This recording is numbered seventeen in
C
Major’s “Tutto Verdi” series of twenty-six of Verdi’s
operas plus his
Requiem Mass. The series is being issued to celebrate
the bicentenary of Italy’s most celebrated composer. Not included
are two additional titles,
Jérusalem and
Aroldo which
are re-writes of earlier operas using some of the original music. The
former derives from
I Lombardi,
the composer’s fourth
opera (see
review
of a performance in this series). Written to a French libretto for the
Paris Opera, it can well be considered a distinct work. This DVD series
is built around Parma’s Verdi Festival, resurrected in 2007 but
with a handful of performances from elsewhere.
Verdi had considerable problems with the composition and staging of
Il
Trovatore. It was the second of his great middle period trio -
Rigoletto,
Il Trovatore and
La Traviata - all premiered over a two year
period from March 1851.
Trovatore was originally intended for librettist
Cammarano’s hometown theatre of the San Carlo in Naples. However,
the theatre found Verdi’s fee too steep for its cash-strapped situation.
The composer proposed the opera be premiered in Rome if the censors accepted
Cammarano’s libretto. At that point Verdi learned, through a friend,
of Cammarano’s death. The Young poet Emmanuele Bardare, who had
converted
Rigoletto into
Clara di Perth for Naples, undertook
the completion. Verdi paid Cammarano’s widow the full fee, plus
a premium, as she was poorly provided for. These delays explain the part
contemporaneously composed
Il Trovatore and
La Traviata
reaching the stage within seven weeks of each other.
The various additions to the libretto of
Il Trovatore, required
of Bardare, show that Verdi was intent on a two-diva opera, with the voices
concerned being of distinctly different ranges and colour. Needless to
say the Rome censor quibbled about details. A burning at the stake was
considered to be too vivid a reminder of the Inquisition and the words
of the
Miserere were altered, as strict Liturgical phrases were
not allowed. With these relatively minor problems sorted
Trovatore
was premiered at the Teatro Apollo, Rome, on 19 January 1853. It was a
resounding triumph with the final scene being encored in its entirety.
Despite odd cavils about the gloomy subject and the number of deaths,
Il Trovatore spread rapidly and was even parodied with baby-swapping
figures in two of Gilbert and Sullivan’s most popular works. Seven
weeks after the premiere of
Il Trovatore, and despite it having
an entirely different orchestral patina and key as well as vastly different
vocal requirements for the tenor and soprano,
La Traviata was premiered
in Venice.
Caruso famously said that
Il Trovatore required the four greatest
singers in the world for the principal quartet; that in a generation when
big-voiced singers capable of meeting the vocal and dramatic demands of
the roles seemed to grow on trees. Nowadays such voices are too rare for
comfort. Given that Parma is very much a provincial Italian theatre and
not able to compete with the likes of La Scala or Rome, casting was likely
to be a challenge and it was. With production and sets, shared with La
Fenice, Venice, not finding favour and the singers far too often left
to their own devices, the opening night was set for a fiasco. So it proved,
with a vociferous audience showing their displeasure. It seems the soprano
and mezzo took the brunt, the producer and designer escaping more lightly.
Singers are more easily replaced than sets and the soprano and mezzo were
changed before the performances from which this recording was made.
Verdi purists at Parma, which considers itself Verdi’s local house,
were not pleased at the conductor’s decision to excise the cabalettas.
How Marcelo Álvarez, the best singer in the production, viewed
the excision of showcase aria
Di quella pira (CH.29), which he
was well capable of singing, I do not know. Elsewhere, his varied phrasing
and vocal characterisation, allied to his virile lyric-toned spinto tenor
provided the best singing as recorded from three performances. As Di Luna,
Manrico’s competitor for Leonora’s love, Claudio Sgura sang
strongly without exactly ravishing Verdi’s phrases in
Il Balen
(CH.16). Deyan Vatchkov was a satisfying and imposing Ferrando (CHs. 2-4
and 23).
The two replacement women must have been better than the original cast,
as the gallery did not boo them off the stage at the end. As Leonora,
Teresa Romano has an appealing vocal tone. Her voice can soar to the heights
that Verdi demands in the big showcase arias
Tacea la notte in placida
(CH.6) and
D’amor sull’ali rosee (CH.31). Regrettably
that is the good news. Her choppy phrasing and abbreviation of the end
of lines added up to a lack of the required legato. It was perhaps a relief
all-round that the cabalettas were not included. As Azucena, the gypsy
whose name very nearly became that of the opera, Mzia Nioradze looked
far too young to be Manrico’s mother. What’s more, she lacked
the vocal wherewithal to create the towering dramatic figure that inhabits
Verdi’s music for the role.
Add to these vocal limitations matters of direction and set. The former
was notable by its absence. The singers seemed to be left to their own
devices and waving of arms was the limit. The spartan minimalist set created
little mood. A full moonlit night and a few branches made Leonora’s
mis-recognition of Manrico in Act One quite implausible. The full red
moon of Act Two added nothing to a vacuous set for the gypsy camp whilst
that outside the convent lacked any sense of situation. The rescue of
Leonora by Manrico’s troops was laughable. On the rostrum Yuri Temirkanov
seemed unduly keen to get to the end with a tendency towards hard-driven
tempi. When not standing about aimlessly the chorus sang with vibrancy.
Robert J Farr
Provincial at best. Verdi and Álvarez deserved better than this.