A Turtle Dove of a Rococo Opera

One of the unexpected highlights of our visit to Malta was a performance of ‘Zanaida’, an opera by Johann Christian Bach, the youngest son of Johann Sebastian, at the Manoel Theatre, La Valletta.

I had never realized that Malta has one of the finest baroque theatres in the world quite on a par with those at Drottningholm, Prague and Bologna. Every year it holds a festival of baroque (and rococo) music.

To hear an eighteenth century opera in a theatre dating from 1731 on a tiny island in the Mediterranean was absolutely irresistible!

The Manoel theatre was commissioned by Antonio Manoel de Vilhena, Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, “for an honest recreation of the people”. This motto was inscribed on the main entrance of the building and it’s still there to this day.  In the next half of the century, the theatrical repertoire expanded to include operas by Johann Adolf Hasse, Niccolò Piccini and Baldassare Galuppi.

The theatre suffered a period of decline in the nineteenth century when the new opera house (mentioned in my previous Maltese posts) was built and during the Second World War it became a collection center for the victims of the bombing of the Axis forces.

After the destruction of the Royal Opera House by enemy bombings in 1942, the Manoel Theatre was restored to its ancient splendour.  The adjacent 18th century Palazzo Bonnici was added to the theatre and this is where the bar and ticket office are located.

The theatre is not very large. It has 623 seats and an oval-shaped auditorium which is built entirely of gilded wood and with a beautiful painted ceiling.   We managed to book seats near the top tier (using the internet facility of my now historic Kindle which actually worked there, unlike Italy and the UK).

Our seats were a little like standing at the edge of a cliff; it was a slightly uneasy experience, but the stage was fully visible and when the opera began I was utterly bowled over by the theatre’s acoustics. They were so clear, so immediate – an absolutely seductive experience.

‘Zanaida’ was premiered in London at the King’s theatre in 1763 and was J. C. Bach’s second opera composed for that city. It was so successful that Johann Christian decided to make his home in London where he is buried in St Pancras old churchyard (see my post on that at https://longoio3.com/2017/12/03/dove-si-fidanzarano-percy-bysshe-e-mary-shelley/).

However, the score of Zanaida was lost until it turned up in someone’s library in 2010. In this respect do check your own library to see if there are any lost opera manuscripts lurking there. I examined my own modest collection and, lo and behold, an ancient  libretto of an opera by Piccini (not to be confused with Puccini!) turned up. So there!

Based on political and sentimental intrigues between Persia and Turkey ‘Zanaida’ capitalizes on the vogue for oriental subjects which produced such masterpieces as Mozart’s ‘Abduction for the Seraglio’ and is based on ‘Siface’ by the great opera librettist Pietro Metastasio.

Turkish Princess Zanaida is an ideal of opera seria feminine tolerance who eventually finds herself in the midst of pitiless psychopaths who almost execute her. The music, however, is certainly not violent but beautifully expressive with gorgeous arias and elegant minuets. There is a particularly stunning virtuoso piece called ‘Tortorella abbandonata’ (‘abandoned turtle dove’) specially composed by Johann Christian for soprano Anna de Amicis. It has one of the first obbligato uses of a new instrument in that century, the clarinet. You can hear it here performed by Sara Hershkowitz from the Opera Fuoco production we attended:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHQjKWRVcmo

I found out that Zanaida is also appropriately the name of a dove. The Zanaida dove is native to the West Indies and the Yucatán peninsula. The name, which is attributed to the species by French ornithologist Carlo Luciano Bonaparte, commemorates his wife Zénaïde Bonaparte, daughter of Giuseppe Bonaparte and Julie Clary.

Incidentally, why is the turtle dove described with the word of an animal to which it bears absolutely no resemblance? It’s because that word actually derives from the bird’s soft ‘turr turr’ call (in Italian ‘tortora’). Biblical references, like the ‘Song of Songs’ to turtle doves and the birds’ strong pair bonds have turned them into symbols of devoted love….just like the sentiments expressed in the opera aria ‘Tortorella abbandonata’.

The full performance of ‘Zanaida’ that we heard is recorded live here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEwmNf0Edn8

Parenthetically, Anna de Amicis went on to sing in the sixteen-year-old Mozart’s opera ‘Lucio Silla’ which we too heard in a concert performance at London’s Spitalfields church festival conducted by the late Richard Hickox. When Wolfgang wrote poignantly about Bach’s death in one of his letters it was clearly Johann Christian and not Johann Sebastian he was referring to. How wonderful that Anna was able to premiere works by both J. C. Bach and Mozart!

The performers in Malta were members of ‘Opera Fuoco’, a French lyric ensemble founded by David Stern in 2003 and dedicated to the performance of operatic repertoire from the beginning of the 18th to the end of the 19th centuries. I could not fault them in any way. The production was faithful to eighteenth century practice, including appropriate contemporary costumes and the use of baroque hand gestures to express emotions. I get rather fed up when performances of eighteenth century opera are historically informed as to the use of period instruments and singing but completely philistine as far as pretentious modern costumes and scenery are concerned, just to please the egos of pompous producers.

It was quite an experience, after the excellent performance, to walk out into the mild winter evening of La Valletta and find our way to that hotel which we always had some difficulty in locating. We truly had had an honest recreation.

Tripletta

Tripletta non di calcio ma di musica questa volta. Londra respira musica e l’altro pomeriggio abbiamo goduto tre concerti, due dei quali gratuiti.

La Chiesa di Saint Margaret Lothbury, tra altre opere d’arte,  possiede uno squisito dossale.

FSCN0505_1~2.JPG

La chiesa, a dirimpetto della Banca d’Inghilterra, è stata la nostra meta in altre occasioni per i suoi svariati concerti d’organo suonati sul magnifico strumento George Pike England del 1801.

DSCN0429~2.JPG

L’organista principale, Richard Townend, porta il suo sapere con leggerezza. Inoltre, è un grande viaggiatore e visita organi in tutto il mondo. Un sua visita in Svezia ha condotto all’invito del noto Bo Ingelberg di Linkoping per suonare il seguente programma di musica scandinava.

DSCN0427~2.JPG

Buxtehude, il grande maestro di Bach, sebbene considerato Danese, nacque a Helsingborg, parte della Svezia.  Gli altri compositori, ammetto, non mi erano conosciuti. Però, le loro musiche, in particolare il pezzo di Roman, erano molto attraenti.

Dopo il concerto abbiamo goduto un tè al sole nel giardino della chiesa.

La guglia è stata recentemente restaurata alla sua originale gloria luccicante.

Alle cinque ci siamo trovati nella gloriosa cattedrale Di Saint Paul’s per partecipare a ‘evensong’, i vespri della Chiesa anglicana.

Questo rito, più di ogni altro, rivela l’assoluta superiorità dell’esecuzione della musica religiosa inglese.

Ecco il ‘order of service ‘:

Il compositore del consueto Magnificat e del Nunc Dimittis era John Mundy (1555-1630) uno dei grandi della musica tudor.

Si potrebbe far critica che evensong è un rito religioso e non un concerto. Però, un canto così sublime sposa musica e preghiera in un’unità veramente senza pari.

Il gran finale della nostra tripletta fu la rappresentazione, alla Royal Opera House, del Andrea Chenier del pugliese Umberto Giordano.

Con Chenier, cantato da Roberto Alagna, e Maddalena di Coigny cantata da forse una delle più splendenti voci dei nostri tempi, Sondra Radvanovsky, e con una splendida produzione di David McVicar posso dichiarare senza alcun dubbio che questa serata all’opera di Londra rimarrà nella memoria per sempre.

Eseguita per la prima volta il 28 marzo 1896 alla Scala, poco più di un mese dopo la prima della Boheme di Puccini al Regio di Torino, Andre Chenier rimane per me su un livello musicale pressoché alla pari del maestro Lucchese. Certi brani, in particolare, ‘la mamma morta’ sono veramente travolgenti.

Il pubblico inglese, generalmente più riservato di quello italiano, era in delirio a questo punto…e con ogni ragione.

Viaggi sonori

avvolgono i sensi

ineffabili.

Zeffirelli’s ‘Inferno’ Re-Created in Florence

I’ve mentioned Franco Zeffirelli’s foundation and museum in Florence in my post at https://longoio3.com/2018/05/06/an-invitation-from-franco-zeffirelli/

Last October we made a return visit to Florence as we hadn’t yet seen the museum.

Where to start with Franco’s achievements? In operatic scenography (Callas in ‘Tosca’)? In theatrical productions (‘Taming of the Shrew’ with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton)? In films (‘Tea with Mussolini’ with Judi Dench)?

I have my favourites (‘Jesus of Nazareth’, whose film sets we stumbled upon during our Tunisian honeymoon forty years ago),

‘Filumena Marturano’, a West End production with Joan Plowright, Larry Olivier’s widow, and the rehearsals of which we witnessed personally at the Italian Institute with the master himself, my father-in-law’s (the institute’s secretary-general from its inception) good friend, and, particularly, ‘Romeo and Juliet’, which had me transfixed as a teenager.

DSCN3348_1

There’s an excellent web site for Franco’s museum at

https://www.fondazionefrancozeffirelli.com/en/the-museum/

The immense achievement in theatre, opera and cinema of this genius, who was born in Vinci and is a direct descendant of Leonardo himself, is fully displayed in the fascinating museum which occupies the San Firenze baroque complex formerly occupied by the city’s tribunal. Here is a selection of costumes, photographs and posters showing the breadth of the master’s achievements.

The palazzo’s setting is spectacular and there is a very convivial bar and a cortile to relax in after your visit.

For me the most fascinating section was that dealing with the unfinished 1972 project  of making a film of Dante’s ‘Inferno’. Sandra was involved in typing the scripts and the maestro’s scenic directions. But why was the project abandoned? Zeffirelli needed special effects which, although, today, are common place in any US type blockbuster, were then not yet available. The digital revolution was in its infancy and the master’s imagination could then not be realised in cinematographic form.

These are the preparatory sketches for the imagined masterpiece.

There are so many artists in history whose vision is far ahead of any technology that could achieve it. Zeffirelli is one of them. And this is the astounding re-creation of these sketches in the film which climaxes this very special museum. Of course, you have to see it in its full size in the splendid room which displays it, to fully appreciate the unrealised masterpiece.

 

 

 

Parliament’s a Load of Fairies!

 

The Lucchesia is pretty good at supplying those essential supplies even the most cosmopolitan brits yearn for. Sri Lankan shops will supply curry powder, Marmite and ginger beer; the Irish pub near Lucca station builds up a mean Guinness and, in the musical field, a repertoire ranging from last year’s live Stones concert to Colombini’s outbursts of Elgar also greatly helps to appease Anglo-Saxon longings. Fish ‘n Chips regularly appear on Barga’s summer menu and, if there were still lapses, Viareggio’s English shop will fill most gaps in one’s stomach.

However, what is desperately missing in Italy is live performances of Gilbert and Sullivan. Strange, because in 1898 the Mikado, with its libretto adapted by Gustavo Macchi and music published by Ricordi, was shipped across to Florence’s Teatro della Pergola and scored a great success, one which was repeated in the theatres of Genoa, Rome, Palermo, Naples, Milan and Cremona.

Of course, not all Italians were fully able to understand the whimsical subtleties of English and, particularly, Gilbertian humour, although the audience appreciated the English avoidance of French operetta’s outre’ situations, but the Mikado made a particular impact on Puccini who remembered its delightful evocation of an exotic world when he came to compose his own masterpiece of Japonerie, ‘Madama Butterfly’, less than ten years later.

English National Opera’s production of another Gilbert and Sullivan masterpiece, ‘Iolanthe’, where the world of faeries collides with the House of Peers with devastatingly hilarious effect, is set to be an unforgettable success in the same manner as Jonathan Miller’s Mikado production, which we enjoyed some years ago. Happily, no update here is attempted and the operetta sits faerily in a Richard Dadd world of kaleidoscopically flimsy colours, giant flowers, anthropomorphic beasts and a thousand and one other comic touches which it would be unfair to disclose to those unfortunate enough not have yet seen it. It’s just so sad that designer Paul Brown did not live long enough to enjoy his wonderful scenario.

 

 

G and S have suffered unduly at the hands of poor amateur productions. To experience a first class professional performance under Timothy Henry’s baton, with such gorgeous actor-voices as Samantha Price’s, revealed once more to me how fortunate Britain is in having one of the finest operetta traditions in the world and, in Arthur Sullivan, a composer of the highest order, both in serious and light music. What a truly fabulous evening we enjoyed at England’s wonderful National Opera!

Not forgetting, of course, that ENO’s home is the unparalleled splendour of the capital’s largest theatre and Frank Matcham’s masterpiece dating from 1904, the London Coliseum:

 

 

 

A Swallow Starts to Fly

It’s a hundred years ago that the swallow first flew. I am, of course, referring to Puccini’s swallow, ‘La Rondine’, his unduly neglected semi-operetta which was first performed at Montecarlo (the French one…not the one near us in the Lucchesia).

We attended a performance of this truly delightful piece at the open-air theatre by Puccini’s lakeside house at Torre Del Lago this July 15th.

In the theatre’s exhibition space, among other items, there was an amazing paper sculpture which somehow reminded one of those terracotta warriors.

There was a brisk wind blowing – a ‘libeccio’ – and the Apuan Mountains and the lake could be seen crystal clear against a brilliant sunset.

It was rightly a dramatic opening to a great evening. Throughout the performance we could hear the waves lapping against the shore. It was not, however, unduly a distracting sound and the wind did wonders with the female singers’ dresses!

Up to the wrenching finale when a mini-Traviata like situation (without the heavy bits) is enacted there’s one gorgeous melody after another. Act two represents a Bohème-like café Momus scenario with lively interchanges between courting couples, a great chorus and some delicate choreography.

All I can say about the performance at Torre del Lago is that it was one of the most perfect productions I have heard there for some time. The sets and costumes were so appropriate to a nineteenth century Parisian scene and the descending circular staircase was a scenic inspiration.  The singing was on the highest level, particularly the two main protagonists Donata D’Annunzio Lombardi as Magda and Leonardo Caimi as Ruggero. The conducting by Beatrice Venezi (still not many women conductors in Italy) was most sensitive.

Every time I attend a performance of ‘la Rondine’ (which is not too often since it is one of the least given of the maestro’s works) my estimation of this opera/operetta increases. There’s so much of Puccini’s heart in it that it could only come out of a fraught extra-marital love affair (which we know now it does – with a German baroness Puccini was secretly meeting up with). If you are lucky to attend the next performance of la Rondine at the lakeside do listen out for the exquisite quartet Bevo al tuo fresco sorriso, between Magda, Ruggero, Lisette and Prunier in act two and Ruggiero’s aria:  Dimmi che vuoi seguirmi alla mia casa in act three.

It’s ‘Il sogno di Doretta’, however, which melts my heart every time I hear it. Due to the normal restrictions on taking photos or recordings at a live performance I can only present you with one of my favourite recordings: Renée Fleming

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNt3iiqjLww

Who does not know ‘La Rondine’ does not truly know Puccini!

This is the cast list of the performance we attended.

LA RONDINE

 

Production Plamen Kartaloff
Conductor  Beatrice Venezi
Magda Donata D’Annunzio Lombardi 
Lisette  Elisabetta Zizzo
Ruggero  Leonardo Caimi 
Prunier  Alberto Petricca
Rambaldo  Davide Mura
Périchaud  Alessandro Biagiotti
Gobin  Emmanuel Lombardi
Crébillon  Claudio Ottino
Yvette Anna Paola Troiano
Bianca  Anna Russo 
Suzy Donatella De Caro 

 

 

Do check out future performances at the festival’s web site at

Edizione 2017

 

PS Here is an excerpt from the performance we attended, courtesy of NOI TV. You can see how windy it was that night!