Monteverdi: Il Ritorno d’Ulisse
in Patria. Fernando Guimarães,
Jennifer Rivera, Aaron Sheehan, Leah Wool, João Fernandes, Owen McIntosh; Boston Baroque conducted by Martin
Pearlman. Linn Records. $39.99 (3 SACDs).
Dvořák: Alfred. Petra
Froese, Ferdinand von Bothmer, Felix Rumpf, Jörg Sabrowski, Peter Mikuláš;
Czech Philharmonic Choir Brno and Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Heiko Mathias Förster. ArcoDiva.
$24.99 (2 CDs).
Lehár: Paganini.
Kristiane Kaiser, Eva Liebau, Zoran Todorovich, Martin Zysset, Jörg Schörner, Philipp Gaiser; Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks and Münchner Rundfunkorchester conducted
by Ulf Schirmer. CPO. $33.99 (2 CDs).
Long unaccepted as a genuine
opera by Monteverdi, Il Ritorno d’Ulisse
in Patria (1640) has been acknowledged, since being proven authentic in the
1950s, as a work every bit as worthy as Orfeo
(1607) and L’incoronazione di Poppea
(1642). A splendid Boston Baroque recording of Martin Pearlman’s own new
edition of the opera, released by Linn Records, shows this work to be richly
textured and – thanks to fine performances by tenor Fernando Guimarães as Ulisse and mezzo-soprano
Jennifer Rivera as Penelope – emotionally trenchant. This is more than a simple
tale of revenge, which is to say that Giacomo Badoaro’s libretto retains some
of the ambiguity of books 13-23 of Homer’s Odyssey,
on which it is based. On the one hand the story of the return home at last of
an aging warrior who finds the world changed around him and his faithful wife
under unending assault by demanding suitors, this is on the other hand the tale
of a man portrayed as heroically noble and tremendously crafty – who commits an
act of extreme violence that leaves the audience pondering his legacy and the
extent of his humanity. Pearlman does a first-rate job in his edition of
filling in the many gaps in the surviving manuscript of this opera, producing a
version with fine attention to detail and full, clear appreciation of period
style. By using a continuo of seven instruments, and 13 players in
accompaniments of arias, Pearlman gives the opera a tonal richness that it does
not always possess in accounts that hew more closely to what survives of the
manuscript but not, perhaps, to Monteverdi’s original intentions and
performance plans. Pearlman uses recorders and cornetti in ritornelli, but
stops short of so expanding the ensemble as to overweight the non-verbal
portions of the score: this is an opera that belongs to the singers. And the
youthful cast here is particularly fine, with Guimarães tremendously moving
in the recognition scene with Aaron Sheehan as Telemachus, and Rivera displaying
a voice of beauty and expressive power, with an especially impressive lower
range. All the singing roles are well filled, and the orchestral playing is
outstanding throughout, as Pearlman conducts with a firm hand and precise cuing
that keeps the action moving ahead smartly while showcasing the beauties and
emotional depths of Monteverdi’s score. Since the surviving manuscript does not
fully indicate instrumentation, any edition of Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria requires guesswork, and Pearlman’s
offers a well-chosen approach throughout that always sounds right – and that
lets the emotional impact of the story come through clearly. There have been
several high-quality recordings of this opera with conductors whose knowledge
of historic performance practice is strong, including Raymond Leppard and
Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Pearlman’s stands up to any of them, and its emphasis on
the psychological depth of the opera gives this 375-year-old work considerable
resonance today, likely causing listeners to confront their own feelings about
the use of extreme violence in a good cause.
Far less known than
Monteverdi’s work, Dvořák’s
first opera, Alfred, received its
first-ever performance in its original language as recently as September 2014.
That original language is German: this is Dvořák’s only opera using a German libretto. (The opera was first
performed in 1938, translated into Czech.) The subject of Alfred the Great, the
ninth-century King of Wessex who repelled a Viking invasion, had attracted a
number of composers before Dvořák
came to it, and the actual libretto, by Karl Theodor Korner, had already been
set to music by Friedrich von Flotow in about 1835, long before Dvořák wrote Alfred. This was in 1870, when the composer was 29. He had already
composed two symphonies and a number of chamber works, including a string
quartet and quintet and a clarinet quintet, plus other vocal and orchestral music,
and had begun to establish his style firmly. Thus, Alfred already sounds like Dvořák’s better-known works, with its lush orchestration and generally
strong sense of vocal writing – although the crucial parts of Alvina (soprano Petra
Froese in the new ArcoDiva release, a live recording) and Harald (Ferdinand von
Bothmer) are quite exposed and hard to manage, causing the singers some
difficulty despite their obvious commitment to the material. Alfred is intended as a heroic opera,
although not on the massive historical scale of the works of Meyerbeer; in
structure, though, it is much more a “rescue opera” along the lines of Fidelio. Interestingly, Harald, the
villainous Viking chieftain, is a tenor, while Alfred, the hero (Felix Rumpf)
is a baritone. The two are competing not only for territory but also for
possession of Alvina, who repeatedly proclaims herself a true Briton and
refuses Harald’s offered hand despite all his threats. The opera progresses
from Alfred’s initial defeat in Act I through his rebuilding of his forces and
eventual triumph over Harald, whom he magnanimously offers to free but who
kills himself rather than accept Alfred’s generosity, which the Viking believes
would shame him. As in other rescue operas, this plot is a straightforward one,
but Dvořák works it through
skillfully, paying special attention to the Viking Gothron (baritone Jörg Sabrowski), who is uncertain that
Harald’s initial triumph will last and tries repeatedly and unsuccessfully to
warn his leader of the coming resurgence of Alfred and his forces. Alfred is a very assured work, with a
strong sense of musically supporting the dramatic story and moving it ahead at
an appropriate pace. The musical material is not highly noteworthy in itself –
there are no grand and glorious arias that listeners will want to hear again
and again – but it is well-crafted throughout and remarkably assured for the
content of a first opera. About a decade after composing the opera, Dvořák created a concert version of its
overture, now known as the Tragic
Overture, Op. Posth. B. 16a. This work – itself not performed during the
composer’s lifetime and only published in 1912 – has heretofore been the only
chance for listeners to familiarize themselves with any of the music from Alfred. The opportunity to experience
the complete work in this generally very fine performance, with Heiko Mathias Förster skillfully leading the Czech
Philharmonic Choir Brno and Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, is a most welcome
one.
The new recording of Lehár’s Paganini is welcome as well, and while this is structurally an
operetta rather than an opera, it is clearly more than just an operetta – as Richard Tauber, whose long and mutually
fruitful association with Lehár
began with this 1926 work, knew well: criticized by some of his fellow opera
singers for his involvement with this work, he indignantly remarked, “Whatever
do you mean by ‘merely operetta’? I don’t sing operetta, I sing Lehár. That’s something quite different…”
Indeed it is, with a richness and emotional strength every bit as telling and
involving as most of the works of Puccini, Lehár’s friend and longtime colleague. Paganini is not really about the historical violinist, except
incidentally: it is a story of the conflict between love and duty, of devoting
oneself to another person or to one’s artistic calling, with the latter
eventually winning out for Paganini despite the heartbreak it brings to his
inamorata, Princess Maria Anna Elisa (Kristiane Kaiser). The renunciation of
love for the sake of art is scarcely an unexplored theme, but Lehár’s lush, hyper-romantic music lends
it special intensity here, enough so that the work’s “second couple” – opera
singer Bella Giretti (Eva Liebau), mistress of Anna Elisa’s husband, and court
chamberlain Giacomo Pimpinelli (Martin Zysset) – provides genuinely welcome
relief that goes beyond the typical lighthearted comedy for which “second
couples” are usually responsible in operetta. All these singers do fine jobs in
their roles, and solo violinist Henry Raudales handles the many Paganini-like
violin passages in the score with real élan. The title role, though, as sung by
Zoran Todorovich, is a touch disappointing: Todorovich’s voice comes perilously
close to cracking in higher passages, and although his lower range is strong, he
never produces the full-throated warmth and expressive intensity that made this
part such a plum one for Tauber. He is certainly a serviceable Paganini, but
scarcely a great one. The presentation of the recording is serviceable as well,
with an unusually detailed and clear synopsis that very much helps in following
the action but with, as occurs constantly in these CPO operetta releases, no
full libretto and no link to one online – a particularly distressing omission
in the world of operetta, where the dialogue carries forward so much of the
action. Something is also unconscionably sloppy in the timing list for the second
CD, with multiple incorrect and reversed timing indications. On the other hand,
Ulf Schirmer, a first-rate conductor of repertoire like this, paces the
performance with his usual excellence and attentiveness to musical and dramatic
detail. And the Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks and Münchner Rundfunkorchester show themselves yet again to be among
the best performers of this repertoire to be found anywhere. Paganini has remained popular in parts
of Europe but has not held the boards worldwide, partly because Die Lustige Witwe continues to
overshadow everything else by Lehár
and partly because the very elements that make this an operatic work make it
difficult for many audiences to figure out how to respond to it. Hearing it on
CD shows that the only response needed is one from the heart.
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