I can’t really imagine that it was so long ago that
Harnoncourt’s first Monteverdi cycle was issued. It's more than
45 years since
L’Orfeo appeared. It caused quite a stir and
the reception was mixed..
Gramophone praised him for “making
Monteverdi's music sound something like the way he imagined.”
There were also deviating voices who thought that his “arrangements”
were a little too much. These were perforce arrangements or rather reconstructions.
After all there was no extant full score of the music to any of the three
operas. The vocal parts and a bass line were preserved and in the case of
L’Orfeo it is also known what instruments were available but
not what they played. All reconstructions will for that reason be, more or
less, clever guesses, based on general knowledge of other music from the same
period. We needn’t even regard the results as “some historical
monument that has been carefully preserved” as Ingo Dorfmüller says
in the liner-notes to this reissue. He continues: “… what we hear
is a body of present-day musicians reacting to music from a distant era and
taking decisions about instrumentation, tempi and ornaments from a modern
standpoint, albeit supported by their knowledge of the available source material
and relevant textbooks of the time.” The outcome, if we look at
L’Orfeo,
is a fresh and sometimes cheeky interpretation that makes the 400-year-old
work seem anything but dated or mossy.
Harnoncourt’s wasn’t the first recording of
L’Orfeo.
As early as December 1939 Italian HMV set down the work on 12 78rpm discs.
Athe war Helmut Koch’s recording in German with Elfriede Trötschel as
Euridice was the first LP-issue. The first historically informed recording
was the Archiv/Deutsche Grammophon production in 1955 conducted by August
Wenzinger who was an early advocate for authentic baroque performances. The
stylish Helmut Krebs was in the title role and a young Fritz Wunderlich as
one of the shepherds. I once owned the original LP set and was rather fascinated
by the sounds, coming as it were, from a very distant past. I suppose it could
still be a worthy inclusion in a baroque opera collection but to my knowledge
it has never been issued on CD. Archiv replaced it in the LP catalogue with
Jürgen Jürgens’ recording in 1973, featuring Nigel Rogers in the title
role. Later, in 1986, came John Eliot Gardiner with Anthony Rolfe Johnson
as Orfeo. Harnoncourt was a revelation back in 1969 and his reading still
holds its spell. The main body of singers consisted of several of those taking
part also in his other, even bigger, project: the recording of Bach’s
cantatas, which developed in parallel with the Monteverdi project. Rotraud
Hansmann, Paul Esswood, Kurt Equiluz and Max van Egmont appeared in both.
They are all very good in their respective roles, as is Nigel Rogers, later
singing the title role in two recordings of the work. Nikolaus Simkowsky is
a frightening Caronte, but the two most spectacular contributions come from
singers normally being heard in other fields. Hungarian tenor Lajos Kozma
had a very wide repertoire that he sang all over the world, Pelléas and Ferrando
(
Così fan tutte) being two of his signature roles. His Orfeo here
is a great reading, more powerful than Krebs for Wenzinger but still very
flexible and expressive. The choice of Cathy Berberian, the prima donna of
the
avant garde who interpreted Berio, Maderna, Cage, Milhaud and
many others, was a real hit in the dual role of Messaggiera and Speranza.
Her identification and her expressive powers erase the intervening centuries
and brings the role straight to the present time.
Il ritorna d’Ulisse in patria has never reached the same popularity
as the other two operas but it is in no way negligible. It is a grander opera
than
L’Orfeo. Clearly Monteverdi had developed his style considerably
since the earlier opera. No wonder since the two are separated by more than
thirty years. The colourful scoring is even more vivid here and once or twice
I thought that the instrumental solos in arias were a bit over the top. There
is no denying though that this blows life into the music. This was the first
complete recording of
Ulisse — a heavily abridged version had
been issued on Vox in 1964 — and it was pioneering among the veritable
boom of productions during the 1970s. Several of the singers from
L’Orfeo
take part here as well. I must point out Nigel Rogers’ lively Eurimaco
and Nikolaus Simkowsky’s magnificent Nettuno. Norma Lerer is a dramatically
involved Penelope and Scottish tenor Murray Dickie, one of the great character
singers of his time, is a wonderfully expressive Iro. Every appearance of
his is a real treat. Ladislaus Anderko, whose name I have only seen in connection
with this recording, is dramatic and powerful as Giove and the black-voiced
Walker Wyatt is impressive as both Tempo and Antinoo.
About Ulisse himself I am in two minds. Sven Olof Eliasson was no baroque
singer. He had an important international career, mostly in dramatic roles.
I saw him in Stockholm a number of times and in particular I remember his
Peter Grimes, opposite Elisabeth Söderström’s Ellen Orford, as Sergey
in Shostakovich’s
Katerina Ismailova and as Walther in Götz
Friedrich’s
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Here, much earlier
than those performances, he scales down considerably, reminding us that he
was also, once upon a time, Almaviva in
Il barbiere di Siviglia.
There he is mellifluous and inward and a pleasure to hear. This Monteverdi
role is one of contrasts and while, when it comes to his dramatic outbursts,
he has the required steel, this also causes him a lot of strain and the vibrato
widens seriously. He is however quite expressive and it is a pity that he
produces some really unpleasant singing.
The last, and by general consent, the greatest of the operas is
L’incoronazione
di Poppea. It was first performed in Venice during the carnival season
in 1643. The original score has been lost and what survives is two copies
from the 1660s. They differ from each other and also from the libretto. Whether
Monteverdi wrote the opera on his own and if not how much was written by others
and who they were, is open to debate. There are stylistic differences that
seem to point to teamwork in one way or another. We must remember that the
composer was 77 and that he died at the end of 1643. Anyway, after the carnival
there was one documented revival and that was in Naples in 1651. After that
it was only a title in some history books until the Venice score was unearthed
in the 1880s. This led to an abridged concert performance in Paris in 1905,
conducted by Vincent d’Indy and a first staged version in 1913. However,
it was long a rarity in opera houses until the 1960s when Raymond Leppard’s
edition was produced at Glyndebourne in 1962. There was a recording of a live
performance in Zurich in 1954, conducted by the versatile Walter Goehr, and
that recording even won a Grand Prix du Disque. I still have an LP with excerpts
that I frequently listened to in my youth. The Leppard version, which was
heavily cut was issued on HMV in 1964, conducted by John Pritchard. Richard
Lewis and Magda Laszlo were Nero and Poppea. The first unabridged recording
was the one in this box, issued in 1974. It was again criticised for what
Denis Arnold called “over-ornamentation”, alluding to the lavish
use of oboes and trumpets. I can imagine though that, since
Poppea
was written for the carnival, people expected some
festivitas and
what more festive than cheeky oboes and bragging trumpets?
In the cast we find a few of the names we know from the previous operas: Rotraud
Hansmann as Virtù and Drusilla, Paul Esswood as Ottone and Kurt Equiluz in
various comprimario roles. Several are new. Jane Gartner is a lovely Fortuna,
Amore is sung by an unnamed soloist of the Wiener Sängerknaben, Giancarlo
Luccardi is a magnificent Seneca – his farewell to his family is as
moving as any I have heard – and then Cathy Berberian delivers another
high-octane impersonation of the wronged Ottavia. The two main characters
are, as in
Il ritorno d’Ulisse, singers not normally associated
with early music. Helen Donath was one of the loveliest lyric sopranos for
several decades. Her Sophie in Solti’s
Rosenkavalier was my
first acquaintance with her and after that I have heard her in numerous other
recordings of Mozart, of operetta, of lieder. Her Poppea is youthful-sounding
and eager and well contrasted to the Nerone of Elisabeth Söderström. This
remarkable soprano had a world career for forty years but all the time was
loyal to the Stockholm Opera and covered all epochs and all styles in the
soprano repertoire: a Mozartean, a Strauss specialist, the leading Janacek
singer for decades and also a concert singer, not least in Scandinavian and
Russian repertoire. Her distinctive timbre is immediately recognizable and
not always the most beautiful in the world but few have matched her deep insight
in the characters she interpreted. This Nerone stands out as a three-dimensional
character and the only objection I have is that this is a woman in disguise.
For her alone this whole set is a must-have and into the bargain we get three
of the most rewarding baroque operas in, by and large, among the most rewarding
recordings.
Another bargain is the ninth CD, “Cathy Berberian sings Monteverdi”.
It was issued separately a year after
Poppea and contains a deeply
satisfying recording of the celebrated
Lamento d’Arianna, the
only surviving music from
Arianna, but a trend-setter in its day.
The
lament even became a popular genre piece out of the opera house.
The two
Concerti de madrigal are also valuable examples of Monteverdi’s
genius. The rest of the disc contains excerpts from the complete operas: Messagiera’s
scene from act II of
L’Orfeo and Ottavia’s two solos
plus a second act scene with Ottone from
L’incoronazione di Poppea.
I have one objection, and a serious one at that, to the presentation of this
set. The liner-notes are an interesting read but when these legendary and
historically important recordings now come in a box there should have been
a fuller documentation and full texts and translations. They have been available
with the individual operas in earlier reissues and it is a disservice to prospective
buyers not to include them. The extra costs should have been marginal.
So a big black mark for the presentation, but in every other respect this
is an issue that should be snapped up by anyone with an interest in baroque
opera – or really any interest in music.
Göran Forsling
Contents
CD 1-2
L’Orfeo [49:13 +58:54]
Rotraud Hansmann (soprano) – La Musica/Euridice; Lajos Kozma (tenor)
– Orfeo; Cathy Berberian (mezzo) – Messaggiera/Speranza; Nikolaus
Simkowsky (bass) – Caronte; Eiko Katanosaka (soprano) – Proserpina/Ninfa;
Jacques Villisech (bass-baritone) – Plutone; Max van Egmond (baritone)
– Apollo/Pastore IV/Spirito III; Günther Theuring (tenor) – Pastore
I; Nigel Rogers (tenor) – Pastore II/Spirito I; Kurt Equiluz (tenor)
– Pastore III/Spirito II; Capella Antiqua München/Konrad Ruhland; Concentus
Musicus Wien/Nikolaus Harnoncourt
rec. 28 February–1 December 1968, Casino Zögernitz, Vienna
CD 3-5
Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria [70:09
+ 54:31 + 68:19]
Sven Olof Eliasson (tenor) – L’humana fragilità/Ulisse; Walker
Wyatt (bass) – Tempo/Antinoo; Margaret Baker-Genovesi (soprano) –
Fortuna/Giunone/Melanto; Rotraud Hansmann (soprano) – Amore/Minerva;
Ladislaus Anderko (tenor) – Giove; Nikolaus Simkowsky (bass) –
Nettuno; Norma Lerer (mezzo) – Penelope; Kai Hansen (tenor) - Telemaco;
Kurt Equiluz (tenor) – Pisandro; Paul Esswood (counter-tenor) –
Anfinomo; Nigel Rogers (tenor) – Eurimaco; Max van Egmond (bass) –
Eumete; Murray Dickie (tenor) – Iro; Anne-Marie Mühle (mezzo) –
Ericlea; Junge Kantorei/Joachim Martini; Concentus Musicus/Nikolaus Harnoncourt
rec. April, May, June 1971, Casino Zögernitz, Vienna
CD 6-8
L’incoronazione di Poppea [71:03 +
75:23 + 69:17]
Jane Gartner (soprano) – Fortuna; Rotraud Hansmann (soprano) –
Virtù/Drusilla; Soloist of the Wiener Sängerknaben (soprano) – Amore;
Helen Donath (soprano) – Poppea; Elisabeth Söderström (soprano) –
Nerone; Cathy Berberian (mezzo) – Ottavia; Paul Esswood (counte-rtenor)
– Ottone; Giancarlo Luccardi (bass) – Seneca; Maria Minetto (contralto)
– Nutrice; Carlo Gaifa (counter-tenor) – Arnalta; Philip Langridge
(tenor) – Lucano, et al/Concentus Musicus Wien/Nikolaus Harnoncourt
rec. December 1973, April 1974, Palais Rasumofsky, Vienna
CD 9
Cathy Berberian sings Monteverdi [46:19]
1.
Se i languidi miei sguardi [7:14]
Lettera amorosa in genere rappresentativo. Concerto: settimo libro de madrigali,
con altri genere di canti (Venice 1619)
2.
Con che soavità. Concerto a una voce e istrumenti [4:28]
Concerto: settimo libro de madrigali, con altri genere di canti (Venice 1619)
3. Lamento d’Arianna:
Lasciatemi morire (Venice 1623) [12:51]
L’Orfeo
4.
Mira, deh mira Orfeo ... In un fiorito prato (act II) [6:37]
(with Nigel Rogers, Günther Theuring and Lajos Kozma)
L’incoronazione di Poppea
5:
Disprezzata Regina (act I sc. V) [4:23]
6.
Tu che dagli Avi miei ... Maestade, che prega (act II sc. IX)
[6:15]
(with Paul Esswood)
7.
Addio Roma (act III sc. VI) [3:55]
Cathy Berberian (mezzo), Concentus Musicus/Nikolaus Harnoncourt
rec. trs. 1-3 published 1975, trs. 4-7 from the above complete operas