For those opera enthusiasts who have seen the NVC Arts DVD titled 
Verdi,
                The pursuit of Success and The Burden of Success - subtitled ‘A
                Major Film on the Life and Work of Giuseppe Verdi’ - (D4226),
                this issue should come with a health warning. The Verdi film
                was derived from two 1994 BBC documentary broadcast programmes
                presented by Mark Elder. The extracts are complete and presented
                as acted performances albeit, with rudimentary scenery, and with
                Elder conducting the orchestra of English National Opera of which
                he was Musical Director. The story is told in between these sung
                and acted excerpts. 
                
                This DVD presentation focuses on a narrative of Rossini’s
                life, which is true to the title. Actor Brian Blessed, as the
                composer, speaks this narrative with Timothy Bateson as the voice
                of Stendhal, Rossini’s biographer. That’s fine. What
                is less so is that the cover also claims that it features Joan
                Sutherland and Cecilia Bartoli. It might escape the attentions
                of Trading Standards in so far as the 
voices of those
                two eminent singers are present. But this is a DVD and some purchasers
                might just assume that they appear in the visual excerpts listed.
                In fact, while most of the excerpts are illustrated by live performances,
                others are only by the music and singing with vaguely relevant
                scenes of the locality or of a supposedly relevant theatre. In
                the case of the religious pieces these are more often of what
                might loosely be described as spiritual connotations. The spoken
                narrative overlays some of the visual excerpts to varying degrees. 
                
                I have listed all the Chapter titles above and marked with an
                asterisk those with a live visual staged performance. Of these
                both 
Il Barbiere di Siviglia and 
La Cenerentola are
                derived from performances at Glyndebourne and feature as two
                of the three operas from that source on 
Warner Entertainment, Three
                DVDs 50-514422-7848-2-4 (see 
review).
                These are adequate rather than inspired staged productions, but
                the extracts suit their purpose. In terms of singing, the extract
                from 
Tancredi with Bernadette Manca Di Nissa’s creamy
                tone in the wonderful catchy 
Di tanti palpiti is a marked
                improvement. Rossini’s somewhat deliberately chaotic finale
                of act one of 
L'Italiana in Algeri, in very ornate and
                colourful costumes, is adequate rather than inspired. The narrative
                puts these and the earlier opera extracts into the perspective
                of Rossini’s life and rise to fame, particularly after 
Tancredi and 
L'Italiana
                in Algeri. This was the critical stage of his career when,
                in 1815 at the young age of twenty-three, he was summoned by
                impresario Barbaja to be Musical Director of the Royal Theatres
                of Naples. His first opera for the San Carlo was 
Elisabetta,
                Regina d'Inghilterra premiered on 4 October 1815. This subject
                was particularly appropriate as it also welcomed the return of
                the King from exile after the overthrow of Napoleon, which had
                been achieved largely by the English. In this extract, Cecilia
                Bartoli sings Elisabetta’s Act One aria whilst pictures
                of the Bay of Naples and the interior of the San Carlo theatre
                are shown. The narrative diverts to mention Colbran and her place
                as the diva at the San Carlo and her relationship with Rossini.
                There are also references to his - later their - travels to Venice,
                Rome and Milan to present the composer’s works and fulfil
                new commissions. 
                
                It is mentioned that Rossini’s contract at Naples allowed
                him to work elsewhere. Whilst mentioning 
Otello, 
Moses and 
Lady
                of the Lake there is no mention of the other Naples opera
                seria, nine in all. The narrative does state that during his
                time at Naples Rossini composed fifteen operas. As a matter of
                detailed accuracy it was nineteen. The narrative and musical
                extracts move on to 
Il Barbiere and 
La Cenerentola, these
                being operas composed for Rome and
 each being with visuals
                from the abovementioned Glyndebourne performances. In between
                there is singing from the 
Messa di Gloria as an example
                of another work Rossini was required to compose for Naples under
                his contract. The brief pictorial extract from the 
Messa di
                Gloria has some fine singing from Francesco Araiza as well
                as an excellent choral contribution. 
                
                The focus of the narrative moves swiftly to Venice where Rossini
                presented 
Semiramide in 1823. The story of Babylonian
                goings-on was the basis for the last opera he composed for presentation
                in his native country. The voice is that of Joan Sutherland from
                the Decca recording conducted by Bonynge. The views of the Grand
                Canal, St Mark’s Square and the Doge’s Palace from
                across the lagoon are a magnificent backdrop, as are pictures
                of La Fenice, interior and outside, before it was destroyed by
                fire in the mid-1990s. Semiramide was the last role Colbran sang
                on stage as she and Rossini, now man and wife, travelled to Paris
                and London where the composer was presented to the King and earned
                vast amounts of money before his return to the French capital. 
                
                In Paris, the narrative recounts his appointment and his first
                operas in French with a woolly picture of an Italian language
                version of 
William Tell featuring Chris Merritt. This,
                at age 37, was Rossini’s last opera. The narrative asks
                why and offers explanations as well as recounting his fight for
                the French pension he had been promised, taking six years to
                sort it out. Years of depression and pain from the urethritis
                consequent on his gonorrhoea were to follow. He worked in his
                native Bologna and composed his 
Stabat Mater for the university
                of that city. Donizetti conducted the premiere. The performance
                extract shown was recorded in the venue of the premiere. With
                the revolution of 1848 Rossini and his wife left Italy never
                to return. They set up home in France, eventually building a
                villa at Passé. 
                
                With his new wife’s care Rossini started to compose again, 
The
                sins of old age, songs with piano performed at the regular
                soirées at their home. 
The Aragonese and 
Adieux à la
                vie are sung wonderfully by mezzo-soprano Della Jones with
                Malcolm Martineau at the piano. Both of these are given without
                overlay of narrative. 
                
                The story concludes with sound extracts from the Erato recording
                of Rossini’s 
Petite Messe Solennelle in a performance
                in the original form with accompaniment by two pianos. Rossini
                later orchestrated it. The original was written for the consecration
                of the Chapel at the home of his friend Countess Pillet-Will
                in 1863. The word ‘petite’ does not refer to the
                work’s size, but rather the composer’s self-evaluation
                of its importance. 
                
                As the narrative notes, Rossini died in 1868 at the age of seventy-seven.
                There were four thousand mourners at his funeral in Paris. He
                had been showered with honours in France and Italy. Garrulous
                as George Bernard Shaw may have dubbed him, 
Old Rococo was
                his self-deprecatory description. He was the first of a sequence
                of truly great operatic composers born in and fostered by Italy
                in the nineteenth century. 
                
                Those interested in more detail about the composer and his operas
                will find it in 
part
                one and 
part
                two of my 
Rossini Conspectus on this site.
                
                
Robert J Farr 
                
                
                Chapter list
              Chapter 1 Il Barbiere di Siviglia * 
Chapter 2 Sonata a quattro 
Chapter 3 La Cambiale di Matrimonio* 
Chapter 4 Il Signor Bruschino* 
Chapter 5 Tancredi* 
Chapter 6 L'Italiana in Algeri* 
Chapter 7 Elisabetta, Regina d'Inghilterra 
Chapter 8 Il Barbiere di Siviglia* 
Chapter 9 Messa di Gloria* 
Chapter 10 La Cenerentola* 
Chapter 11 Semiramide 
Chapter 12 Guillaume Tell* 
Chapter 13 Stabat Mater* 
Chapter 14 Aragonese* 
Chapter 15 Adieux à la vie* 
Chapter 16 Petite Messe Solennelle 
Chapter 17 La Cenerentola* 
Excerpts illustrated by performance pictures* OR sound only with picture backgrounds.