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		    Gioachino ROSSINI (1792-1868)
 L’Italiana in Algeri - Comic opera in two acts (1813)
  
             
            Mustafa, Bey of Algiers – Lorenzo Regazzo (bass) 
Elvira, Mustafa’s wife – Ruth Gonzalez (soprano) 
Haly, captain of the Algerian pirates – Giulio Mastrototaro (bass) 
Lindoro, a young Italian and Mustafa’s favourite slave – Lawrence Brownlee (tenor) 
Isabella, an Italian lady – Marianna Pizzolato (alto) 
Taddeo, Isabella’s adoring companion – Bruno De Simone (buffa bass)
 Transylvania State Philharmonic Choir, Virtuoso Brunensis/Alberto Zedda
  
			rec. live, Kursaal, Bad Wildbad, Germany. 2-3, 4-5 July 2008, Jubilee performance of the 20th Rossini in Wildbad Festival in the critical edited for the Rossini Foundation, Pesaro by Azio Corghi
  
             
            NAXOS OPERA CLASSICS 8.660284-85   [68.57 + 67.17]  		  
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                 Recordings of Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri, the composer’s 
                  first full-length comic opera, are arriving thick and fast. 
                  As I write in the autumn of 2010 the work has already appeared 
                  in two re-issues featuring renowned divas as L’Italiana. Sony, 
                  in their Sony Opera House series, has given a new lease of life 
                  to the 1979 recording featuring Lucia Valentini-Terrani in the 
                  eponymous role (see review) 
                  whilst from Erato’s Opera Collection has come a revival 
                  of the admired 1980 recording with a starry cast including the 
                  formidable Marilyn Horne centre-stage. I awarded this Bargain 
                  of the Month whilst also warning that this live performance 
                  from Naxos was on the way (see review). 
                  It was recorded at Bad Wildbad in 2008 in a performance to celebrate 
                  the Bad Wildbad Festival’s twentieth anniversary. Notably it 
                  features one of the earliest recordings of new tenor find, Lawrence 
                  Brownlee, now finding illustrious fame in Rossini at New York’s 
                  Metropolitan Opera, alongside the admired Italian diva Marianna 
                  Pizzolato in the title role. Renowned Rossini scholar and conductor 
                  Alberto Zedda, nearing his eightieth year, is on the rostrum. 
                   
                   
                  This proliferation of recordings is wholly fitting as L’Italiana 
                  has had a place in the record catalogue since the earliest days 
                  of LP. It now takes its rightful place on the world’s opera 
                  stages and in the Rossini canon. The premiere in May 1813 followed 
                  on from the success, earlier in the same year, of the composer’s 
                  opera seria Tancredi at Venice’s premier theatre, the 
                  La Fenice. Immediately after that event the composer travelled 
                  to Ferrara where he presented a revised version of the work 
                  with a tragic ending more appropriate to the Voltaire original. 
                  On his return to Venice, and with his reputation swept along 
                  in an upward spiral, Rossini was in demand to write a comic 
                  opera, at very short notice, for the Teatro San Benedetto. Faced 
                  with a timetable of less than a month he decided to recycle, 
                  with some revisions, the libretto of an existing opera. He also 
                  outsourced the recitatives and Haly’s short aria in act two 
                  La femmine d’Italia (CD 2 tr.14). The recitatives and 
                  the aria are those included in the Critical Edition by Azio 
                  Corghi for the Rossini Foundation, Pesaro, which is used 
                  here.  
                   
                  The plot of L’Italiana revolves around the feisty eponymous 
                  heroine Isabella. She has been sailing in the Mediterranean, 
                  accompanied by an elderly admirer Taddeo, in search of her lover 
                  Lindoro. After her ship is wrecked, Mustafa, the Bey of Algiers, 
                  believes her the ideal replacement for his neglected wife who 
                  he intends to marry off to a captured slave. This slave happens 
                  to be Lindoro. After complicated situations involving Taddeo 
                  being awarded the honour of Kaimakan and Mustafa becoming a 
                  Pappataci, a spoof award invented by Isabella to keep him obeying 
                  her strict instructions, all ends well in a rousing finale with 
                  the Italians escaping from the clutches of the Bey.  
                   
                  In my review of the Sony recording (see review) 
                  I noted that despite a cast of native Italians, who invest the 
                  recitatives with commendable nuance, somewhere along the way 
                  Rossini’s vibrant opera with all its humour gets lost. I attributed 
                  this to Lucia Valentini-Terrani. She is somewhat heavier in 
                  tone than in her previous recording (see review) 
                  and fails to bring out the lightness and vivacity of the role. 
                  I felt this was exactly what Marilyn Horne’s interpretation 
                  on Erato, the highlights of which were reviewed by a colleague 
                  did (see review). 
                  The latter now comes complete and at bargain price.   
                  This Naxos recording may not have the starry names of the other 
                  versions referred to here. What it does have is the non-pareil 
                  experience of Alberto Zedda. Right from the outset his rhythmic 
                  vitality belies his age, whilst his experience of the composer’s 
                  music characterises this performance. Add his pacing throughout, 
                  particularly in the recitatives, and the performance as a whole 
                  is off to a flying start. At the time of the recording not many 
                  of the soloists were household names in the Rossini firmament. 
                  That has changed somewhat in the intervening years. This is 
                  particularly so with respect to Lawrence Brownlee who is now 
                  making big waves in what had been considered the fiefdom of 
                  Juan Diego Florez. Brownlee has more edge to his tone than his 
                  renowned Peruvian coeval. He gets both his major arias ((CD 
                  1 Tr.5 and CD 2 Tr.4) whilst contributing with tonal beauty 
                  to ensembles and duets where his high-flying tenor is distinctive. 
                  Whilst there is the odd squeeze to the tone he, as we now know, 
                  is a major artist in this repertoire and is in demand at the 
                  best operatic addresses. Not quite achieving that level is Marianna 
                  Pizzolato as the eponymous lady, Isabella. If Marilyn Horne 
                  comes over as though she could eat the Bey for breakfast, and 
                  without indigestion, as she manoeuvres him into the Pappataci 
                  shenanigans (CD 2 Tr.17), Pizzolato, shown as contralto but 
                  more a soft-grained mezzo to my ears, comes over as much more 
                  feminine in her wiles. In the cavatina Crude sorte! her 
                  even tone and well shaped phrases are welcome, whilst her native 
                  Italian is even more so in the recitatives. Venetian Giulio 
                  Mastrototaro is quite magnificent as the Bey infatuated with 
                  Isabella. His full-ranged resonant voice allied to vocal flexibility 
                  and ability to play with the words portends a great future in 
                  this repertoire. He is heard to benefit throughout. Bruno De 
                  Simone, an old hand in this repertoire, characterises Isabella’s 
                  elderly admirer Taddeo well whether fearing his own fate, accepting 
                  the Bey’s honours or playing as Isabella’s uncle. Giulio Mastrototaro, 
                  with a soft-grained bass, sings Haly’s aria with appropriate 
                  nuance (CD 2 Tr.14).
                   If this live performance does not displace the Warner 
                  recording, and particularly its duo of Marilyn Horne and Sam 
                  Ramey in my affections, it is without doubt one of the best 
                  of the many Rossini performances Naxos have made at Bad Wildbad. 
                  Its quality, particularly it’s conducting, can stand alongside 
                  any on record. For those irritated by the intrusion of applause 
                  in live performances, it is more frequent and enthusiastic than 
                  in those other recordings, reflecting the quality. Those who 
                  enjoy the extra vibrancy of live recordings, and are more tolerant 
                  of the intrusions, can glory in its strengths.  
                   
                  Rossinian enthusiasts will savour this performance and at the 
                  price can afford to add it to their other versions. The absence 
                  of libretto is a drawback although one is available, without 
                  translation, at the Naxos 
                  website. For those relatively new to the work, or the composer’s 
                  compositions other than Il Barbiere, in many ways the 
                  complexities of the story can better be understood from seeing 
                  a performance of which there are several versions on DVD. I 
                  review two such on this site, although in rather idiosyncratic 
                  productions. That from the Pesaro Festival of 2006 also involves 
                  Marianna Pizzolato as Isabella (see review) 
                  whilst the TDK from Paris in 1998, and also in 16:9 format, 
                  has Jennifer Larmore who gives a bravura performance decorating 
                  the vocal line with ease and without excess. The idiosyncrasies 
                  of the production do not detract from her very fine interpretation 
                  that matches that on her excellent audio recording on Teldec/Warner 
                  (see review). 
                   
                   
                  The booklet to this issue provides an excellent track-related 
                  synopsis and welcome artist profiles.  
                   
                  Robert J Farr 
                  See also reviews by John 
                  Sheppard and Gavin 
                  Dixon  
                   
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                   
                 
               
             
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