Vivaldi: Orlando Furioso (1714
version). Riccardo Novaro, baritone; Romina Basso, mezzo-soprano; Gaëlle Arquez, Teodora Gheorghiu and
Roberta Mameli, sopranos; Delphine Galou, contralto; David DQ Lee,
countertenor; Modo Antiquo conducted by Federico Maria Sardelli. Naïve. $33.99
(2 CDs).
André-Ernest-Modeste Grétry:
Le Magnifique. Emiliano Gonzalez Toro, Jeffrey Thompson and Karim Sulayman,
tenors; Elizabeth Calleo and Marguerite Krull, sopranos; Douglas Williams,
bass-baritone; Randall Scarlata, baritone; Opera Lafayette conducted by Ryan
Brown. Naxos. $9.99.
Maria Callas Sings Verdi: Studio
Recordings 1954-56. Dynamic. $14.99.
One of the most
interesting new operas to have come along recently is a very old one: Vivaldi’s
Orlando Furioso. This is not the
well-known 1727 opera – it is one of the same title, on the same subject, with
the same libretto, but dating to 1714. The
rediscovery of the opera this year was a major musical event and a great
rarity: works this important simply do not “go missing” for 270 years after a
composer’s death. But this one did,
although “missing” is not quite right: the score was held among Vivaldi’s
papers in the Biblioteca Nazionale in Turin, Italy, but it did not have a
composer’s name on it and was wrongly considered a revision of an opera attributed
to the little-known Giovanni Alberto Ristori.
It was only very recently that Federico Maria Sardelli identified it as
being by Vivaldi. Once the authorship was confirmed by other Vivaldi scholars,
the work received its modern première
in July and was promptly recorded as part of the ongoing Vivaldi Edition from
Naïve. One of the ironies of the rediscovery is that it has long been known
that an Orlando opera was performed
in 1714 at the Teatro San Angelo in Venice and was such a big hit that it ran
for 40 performances – impressive for the time. But no one knew exactly what that
Orlando was. The theater’s directors
were Vivaldi and his father, who was also a musician, but, again, no one made
the connection, or had any reason to do so. Now there is reason aplenty, and the
1714 Orlando Furioso, with more than
a dozen arias never heard before, is available for Vivaldi scholars and all
interested listeners, in Sardelli’s meticulous reconstruction and with him
directing the ensemble Modo Antiquo. For
all the understandable excitement that the rediscovery of this work has
generated, it will not overwhelm most modern listeners or fill them with
wonder. The story is the well-known one from
Ludovico Ariosto’s poem and Vivaldi’s later Orlando
– a tale of love, magic and madness, with the spurned, jealous knight Orlando
going mad when his beloved Angelica weds another, but eventually recovering his
reason and forgiving Angelica and her husband, Medoro. The upbeat conclusion, however, is missing in
the 1714 Orlando, because only two
acts have survived, the second ending with Orlando going mad. The third act is, at least at this point,
nowhere to be found – one reason this recording, as fascinating as it is, will
remain outside the mainstream and be of most interest to Vivaldi
specialists.
The 1714 Orlando libretto by Grazio Braccioli is
the same one that Vivaldi revisited in 1727.
What is not the same in the earlier composition, and in fact is
surprising in light of Vivaldi’s later works and the usual approach of Baroque
opera, is that the role of Orlando is sung by a baritone (Riccardo Novaro), not
a contralto or mezzo-soprano, as in the later piece. Structurally, the 1714 Orlando follows the typical approach of opera seria and of Vivaldi’s later version, with the action carried
forward through recitatives while the arias are used to comment on what has
happened and give characters’ reactions to events. The music is less advanced, less developed,
than that in the later opera, but it has considerable beauty and commendable
clarity – Vivaldi composed The Four
Seasons at about the same time as the earlier Orlando, although there is no musical connection between the
works. The excellent Naïve recording is
and will remain a specialty item, perhaps, and may be of greater interest to
scholars than to music lovers in general – but this Orlando is a wonderful work on its own terms, not as grand as
Vivaldi’s later version but filled with beautiful music, expressive arias and a
fascinatingly different take on Ariosto’s poem and Braccioli’s libretto. It is a curiosity, yes, but an absolutely
fascinating one.
Le Magnifique is a curiosity, too, and a rediscovery of a different
kind, written in the same century as Vivaldi’s two Orlando versions but partaking of an entirely different
sensibility. This 1773 opera, to a
libretto by Michel-Jean Sedaine that is based on a tale by La Fontaine, is very
much of the Classical era, during which André-Ernest-Modeste Grétry
(1741-1813) was considered to be France’s greatest composer of opera-comique. The story line will be
entirely familiar to anyone who knows Rossini’s or Paisiello’s The Barber of Seville, whose source
dates to the same time period: Pierre Beaumarchais’ Le Barbier de Séville was first performed in 1775. In Le Magnifique, a cruel, older tutor
named Aldobrandin (Jeffrey Thompson) is determined to marry the young Clémentine (Elizabeth Calleo) who has been
entrusted to his care. But Octave (Emiliano Gonzalez Toro), known as Le
Magnifique, figures out how to wrest the girl away from her unwanted suitor and
win her for himself. The centerpiece scene here is not a shaving distraction
but Aldobrandin’s agreement to give Octave 15 minutes to speak with the girl
provided that he, Aldobrandin, is present; and it turns out that the tutor has
commanded the girl to keep silent, so Octave cleverly asks Clémentine to drop the rose she is holding if
she accepts his proposal – which she does; and he thereafter maneuvers matters
to the lovers’ mutual satisfaction and Aldobrandin’s discomfiture. Grétry’s programmatic overture, a rarity for its time, sets up the story
nicely, and the music of the opera – which runs 80 minutes and which Naxos has
managed to fit onto a single CD – propels the plot along neatly, with the love
music being especially expressive. Opera
Lafayette has successfully revived quite a few long-unperformed operas, and
does itself proud once again with this sparkling recording. Ryan Brown leads the troupe with a sure hand,
and if Le Magnifique is scarcely a work of major importance, it is one
with many pleasures and a catchy, well-constructed score that is well worth
rediscovering – or discovering in the first place.
There is nothing “undiscovered” about Maria Callas, and
therefore nothing particularly surprising in the new Verdi recording from Dynamic’s
Historical Series. Nor is this 58-minute
CD likely to please today’s opera enthusiasts completely. The studio recordings here were made from
1954 to 1956, when Callas (who had recently lost a great deal of weight) was
nearing the height of her fame but was not at the pinnacle of her performing
ability from a strictly musical standpoint (her acting was another
matter). The sound quality is all right
but on the dull side, and the selections are ones that are already widely
available from Callas and many other singers.
There are certainly some significant high points here, including “Caro
nome” from Rigoletto and “Ritorna vincitor!” from Aida,
but the excerpts are very much of the “greatest hits” type: three arias each
from La Forza del Destino and Un Ballo in Maschera, two apiece
from Il Trovatore and Aida, and the single one from Rigoletto. The great performers of the 1940s and 1950s
are being heard more often on CDs now, and that is in many ways a good thing,
but the quality of recording has advanced so much – as has the quality of opera
singing – that performances that seemed exceptional 60 years ago now seem
interesting but lacking in the punch that modern ones deliver. It is worth remembering that Callas was a
superstar not only because of her voice but also because of her theatrical
presence and her stormy personal life.
Those latter two characteristics have faded with time, and while the
voice is still worth hearing – it is not a beautiful voice, but she used it
beautifully – it no longer seems the ne plus ultra that it once
did. This Callas collection gets a (+++)
rating and will be of interest mainly to those who have not yet heard “La
Divina” and are interested in how she handled some Verdi standards at a time
when her vocal abilities were not quite at their peak but were still very much
a force to be reckoned with.
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