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            Gioacchino ROSSINI 
              (1792 - 1868)  
              Armida - opera in three acts (1817)  
                
              Armida, Princess of Damascus, Sorceress - Renée Fleming 
              (soprano); Rinaldo, Knight Crusader, Lord of Matalban - Lawrence 
              Brownlee (tenor); Goffredo, Commander in Chief of the Crusaders 
              - John Osborn (tenor); Carlo, Knight Crusader, - Barry Banks (tenor); 
              Gernando, Knight of the Crusades, rival of Rinaldo - Barry Banks 
              (tenor); Ubaldo, Knight Crusader - Kobie Van Rensberg (tenor); Eustazio, 
              Knight of the Crusades, brother of Godfrey - Yeghishe Manucharyan 
              (tenor); Idraote, Uncle of Armida, - Peter Volpe (bass); Astarotte, 
              Keith Miller (bass).  
              Ballet, Chorus and Orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera, New York/Riccardo 
              Frizza  
              Produced by Mary Zimmerman.  
              Set and Costume Design by Richard Hudson.  
              Lighting Design by Brian MacDevitt.  
              Choreography by Graciela Daniele  
              rec. 1 May 2010  
              Picture Format: HD. 16:9 Colour. Sound formats: LPCM Stereo. DTS 
              5.1 Surround  
                
              DECCA 074 3416    
              [2 DVDs: 171:00 + 12:00 (bonus)]  
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                  The year 2010 seemed to be a red letter one for Rossini’s 
                  third opera seria written for Naples. How come, you might ask, 
                  for an opera premiered in 1817, a mere one hundred and twenty 
                  seven years before! Well, Armida was premiered in both 
                  America and Britain in 2010. You might well ask why the delay 
                  and why now? The answers could be several and inter-related, 
                  but surely if a work is deserving of such an auspicious debut 
                  as at America’s best operatic address, The Metropolitan 
                  Opera, New York, there must be a story somewhere. Doubtless 
                  this American debut had something to do with the soprano Renée 
                  Fleming being the diva of the moment in that house. She had 
                  sung the role at the Pesaro Festival, devoted to the works of 
                  Rossini, way back in 1993. A live recording of a performance 
                  from Pesaro was reissued more or less concurrently with this 
                  series of Met performances (see review). 
                  I do not know how many, if any, of the other eight Naples Rossini 
                  opera seria have been seen, at the Met. The situation in Britain 
                  is somewhat better, particularly at the summer Festivals. That 
                  at Garsington, a country house summer venue near Oxford, has 
                  featured many stagings of Rossini’s works including at 
                  least one other of his Naples opera seria. It was at Garsington 
                  in the summer of 2010 that Armida had its UK premiere 
                  and I was very pleased to see it there (see review), 
                  particularly as no cinema in the North West of England, where 
                  I live, took the Met transmission of Armida.  
                     
                  There are two other possible reasons for the neglect of Rossini’s 
                  Armida. The first is that it requires six tenors, all 
                  with coloratura skills. This is a species that largely died 
                  out following the death and retirement of the bel canto 
                  composers of the Italian primo ottocento: Rossini, Bellini and 
                  Donizetti. The works of their successors, Verdi, Puccini and 
                  the verismo composers, written for larger orchestras and denser 
                  orchestration, demanded bigger voices. In the past thirty or 
                  so years the light flexible coloratura tenor has made a come-back. 
                  This has made it possible to stage some of Rossini’s Naples 
                  opera seria that originally featured some of the most renowned 
                  practitioners of the day such as Giovanni David, Andrea Nozzari 
                  and Giovanni Rubini, albeit that only one of them featured in 
                  the premiere of Armida. As at the Naples premiere there 
                  is the possibility of doubling up. At Garsingtom only four tenors 
                  were featured whilst in this production the English coloratura 
                  tenor Barry Banks portrays Gernando, who is killed in act one, 
                  and Carlo who appears in act two; both major parts.  
                     
                  The second possible explanation for the neglect of Armida lies 
                  in the complexities required of the staging. Whilst Rossini 
                  was away from Naples presenting La Cenerentola in Rome 
                  and La Gazza ladra (The Thieving Magpie) in Milan, calamity 
                  overtook the San Carlo in the form of a fire that gutted the 
                  building. It was, however, a Royal Theatre and the King of Naples, 
                  a great lover of opera was seen regularly in his box at the 
                  San Carlo. It seems that money was no object and the theatre 
                  was rebuilt with the very best technical facilities of the time. 
                  To open the refurbished theatre, the impresario Barbaja was 
                  keen for a work of musical individuality, one breaking away 
                  from the prevailing conventions. Above all he wanted from Rossini 
                  a work utilising the new facilities in terms of scenic effect 
                  and dance. The fourteen-minute ballet was good practice for 
                  Rossini’s later Paris works where a ballet was de rigueur 
                  (DVD.2 CHs.10-13). Rossini produced his most romantic opera 
                  to date in terms of the opulence and romanticism of the music 
                  including three extended love duets for Armida and Rinaldo, 
                  one in each act (DVD 1 CHs.18-21 ) (DVD 2, CHs.6-7 and 18-19). 
                  The accompaniment to the second and third of those involves 
                  solo cello and violin respectively. The libretto also called 
                  for lavish staging including Armida’s palace and an enchanted 
                  garden. There were to be many comings and disappearances as 
                  well as dances by nymphs, cherubs and dragons. The lovers Armida 
                  and Rinaldo were to descend on a cloud that becomes her chariot 
                  and, as she waves her wand, turns into her castle. These requirements, 
                  if taken literally, constitute considerable technical challenges, 
                  even for a money-rich operatic company such as America’s 
                  premier operatic establishment.  
                     
                  The eponymous sorceress is the only female part. At the premiere 
                  the role was taken by the formidable Isobel Colbran. It seems 
                  she had the timbre of a mezzo-soprano with a good extension 
                  at the top of her voice. This is just the area in Fleming’s 
                  lyric soprano voice one would expect the richest sound and this 
                  she provides with vocal security. Although she states, in her 
                  brief interval interview, that she has sung nine bel canto roles 
                  she is not always comfortable in the higher reaches and free 
                  decoration of the vocal line. She certainly lacks some of the 
                  freedom and security of her earlier performances at Pesaro. 
                  All that being said, she does consistently sing beautifully. 
                  She produces notes at the lower part of her voice in Armida’s 
                  mad scene (DVD 2. Chs.23-28), and does so with a vehemence, 
                  that I did not expect. Dressed in a series of largely irrelevant 
                  couture gowns in acts one and two, she looks quite ravishing 
                  as she affects beguiling, seductive or agonised glances, as 
                  she deems appropriate.  
                     
                  Of the five tenors, act one is dominated by Lawrence Brownlee 
                  as Rinaldo, John Osborn as Goffredo and Barry Banks as Gernando. 
                  All manage the difficult tessitura of their roles with unstrained 
                  vocal security without erasing the name of a certain Peruvian 
                  from the mind. Brownlee, whilst being pleasantly mellifluous 
                  hasn’t quite got that ping at the top of his voice that 
                  Juan Diego Florez essays with such clarity and ease. John Osborn’s 
                  slightly husky tone rises superbly to the dramatic demands on 
                  Goffredo whilst the somewhat diminutive Barry Banks as Gernando, 
                  who feels robbed of his due in act one, matches both with his 
                  easy top and good vocal characterisation before being killed 
                  by Rinaldo; they say the best surprises come in small packages! 
                  With an edge to his voice and secure singing and expression 
                  he is a match for any of the other tenors. The good news is 
                  that he re-emerges as Carlo in the final act alongside Kobie 
                  Van Rensberg’s secure and well-portrayed Ubaldo. The scene 
                  for these three coloratura tenors in the final act, surely unique 
                  in all opera, is stunning in its realisation (DVD 2 CHs.20-21). 
                   
                     
                  Mary Zimmerman's new production is full of slick coups including 
                  a cupid with notices. Regrettably, given the resources at her 
                  disposal, she misses too many tricks. Surely Armida’s 
                  destruction of the Enchanted Garden at the conclusion of the 
                  opera deserved an imaginative coup de théatre 
                  rather than the mélange of mixed images that I could 
                  see. The fixed set of a curved arcade with many entrances is 
                  fine, but the Enchanted Garden left much to be desired. There 
                  is a descent by Armida and Rinaldo from on high, albeit not 
                  on a cloud.  
                     
                  The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus respond well to 
                  Riccardo Frizza’s secure beat and pacing. There is no 
                  mention of which edition of the score is used. That at Pesaro 
                  for the 1993 production was that of the Critical Edition edited 
                  by Charles and Patricia Brauner for the Rossini Foundation. 
                  The timing is similar to that in this performance albeit there 
                  is more applause time here.  
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
                
                       
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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