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              AND HEARD OPERA REVIEW
 
                           
                           Donizetti, 
                           Parisina: 
                           (Concert Performance) Soloists, Geoffrey 
                           Mitchell Choir; London Philharmonic Orchestra/David 
                           Parry. Royal Festival Hall, 6.12. 
                           2008 (CC)
                           
                           
                           Donizetti’s Parisina (1833) is a mightily 
                           impressive opera. Its strength lies in its musical 
                           structural integrity (a structural integrity that 
                           does not extend to its theatrical side, however) and 
                           its consistency of inspiration rather than in any 
                           particular excerptable numbers. 
                           Its premiere was deservedly successful but the same 
                           cannot be said of subsequent revivals and over time 
                           the opera has fallen into the shadows. Sheer haste 
                           towards the date of the premiere meant that the final 
                           act does not tie up all ends, and that Ugo, the 
                           opera’s tenor lead, dies off-stage. Perhaps the 
                           imbalance of the act timings has not helped its cause 
                           in the opera house: Act I 
                           lasted 1 hour 12 minutes; Act II 
                           was just shy of an hour; Act III, 
                           33 minutes.
                           
                           The plot is that of a tragedy. Parisina loves Ugo, an 
                           orphan taken into the court of Azzo (historically 
                           Niccolò III, Duke of Ferrara), but she has been 
                           forced to marry Azzo instead. She still loves Ugo
                           however; and
                            in jealousy, Azzo sends 
                           Ugo away. This is the background to Act
                           I, where we find Parisina 
                           downcast. A celebration is ordered to commemorate a 
                           victory in battle, and yet Azzo remains suspicious of 
                           Ugo, ordering him not to return until summoned 
                           personally. Alas, Ugo in fact appears at that very 
                           moment, borne by his love for Parisina. The scene 
                           shifts to Parisina and her 
                           consorts. Parisina is dejected
                           as usual; enter Ugo, disguised, to press his 
                           love. Trouble comes when Azzo finds out of his return 
                           (Ugo claims ignorance of his ban). As a result of 
                           Parisina’s intercession, Ugo is spared. Act
                           II brings a tournament, in 
                           which Ugo is the clear hero. Weary after the 
                           festivities, Parisina retires, and it is here that we 
                           are treated to a sleep-talking scene (yes, you read 
                           it correctly) that verges on music-drama. Parisina 
                           indeed talks in her sleep, overheard by Azzo – and it 
                           is Ugo’s name that is on her lips. After 
                           Parisina narrowly escapes
                           with her life, Azzo has Ugo arrested. As Ugo 
                           is led away, Ernesto, in 
                           one of those archetypical operatic twists, barges in 
                           to reveal that Ugo is actually Azzo’s son 
                           and  Ugo is spared. In the brief Act
                           III, Parisina reads a 
                           letter from Ugo stating they should flee and
                           that he will come to rescue 
                           her. Instead of  Ugo appearing however, Azzo enters. 
                           The windows are opened, and there lies Ugo, dead. 
                           Parisina herself then dies in a paroxysm of grief.
                           
                           It was rather strange that a pre-performance 
                           announcement stated that Carmen
                           Giannattasio was suffering from vocal fatigue 
                           and yet we heard little if any from her. Giannattasio 
                           in fact took over as Parisina
                           from the originally announced Patrizia Ciofi 
                           (a big name whose cancellation, going on the comments 
                           at the pre-concert talk, caused not a little 
                           consternation). Giannattasio was actually a stunning 
                           choice. She is a student of Leyla Gencer at La Scala 
                           and her credentials in this repertoire are actually 
                           immaculate – her repertoire includes Rossini’s 
                           La Donna del lago. Her 
                           great Act III aria was 
                           stunning, and beautiful; her Romanza in Act
                           II was compelling (note how 
                           Donizetti effortlessly dovetails its end into 
                           Parisina’s lady-in-waiting 
                           Imelda’s reposte). She acts well with her voice and 
                           has great stage presence: her ‘destiny’ aria (“E’ in 
                           me natura il pianto. Forse un destin”) conveyed a 
                           superb sense of desolation, something reflected in 
                           Donizetti’s sparsely-scored accompaniment. More, 
                           Giannattasio was remarkably agile in delivering her 
                           decorations, here and elsewhere, with remarkably few 
                           aspirates. I look forward to renewing acquaintance 
                           with her.
                           
                           Nicola Ulivieri’s strong baritone suited the role of 
                           Ernesto well – in fact, he was one of the stars of 
                           the evening. Dario Solari, as Azzo, was a little 
                           weak, and there was initially some air around his 
                           voice. Alas  though, 
                           the weak link in the cast was the all-important Ugo, 
                           sung by tenor José Bros, whose lightish voice emerged 
                           as over-reedy. Legato lines from Bros tended not to 
                           work either, as his voice felt rather tremulous. In 
                           the long scene between Ugo and Parisina towards the 
                           end of Act I, Bros was 
                           consistently put in the shade by the beautifully 
                           shaded phrasing of Giannattasio. The mezzo Ann Taylor 
                           took the part of Imelda very competently.
                           
                           Donizetti’s imagination seemingly knew no bounds. His 
                           orchestration is consistently carefully considered 
                           and full of eyebrow-raising touches (one which stood 
                           out was now a powerful horn ensemble underpins 
                           Parisina’s entrance in Act III 
                           (“No … pi? Salir non ponno miei prieghi al ciel”) 
                           before segueing into the 
                           sustained chords that form the backdrop to Parisina’s 
                           vocalisations. 
                           
                           David Parry is now artistic director of Opera Rara, 
                           and Parisina was actually recorded for 
                           commercial release the week before this performance. 
                           His direction of the orchestra was one of firm 
                           control. There was some fine playing from the LPO 
                           horns in the Overture – but why was a sole member of 
                           the RFH staff wandering around the choir stalls 
                           during Donizetti’s opening gambit?In a modern 
                           staging, of course, that would probably indicate 
                           something deep. The 
                           Geoffrey Mitchell Choir was as well-polished as one 
                           would expect.
                           
                           I await the recording with some impatience, an 
                           impatience compounded by the fact that the opera set 
                           is scheduled for release in September 2009. Unusually 
                           although not uniquely for an opera presented by Opera 
                           Rara, there is a CD precedent, a live account 
                           conducted by Paolo Carignani on Bongiovanni, GB2212, 
                           although given its playing time (a mere one hour 45 
                           minutes) it must surely present a cut score. There 
                           was an LP version with the great Caballé available on 
                           BJRS134-3 which was reissued on CD by Myto (984193). 
                           Finally, you can hear Caballé for free on YouTube 
                           (New York, 1974. Alas, the video is only of nature, 
                           including  rather 
                           bizarrely, two horses at play at one point, and not 
                           a sign  of Caballé on-stage. 
                           The link is  http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=vyzGqnIEIi4.
                           
                           
                           Colin Clarke
