As late as 1837 
                  Donizetti, despite the success of Anna Bolena (1830) 
                  and Lucia di Lamermoor (1835), was still on the treadmill 
                  of writing three or so operas each year. He had hoped for the 
                  post of Director of the Naples Conservatory, but a faction supporting 
                  Mercadante thwarted this prospect. Then his opera Poliuto, 
                  concerning Christian martyrdom in Roman times, was forbidden 
                  a staging in Naples at the personal insistence of the King, 
                  a deeply religious man. Donizetti, still suffering depression 
                  after the death of his wife, determined to go to Paris where 
                  censorship was less of an issue, remuneration far higher and 
                  the musical standards better. He hoped he might follow Rossini’s 
                  example and make enough money to retire from the frustrations 
                  of the theatre.
                Matters got off 
                  to a good start in 1840 with his operas being performed in four 
                  Paris theatres to the chagrin of some native composers. The 
                  operas concerned included a French version of Lucia at 
                  the Renaissance Theatre. More importantly he agreed to write 
                  two operas in French for presentation at The Opéra. For the 
                  first he turned to Poliuto and engaged Eugène Scribe 
                  to produce a French text based on Cammarano’s Italian libretto. 
                  Whilst awaiting the ever-dilatory Scribe to complete the new 
                  libretto, Donizetti wrote and presented La Fille du régiment 
                  at the Opéra Comique on 11 February 1840. For the revised 
                  Poliuto he rewrote the recitatives, divided act one in 
                  two and wrote a new finale. The new four-act version was premiered 
                  as Les 
                  Martyrs at The Opéra on 10 March 1840 with the second 
                  work in French, La 
                  favorite, following in December.
                Following this stay 
                  in Paris, Donizetti visited Rome and Milan, where he attended 
                  the premiere of Verdi’s Nabucco. Following Adelia 
                  and Maria Padilla in Rome he achieved a huge success 
                  in Vienna with Linda 
                  de Chamounix, premiered at the Vienna Karntnerthor on 
                  19 May 1842 and was appointed Kapellmeister to the Austrian 
                  Court. This appointment allowed him six months leave each year 
                  to pursue his career elsewhere. Things were really going in 
                  the direction Donizetti wanted. Back in Paris, the premiere 
                  of Don Pasquale was a great success at the Théâtre Italien 
                  in 1843 and was followed by Maria de Rohan in Vienna 
                  in June 1844. Whilst in Vienna Donizetti started on the composition 
                  of Dom Sébastien Roi De Portugal, a five act Grand 
                  Opera, including a ballet he had agreed to write for the Paris 
                  Opera. Scribe was the librettist.
                The complicated 
                  plot of Dom Sébastien starts in Lisbon where the 
                  King falls in love with the Muslim princess Zayda. He goes on 
                  an ill-fated war in Morocco where his army is slaughtered by 
                  the troops of her lover, and father’s general, Abayaldos. In 
                  the opera Dom Sébastien and the poet Camoëns, who had 
                  accompanied him, escape with their lives and return to Portugal 
                  to witness the King’s supposed funeral mounted by his uncle 
                  who has usurped the throne. Camoëns promotes a disturbance claiming 
                  the King is alive and is arrested, but Sebastien steps forward 
                  to his defence. The Grand Inquisitor, who has his own agenda 
                  of ceding Portugal to Spain, denounces Sébastien as an impostor 
                  and threatens him with the power of the Inquisition and has 
                  him arrested. In prison, Sébastien is joined by Zayda who hopes 
                  to aid his escape but is denounced and joins him in captivity. 
                  Sébastien is offered the opportunity of freedom if he will renounce 
                  his right to the throne and cede it to Philip II of Spain. In 
                  a weak fifth act he refuses to accept, changes his mind, and 
                  then whilst trying to escape to a boat brought to the prison 
                  by Camoëns, Sébastien and Zayda die as the rope leading them 
                  down from the prison tower is slashed. The opera concludes with 
                  Dom Antonio declaring himself King but the Grand Inquisitor 
                  showing him the document signed by Sébastien ceding the throne 
                  to Philip of Spain.
                In my review 
                  of Les martyrs, I note that independent of the quality 
                  of the singing and recording it is the maturity of Donizetti’s 
                  musical creation that is so captivating. It for me indicated 
                  a significant step in compositional development much as Luisa 
                  Miller does in the Verdi oeuvre. Arias extend into duets 
                  and trios with an associated orchestral complexity that marks 
                  a significant development in his compositional style. In Dom 
                  Sébastien the music reaches a further level of sophistication 
                  and complexity albeit there is rather dark patina that derives 
                  from the plot. I had never managed to track down a copy of the 
                  live recording of the 1998 performance at Bergamo with Sabbatini 
                  in the title role and which, my bel canto friend Lew Schneider 
                  informs me, circulates on DVD in America. Accordingly I looked 
                  forward in eager anticipation when I heard of the concert performances 
                  at Covent Garden in September 2005 and that Opera Rara would 
                  be present. Then I feared a slip between cup and lip as I read 
                  that Renato Bruson had withdrawn at short notice in the vital 
                  role of Camoëns and that at the first of the two performances 
                  Simon Keenlyside, as Abayaldos, was suffering from a severe 
                  cold. I need not have worried about Keenlyside who sings strongly 
                  throughout. I was doubtful about the casting of Bruson this 
                  late in his career. Fine actor that he still is, his voice has 
                  lost the bloom that defined him as the finest Donizetti baritone 
                  of his generation twenty or so years ago. Carmelo Corrado Caruso, 
                  who sang the role in the second cast at Bergamo was the chosen 
                  substitute. His rather thin and wavery tone does not do justice 
                  to the important part of Camoëns who gets the one aria from 
                  the work, O Lisbonne, ô ma patria (O Lisbon, 
                  O my fatherland. CD 2 tr.13) that has achieved popularity 
                  outside complete performances. Another Italian, Giuseppe Filianoti, 
                  sings Dom Sébastien with a rather reedy tone and tight top to 
                  his voice. Consequently the unique, for Donizetti, ending of Act 
                  II, with Sébastien's aria Seul sur a terre (CD 2 
                  tr. 10), goes for little. Lew Schneider tells me Giuseppe Sabbatini 
                  sings this memorably in the 1998 Bergamo recording. The best 
                  singing on the male side comes from the British contingent with 
                  Simon Keenlyside’s Abayaldos showing no signs of vocal restriction 
                  or sinus congestion. Equally impressive is the singing of Alastair 
                  Miles as the Grand Inquisitor. I have often found his lean bass 
                  lacking in depth and sonority. In this performance he seems 
                  to find extra colour and an added vocal richness. These Brits, 
                  and those in the comprimario roles not only provide the best 
                  singing but also superior command of French. Although there 
                  are a few native French singers on the international stage it 
                  is a pity none could be found for this performance. It is certainly 
                  a long time since there was a Francophone singer around who 
                  could have tackled the mezzo role of Zayda sung here with dramatic 
                  conviction, good tone, and variable French, by Vesselina Kasarova. 
                  Dramatic conviction and involvement are the virtues also to 
                  be found in the singing of the Chorus of the Royal Opera House 
                  who are both characterful and vibrant and are matched for quality 
                  and commitment by their orchestral counterparts.
                Whatever the strengths 
                  and weaknesses of the singing, the fact that the whole holds 
                  together to allow appreciation of Donizetti’s considerable work 
                  is due to Mark Elder on the rostrum. Living near Manchester, 
                  I have come to appreciate his conducting strengths, particularly 
                  in the concert performances of operas and excerpts, since he 
                  took the helm at the Hallé Orchestra. It is a great pity that 
                  our philistine TV channels have not shown the two-part film 
                  on Donizetti that he has made. His conducting of Dom 
                  Sébastien Roi De Portugal on this recording shows 
                  his knowledge and sympathy with the bel canto idiom. 
                  Clearly that sympathy extends to Donizetti’s music equalling 
                  his renowned conducting and knowledge of Verdi. Elder’s conducting 
                  of the act 2 Ballet Music (CD 1 trs. 15-17) is a sheer delight. 
                  Eagle-eared listeners with quality hi-fi equipment will notice 
                  a slight difference in ambience from the rest; a fact explained 
                  by separate sessions and recording venue.
                
              This recording, issued 
                with the financial support of the Peter Moores Foundation, comes 
                in the usual Opera Rara quality presentation. This includes a 
                sturdy folding box outer containing a scholarly essay from Dr 
                Jeremy Commons, a performance history, a synopsis in three languages 
                and full libretto with English translation. Unlike the performance 
                of Donizetti’s Roberto Devereux, recorded by Opera Rara 
                after concert performances at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, 
                London in July 2002 (review), 
                the applause has been edited out; for which I am grateful.
                  
                  Just when Donizetti’s life seemed to be on the up, the converse 
                  was the case. Like Rossini before him, and Verdi later, he had 
                  his frustrations with The Opéra and also with Scribe the librettist 
                  during the preparations for Dom Sébastien. More importantly, 
                  whilst in Vienna the composer had shown signs of declining health 
                  and during the extensive rehearsals in Paris he was reported 
                  to have exhibited erratic behaviour and flown in to uncontrollable 
                  rages. Nonetheless the production came to fruition, and was 
                  premiered on 13 November 1843. To Donizetti’s frustration Dom 
                  Sébastien was only modestly received by the Parisian 
                  audience. A revised edition had a better reception in Vienna 
                  the following year. But by then Donizetti’s health was in serious 
                  decline and far from enjoying the fruits of his more recent 
                  successes he became increasingly ill from the effects of tertiary 
                  syphilis, known as general paralysis of the insane. He became 
                  paralysed with the consequent cerebra-spinal degeneration and 
                  was placed in an institution. For the last 17 months of his 
                  life he was paralysed and finally comatose. Dom Sébastien 
                  Roi Du Portugal was his final opera. It is a great epitaph 
                  and shows clear indications as to how the composer might have 
                  responded to the challenge of the emergence of Verdi were it 
                  not for his decline and eventual premature death at the age 
                  of fifty-one.
                Robert J Farr