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             Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848)  
               
              Maria di Rohan - Opera in three acts (Vienna, June 
              1843 with major revisions for Paris in November included)  
                
              Maria, Contessa di Rohan - Krassimira Stoyanova (soprano)  
              Riccardo, Conte di Chalais - José Bros (tenor);  
              Enrico, Duca di Chevreuse - Christopher Purves (baritone)  
              Armando di Gondi, a young nobleman - Loïc Félix (tenor. Vienna version) 
               
              Enkeledja Shkosa (mezzo, Paris version)  
              De Fiesque, Captain of the Archers - Brindley Sherratt (bass)  
              Il Visconte di Suze - Graeme Broadbent (bass)  
              Aubry - Christopher Turner (tenor)  
              Un Familiare di Chevreuse - Riccardo Simonetti (baritone)  
              Geoffrey Mitchell Choir  
              Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment/Sir Mark Elder  
              rec. Henry Wood Hall, London, October 2009  
                
              OPERA RARA ORC 44 [67.39 + 52.29]  
             
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                Maria di Rohan was Donizetti’s penultimate opera. He 
                  composed it for Vienna, where its premiere took place at the 
                  Kärntnertortheater in June 1843 where it was widely acclaimed 
                  with the Austrian imperial family travelling especially to attend. 
                  The work was quickly performed in other European cities before 
                  arriving in at the Théâtre-Italien, Paris, later that year. 
                  For Paris, Donizetti made major revisions, much as he had done 
                  with Linda di Chamounix after its transfer to the French 
                  capital the previous year. Despite his declining mental health, 
                  the revisions are musically significant in their compositional 
                  colour and do alter the dramatic balance of the opera. Prominent 
                  in these revisions was the recasting the role of Armando as 
                  a mezzo-soprano instead of a second tenor. The second CD in 
                  this issue contains some of the music of these revisions (trs. 
                  8-11) plus a new cabaletta written for the tenor Gaetano Fraschini 
                  for a production in Naples in the autumn of 1844 (tr.12). What 
                  this Opera Rara issue mainly concerns is a performance of the 
                  work as it was given at the premiere in Vienna. Given Opera 
                  Rara’s predilection for including music written for a work, 
                  I can only regret that they did not record the additional final 
                  aria for Maria that Donizetti wrote, particularly given Krassimira 
                  Stoyanova’s singing in this issue. Its exclusion at the premiere 
                  may have been at the request of Tadolini, who had created Linda 
                  di Chamounix in Vienna in 1842, but its inclusion at the 
                  Buxton Festival in 2011, with a mezzo di Gondi, provided a thrilling 
                  conclusion. As there is no shortage of space its inclusion would 
                  have given purchasers the choice and chance of some excellent 
                  Donizetti.  
                   
                  The opera is set in early 17th century Paris in the court of 
                  Louis XIII at the time of Cardinal Richelieu's ascendancy as 
                  First Minister. It was a period when duelling to the death, 
                  either with swords or pistols, was common. At the behest of 
                  Maria de Rohan, the Comte de Chalais, a political power in the 
                  land and adversary of Richelieu, intercedes with the king to 
                  save the life of the Duc de Chevreuse who has been condemned 
                  to death for having killed, in a duel, a nephew of Cardinal 
                  Richelieu. Chalais is a former lover of Maria. Old flames are 
                  lit. But Chalais discovers that Maria has secretly married Chevreuse 
                  when he is involved in a challenge to a duel with Armand de 
                  Gondi, a young dilettante around the Court who has insulted 
                  her. Chevreuse, decides to replace his benefactor in the duel. 
                  In a complex set of circumstances as Richelieu resumes power, 
                  and involving a hidden letter and a secret passage, Chevreuse 
                  discovers that his friend has been the lover of his wife and 
                  the drama is resolved with more deaths.  
                   
                  The recording sets the singers somewhat behind the orchestra. 
                  Conducting the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Sir 
                  Mark Elder brings out the dark colours and dramatic centre of 
                  the action with his customary intensity of feeling for this 
                  composer’s works. Of the soloists, major vocal honours must 
                  go to Bulgarian soprano, Krassimira Stoyanova in the eponymous 
                  title role. Her extraordinarily wide range, pure in all its 
                  registers whilst being allied to a warm tone and expressive 
                  singing, is all one could expect and hope for in a performance 
                  of dramatic bel canto. I would hope to hear her featured 
                  again by Opera Rara perhaps in Donizetti’s final stage work, 
                  Caterina Cornaro. In the appendices of the arias allocated 
                  to a mezzo Armandi Di Gondi in the Paris version, Enkeledja 
                  Shkosa sings with creamy-voiced assurance.  
                   
                  If the only two ladies in either edition carry the female burden, 
                  the male contingent has much more to do. I personally find the 
                  rather plangent tone of José Bros somewhat lacking in ideal 
                  variety of vocal colour. Whilst generally singing with taste, 
                  flexibility and elegant phrasing as Chalais, he is stretched 
                  vocally at times as in the added cabaletta written for Gaetano 
                  Fraschini referred to above. At Buxton, the cabaletta immediately 
                  brought to mind the early works of Verdi, and even Il Trovatore. 
                  It is perhaps no surprise to know that Donizetti was present 
                  at the premiere of Nabucco in Milan in March 1842 and 
                  conducted the work in Vienna immediately prior to the premiere 
                  of Maria Di Rohan. As Chevreuse, the other man in this 
                  complex love triangle, Christopher Purves sings strongly with 
                  a good variety of tone and expression whilst missing the bel 
                  canto ideal as his top range loses focus and line under 
                  pressure.  
                   
                  Of the lesser roles, Graeme Broadbent sings strongly as Visconte 
                  di Suze whilst Brindley Sherratt is resonant as De Fiesque and 
                  Loïc Félix an adequate tenor Gondi. The contribution of the 
                  Geoffrey Mitchell Choir is, as always in Opera Rara issues, 
                  notable by excellence.  
                   
                  The associated booklet has a full track-listing and synopsis. 
                  The extensive essay by Jeremy Commons is scholarly and illuminating 
                  and is a perfect complement to Ashbrook’s definitive, but now 
                  rather dated Donizetti and his Operas (Cambridge University 
                  Press 1982). The performance history and cast lists are interesting. 
                  The libretto is given in full with translation in English.  
                   
                  Robert J Farr 
                   
                 
                                        
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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