 
              mythology. 
              
              But Vivaldi managed to produce music, at least, that has moments 
              of the highest quality. The opera contains no less than 26 arias, 
              three sinfonias and various vocal ensembles. It is still an uneven 
              work, but one may single out a few highlights – Narete’s aria (he 
              is the nymphs’ father), ‘Deh, ti piega,’ is a gem, as is Osmino’s 
              countertenor ‘Qual serpe tortuosa,’ and the two arias of Morasto 
              are very fine, ‘Destin avaro’ for its bravura and ‘Dite ohime,’ 
              for the originality of its guitar accompaniment.
              
              Spinosi has recently found Vivaldi fertile ground for the 
              expression of his own personality and intensity, and this was 
              certainly true of this production. At the same time, there was no 
              loss of delicacy and there were moments of the greatest intimacy. 
              He made an excellent case for this form of opera, and, 
              incidentally, for how it points towards Mozart. The Ensemble 
              Matheus was also able to show it is one of the best baroque 
              outfits around at the moment.
              
              The vocal cast for this production has hardly any weaknesses. The 
              three female roles are especially demanding, with at least six 
              arias each. The supposed protagonist, the faithful nymph herself, 
              Licori, was sung by the French singer Anna Maria Panzanella; she 
              was perhaps the weakest of the main singers, with moments both of 
              harsh tone and imprecision. Licori’s sister, the other nymph 
              Elpina, was sung by the Italian mezzo Barbara di Castri, who also 
              took the role of Juno in the finale. She had a big voice, 
              convincing, if of no outstanding tonal beauty. Sandrine Piau and 
              Sara Mingardo take  these roles in some performances. For me, 
              there was no doubt that the prize among the female singers went to 
              the Argentinian Veronica Cangemi (Morasto). She sang with great 
              sensitivity, beauty of tone and agility, and undoubtedly provided 
              some of the best moments of the whole evening.
              
              Jose Manuel Zapata was a fine and agile Narete, with excellent 
              diction in the recitatives and plenty of taste in his set-piece 
              aria, ‘Deh, ti piega.’ The expressivity and emotion of his singing 
              came as a pleasant surprise to me; I could see him as Nemorino, or 
              Arturo in I Puritani. Osmino, whose story in this opera is 
              especially incomprehensible, long and boring, was sung by the 
              French counter-tenor Philippe Jarousky, whose voice and quality 
              are beyond criticism. I think of Jarousky as having one of the 
              most beautiful voices in his field, and would like to see him in 
              more demanding roles. It has been said that the original singer 
              who played Osmino must have been the best-paid of the company, 
              since he has relatively little to sing, but what he does sing 
              includes two major arias. Lorenzo Regazzo was a great success as 
              Oralto, the pirate, giving the role real life and interest. It was 
              the best I have heard him sing, and suggested he might be very 
              well suited to similar low baritone roles in this repertoire.
              
              The auditorium had plenty of spaces, but this was still a much 
              more substantial audience than there has been on many previous 
              occasions. So it looks as if the public  is more warmly embracing 
              the attractive programme that Vallodolid now offers.
              
              There have been many occasions (especially in Madrid) where cuts 
              of up to a third of the music have been made to the opera, 
              sometimes shortly before the performance date, simply because of 
              timetabling problems but on this occasion, even after three and a 
              half hours, the audience not only clapped and cheered the whole 
              cast, but also showed no signs of stirring. Finally, Spinosi, gave 
              them a hint, turning to them and saying with a wink, the two 
              words; ‘Da Capo!’ and indeed, why not…..
              
              José M Irurzun
              
              
              
              
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