Poor old Cherubini. Who remembers him 
                today ... and for what? At best perhaps 
                he is recalled as the Director, for 
                some two decades, of the Paris Conservatoire; 
                or possibly as the composer of the striking 
                classical drama Medee, which 
                was to become a vaunted vehicle in the 
                1950s and 1960s for Maria Callas ... 
                and beyond that? Well probably not very 
                much. 
              
 In fact Cherubini was 
                a very active and significant figure 
                in the operatic world of the late 18th 
                century and early 19th century, producing, 
                between 1770 and 1815, some 32 stage 
                works. Indeed even after the collapse 
                of the Napoeonic order and the assumption 
                of his Conservatoire duties he managed 
                three further operas, his last work, 
                Ali Baba, staged at the Paris 
                Opera in 1833. 
              
 Fundamentally serious 
                in outlook he naturally aligned himself 
                with the reformists and largely ignored 
                "buffa" and "comique" 
                types, preferring "opera seria", 
                particularly as a platform to extend 
                and develop the 18th century form of 
                "tragedie lyrique". Alas he 
                was stubbornly under-appreciated in 
                France, and was unable to break into 
                the inner circle of the Academie Royale/Imperiale. 
              
 Indeed it was long asserted 
                that Napoleon disliked his music, and 
                this led to a clear antipathy to his 
                work within the court. Whilst it was 
                true that the Emperor preferred simpler 
                Italianate confections, this enmity 
                seems to be largely myth. Cherubini 
                was appointed Napoleon’s Director of 
                Music between 1805 and 1806, and there 
                is abundant evidence of commissions 
                throughout the 1st Empire. Moreover, 
                the premiere of Les Abencérages, 
                on 6 April 1813, was graced by the Emperor 
                himself ... an even greater mark of 
                approval than it might at first seem 
                since Napoleon had deliberately delayed 
                his departure to the crucial Eastern 
                campaign to attend the opera. 
              
 Unfortunately the popularity 
                of the work was short lived and Les 
                Abencerages effectively disappeared 
                for a century and a half. It was briefly 
                revived at the Maggio Musicale festival 
                of 1956, in a production that united 
                Anita Cerquetti with Carlo Maria Giulini, 
                otherwise it has been cast to the outer 
                reaches of the repertoire, known only 
                for its overture and one or two of Almanzor’s 
                arias. It would surely be a worthwhile 
                candidate for revival at an enterprising 
                festival such as Wexford. 
              
 Part of the reason for 
                its neglect may lie in the rather contrived 
                libretto by Etienne de Jouy. It revolves 
                around an ancient feud between the Moorish 
                tribes of the Abencerragi and the Zegri. 
                The Vizier (a Zegri) along with co-conpirators 
                Alamir and Kaled work against Almanzor 
                to ruin his reputation. 
              
 Meanwhile Almanzor and 
                Noraime are in love and their wedding 
                takes place within the Alhambra, with 
                Gonzalve, a Spanish general, as honoured 
                guest. The ceremony is interrupted by 
                news of an an uprising which Almanzor 
                has to quell. 
              
 He returns triumphant 
                but in the process of victory has lost 
                the sacred standard of Granada. Despite 
                his claims that he passed it to the 
                knight Octair who disappeared, Almanzor 
                is banished. His love for Noraime however 
                is so strong he sneaks back into the 
                Alhambra gardens to see her and is captured. 
                His transgression means he is doomed 
                to be cast down a cliff unless a champion 
                comes forth to fight Alamir for his 
                life. 
              
 To universal surprise 
                a mysterious knight duly appears, takes 
                up the challenge, and defeats Alamir. 
                He then not only reveals himself as 
                Gonzalve the Spanish general, but also 
                produces proof that Octair was acting 
                with the Vizier and his followers to 
                deliberately discredit Almanzor. The 
                traitors are arrested and Almanzor and 
                Noraime reunited. 
              
 Cherubini creates a 
                work with real melodic interest and 
                perhaps more open-ended forms than with 
                many of his previous opera seria. In 
                fact it seems to me a definite advance 
                over much of his work of the previous 
                two decades. By comparison a previous 
                CD issue of Lodoiska, a "rescue 
                opera" of 1791, struck me as cold 
                and formulaic, despite the fervent advocacy 
                of Riccardo Muti and his La Scala team 
                - admirably captured by Sony Classical 
                in a live performance. 
              
 Although greater weight 
                and experience is evident in the choral 
                scenes I would concede that characterisation 
                of the leading characters is not as 
                well defined as in some of Cherubini’s 
                earlier operas. In this respect a work 
                like Medee is in certainly in 
                a different league. Nevertheless there 
                is much that is worthwhile here and 
                the artists involved, by and large, 
                do the piece justice. 
              
 Almanzor should have 
                a bel-canto warmth with heroic 
                pretensions, to which Francisco Ortiz 
                responds very pleasingly. I had not 
                come across this Spanish singer before 
                and I look forward to crossing his path 
                again. He maintains a good line, and 
                has sap in his voice, responding well 
                to the text. Meanwhile his partner in 
                love, Noraime, is taken by Margherita 
                Rinaldi. She has all the notes, although 
                there is a tendency for her voice to 
                harden and become squally in the topmost 
                registers. 
              
 The roles of Gonzalve 
                and Alemar are in the skilled hands 
                of Jean Dupouy and Jacques Mars. Unsurprisingly 
                they sound more at ease in the language, 
                and Dupouy especially adds to this quality 
                a fine voice with a ringing top register. 
                He certainly sounds like a worthy champion 
                for anyone. The remaining cast are more 
                than adequate. 
              
 Peter Maag is nevertheless 
                the justifiable focus of this reissue, 
                part of a series devoted to his valuable 
                work in Italian Radio in the 1970s, 
                resuscitating works from the late 18th 
                and early 19th centuries. Although the 
                sleeve-note writer at one point asserts: 
                "Maag surprises us by the ease 
                with which he manages to adapt, with 
                outstanding results, to a repertoire 
                that certainly was not among his favourites" 
              
 I can only conclude 
                that he manages to hide his antipathy 
                well! 
              
 Incidentally, the notes 
                remind us that one of his most valuable 
                rediscoveries was Paer’s Leonora, 
                subsequently recorded and issued commercially 
                by Decca; I have cassettes of this recording, 
                but did it ever make it to CD? 
              
 Although the music of 
                Les Abencérages is not especially 
                evocative of the Alhambra, let alone 
                Spain, Cherubini does include some quite 
                attractive cod Spanish dances in the 
                first act’s wedding celebrations. Each 
                act also concludes with an impressive 
                finale, building quite a head of steam 
                in the first, which Maag controls admirably, 
                bringing out much detail in the orchestral 
                part writing. Just occasionally, for 
                example the opening of second act, the 
                orchestra are fallible in intonation, 
                but there is nothing especially worrying 
                overall. In general they respond admirably 
                to their conductor. 
              
 To round things off 
                the 1975 radio sound is well transferred; 
                warm but with detail preserved. A four-language 
                synopsis is provided, but be warned; 
                the libretto is in French only. In short, 
                if it appeals, take the plunge! 
              
Ian Bailey