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            Gioachino 
              ROSSINI (1792-1868) 
                
              Il barbiere di Siviglia - Melodramma Buffa in two 
              acts (1816)  
              Count Almaviva, in love with Rosina – Juan Diego Florez (tenor); 
              Figaro, a barber and general factotum - Pietro Spagnoli (baritone); 
              Bartolo, a doctor and ward of Rosina - Alessandro Corbelli (buffa 
              baritone); Rosina, ward of Bartolo – Joyce DiDonato (mezzo); Basilio, 
              a singing teacher - Ferruccio Furlanetto (bass); Berta, Dr. Bartolo’s 
              housekeeper - Jennifer Rhys-Davies (soprano); Fiorello, servant 
              of Count Almaviva - Changham Lim (baritone)  
                
              Chorus and Orchestra of The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London/Antonio 
              Pappano  
              rec. live, July 2009  
              Stage Directors: Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier. Set Designs: 
              Christian Fenouillat. Costumes: Agostino Cavalca. Television Director: 
              David Stevens  
              NTSC all regions. Picture format: 16:9 Colour. Sound formats: LPCM 
              Stereo. DTS 5:1 Surround  
              Subtitles in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish  
                
              VIRGIN CLASSICS   
              6945581 9 4 [2 DVDs: 102:00 + 74:00 plus bonus]   
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                  First night disasters in the history of opera performances are 
                  numerous. They usually involve aspects of performance, production, 
                  inappropriate singers or inadequacy of composition. La Traviata, 
                  Madama Butterfly and Beethoven’s Leonora spring 
                  to mind. Except in Beethoven’s case, which took ten years, some 
                  minor compositional adjustments, or a more appropriate cast 
                  and the damage was quickly reversed. But there were a few occasions 
                  when the derision mounted on the first night was as quickly 
                  reversed. This was the case with Rossini’s Il Barbiere di 
                  Siviglia. His paramount position among fellow Italian opera 
                  composers led to his being appointed Musical Director of the 
                  Royal Theatres in Naples. It was for the San Carlo, with its 
                  professional orchestra that Rossini composed his great opera 
                  seria, starting with Elisabetta Regina d’Inghilterra 
                  premiered on 4 October 1815. A clause in his contract at Naples 
                  allowed Rossini to accept odd commissions from other theatres. 
                  It was a clause that Rossini took much advantage of, certainly 
                  stretching it beyond the limits the impresario Barbaja had intended 
                  when he brought the composer to Naples. In the first two years 
                  of this contract Rossini composed no fewer than five operas 
                  for other cities, including four for Rome.  
                   
                  The first of the Rome operas was Torvaldo e Dorliska. 
                  It opened the Carnival Season at the Teatro Valle on 26 December 
                  1815. Previously, on 15 December, Rossini signed a further contract 
                  with the rival Teatro de Torre Argentina in Rome for a comic 
                  opera to be presented during its Carnival Season. It had to 
                  be delivered by mid-January! Quick composition was the order 
                  of the day. With time short it was decided that the opera would 
                  be based on Beaumarchais’play Le Barbier de Séville. 
                  For Rossini this posed a difficulty in that Paisiello had set 
                  an opera by the same name in 1782 and both it, and the composer, 
                  were greatly respected. Rossini moved to ensure Paisiello took 
                  no personal offence with his younger colleague and the opera 
                  was presented as Almaviva, ossia L’inutile precauzione 
                  (The useless precaution) with the sequence of scenes distinctly 
                  different from Paisiello’s creation. Despite Rossini’s efforts 
                  Paisiello’s supporters created a disturbance on the first night 
                  and turned it into a fiasco. On the second night Rossini was 
                  tactfully ill and did not attend the theatre, as stipulated 
                  in his contract. The performance was an unprecedented success 
                  after which the cast and supporters walked to the composer’s 
                  lodgings carrying candles and singing tunes from the opera. 
                  After its initial seven performances in Rome the opera began 
                  to be called Il Barbiere di Siviglia. It was soon performed 
                  as such around Italy and reached London in March 1818 and New 
                  York the following year. It is the only opera by Rossini to 
                  have maintained its place in the repertoire in the theatres 
                  of Italy, and elsewhere around the world, throughout its life. 
                   
                     
                  There can be few performances of Rossini’s Il Barbiere di 
                  Siviglia that got off to a worse start than the series 
                  of performances scheduled at Covent Garden in 2009. A superb 
                  cast had been assembled for what was to be the eminent Music 
                  Director’s first assumption. The intention was to play a performance 
                  on the big screens in London and elsewhere and film a performance 
                  for DVD issue. Before the first night the singer cast in the 
                  eponymous role withdrew. Worse, in the first act, running off 
                  stage after her display aria Una voce poca fa (CH 15) 
                  the diva singing Rosina, Joyce Di Donato, tripped and damaged 
                  her ankle. After some treatment she carried on with the help 
                  of a stick as a crutch and the support of her colleagues. In 
                  the event it turned out that she had broken a major leg bone 
                  and was put in plaster for six weeks. As she explains in a very 
                  informative interview, as one of the bonus tracks on the first 
                  DVD, she and the theatre were left with various alternatives, 
                  none of them entirely satisfactory. These included a replacement, 
                  not easy after very detailed rehearsal and the Director having 
                  departed, or having her sing from the pit and somebody walking 
                  the role through. What was decided, however, was that she would 
                  sing the role from an athlete’s wheelchair moving along the 
                  narrow channel between the raked set and the orchestra pit. 
                  As Pappano explains in the introductory Chapter, this was done 
                  without rehearsal. However, as DiDonato says, with the help 
                  of the consummate actors in the other roles it seems not to 
                  matter at all. She had the biggest problem of sitting on cushions 
                  and raising herself by her arms to allow her diaphragm to drop 
                  and her lungs to fill. Given her capabilities, and the full 
                  cooperation and participation of her colleagues, the outcome 
                  is one of the most enjoyable and well-sung performances of Il 
                  Barbiere I have seen or heard for many years.  
                     
                  The production by Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier was first 
                  seen in 2005. Christian Fenouillat’s set is simple in the first 
                  scene with the Almaviva of Juan Diego Florez climbing into a 
                  tree to serenade Rosina who appears at a window - no problem 
                  for her there. After this the set is static in a shoebox shaped 
                  raked space with high walls and with doors and windows appearing 
                  for the many entrances and exits. The costumes by Agostino Cavalca 
                  are very colourful and the DVD camera-work unobtrusive. What 
                  makes the performance so special is the singing of the soloists. 
                  My notes for DiDonato read like a eulogy of excellence with 
                  her command of coloratura, appropriate decoration, excellent 
                  diction, phrasing and vocal characterisation all being of the 
                  very highest order. I have never heard Rosina’s display aria 
                  sung as well on record or in the theatre. Her vocal distinction 
                  is matched by her sung and acted interaction with her colleagues 
                  and which, thanks to them as well as her, does not require any 
                  allowances whatsoever for the circumstances. As her lover, Juan 
                  Diego Florez is equally outstanding. His command of the idiom 
                  and ease and fluency of his singing in this music is unmatched. 
                  In his bonus interview he explains the difficulties of his long 
                  second act aria Cessa di piu resistere, which for many 
                  years was cut, even in recorded performances. His legato, expression 
                  and pinging high notes are a delight whilst he acts the part 
                  of the drunken soldier and, later, the substitute singing master, 
                  with easy facility and without recourse to slapstick. He is 
                  not bettered on the world stage in this repertoire at the present 
                  time.  
                     
                  I have long admired Pietro Spagnoli who took on the role of 
                  Figaro when the carded Simon Keelyside withdrew. His singing 
                  and acting were first class. In his native language Figaro’s 
                  Largo al factotum (DVD 1 CH.7), sung as he entered via 
                  the stalls, held no fears and neither did Pappano’s brisk tempi. 
                  He sang the rapid patter words with clarity and precision. Added 
                  to those skills was his liveliness as an actor manipulating 
                  the activities as Figaro should. The other two male Italians, 
                  Alessandro Corbelli as Don Bartolo and Ferruccio Furlanetto 
                  as Basilio, were of similar standard as actors and singers. 
                  Corbelli in particular can play any buffa role to the manner 
                  born and his expressive and characterful singing of A un 
                  dottr della mia sorte (DVD 1 CH.22) along with his facial 
                  and body expression could hardly be bettered. Similarly his 
                  acting during Rosina’s singing lesson in act two, with the supposed 
                  substitute tutor - in reality Almaviva - was superb. Ferruccio 
                  Furlanetto was physically imposing as Bartolo, making the most 
                  of the role’s seedy side whilst phrasing La callunia 
                  (DVD 1. CH.17) with every expressive nuance.  
                     
                  Jennifer Rhys-Davies was an excellent Berta although I could 
                  have done without the silly noses she, the gardener and the 
                  policemen had to wear. It made the policemen, already rather 
                  out of period in their costumes, look like spares for a G&S 
                  comedy version. Opera buffa is comic opera not comedy. Similarly 
                  I could have done without Almaviva cocking a pistol to get out 
                  of a tight corner. Regrettably, all directors seem unable to 
                  resist such gimmicks no matter the consideration they give to 
                  detail in other respects. Jennifer Rhys-Davies had the task 
                  of trashing the set during the act 2 thunderstorm which should 
                  have been Rosina herself expressing her frustration at her situation, 
                  but this was not possible. It was well done and did not matter 
                  with Rosina herself using her good leg, and from her wheel chair 
                  reduced to kicking over one of the stands with her good leg. 
                  It exploded magnificently. This level of professional improvisation 
                  and cooperation was evident throughout. Consequently, the diva’s 
                  incapacity was as nothing. This professionalism in delivering 
                  the goods converted what could have been a disaster into a triumph. 
                   
                     
                  Pappano’s tempi were sometimes on the brisk side. He is not 
                  yet in the Zedda class in Rossini, but it was hardly a drawback 
                  and outstanding for a debut. The sound is first rate. Any grumbles? 
                  Well yes. Although this Virgin double DVD set is issued at bargain 
                  price (£14 GBP in the UK) this hardly excuses a lack of track 
                  listing. Those I have given for the reader’s guidance were derived 
                  from my second playing. One can forgive the lack of an essay, 
                  and even of a synopsis at the price, but the coloured photographs 
                  and long list of credits on the four-sided leaflet could have 
                  been better utilised. Ships, pennyworths and tar come to mind. 
                   
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
              
  
             
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