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            Gioachino ROSSINI 
              (1792-1868)  
              Ermione - Opera in Two Acts (1819)  
                
              Ermione, rejected lover of Pirro and loved by Orestes - Carmen Giannattasio 
              (soprano); Andromaca, widow of Hector and a prisoner of Pirro who 
              is infatuated by her - Patricia Bardon (mezzo); Orestes, son of 
              Agamemnon - Colin Lee (tenor); Pirro, King of Epirus, betrothed 
              to Ermione - Paul Nillon (tenor); Pylade, companion of Orestes - 
              Bülent Bezdüz (tenor); Fenicio, tutor to Pyrrhus - Graeme 
              Broadbent (bass); Cleone - Rebecca Bottone (soprano); Cefisa - Victoria 
              Simmonds (soprano); Attalo - Loic Felix (tenor)  
              Geoffrey Mitchell Choir; London Philharmonic Orchestra/David Parry 
               
              rec. Henry Wood Hall, London, March 2009  
                
              OPERA RARA ORC42 [64.47+69.35]   
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                   As I write, 2010 is becoming quite a year for Rossini 
                  lovers. It has amongst other things seen the staging of his 
                  lesser-known works or their appearance on CD and DVD, often 
                  making them readily available for the first time. This is particularly 
                  true of the nine opera seria that the composer wrote for the 
                  Teatro San Carlo in Naples beginning with Elisabetta, Regina 
                  d’Inghilterra, (Opera 
                  Rara ORC22) the composer’sfifteenth 
                  opera in October 1815 and concluding with Zelmira (Opera 
                  Rara ORC27) his thirty-third in February 1822. This 
                  Opera Rara issue of Ermione, Rossini’stwenty-seventh 
                  and the sixth in the Naples sequence, comescomplete with 
                  full background to the opera as well as a libretto and translation 
                  in English. This recording and performance can stand alongside 
                  the first staged performances of Armida in both Britain 
                  (see review) 
                  and the USA as being particularly significant and welcome.  
                     
                  The nine Naples opera seria came about as a result of the recognition 
                  by Barbaja, the powerful impresario of the Royal Theatres of 
                  Naples, of Rossini’s pre-eminence among his contemporaries. 
                  This had become even more evident after the premieres of Tancrediand 
                  L’Italiana in Algeri in Venice in 1813. These launched 
                  Rossini on an unstoppable career that saw him become the most 
                  prestigious opera composer of his time. Barbarja summoned Rossini 
                  to Naples and offered him the musical directorship of the Royal 
                  Theatres, the San Carlo and Fondo. The proposal appealed to 
                  Rossini for several reasons. First, his annual fee was generous 
                  and guaranteed. Secondly, and equally important, unlike Rome 
                  and Venice Naples had a professional orchestra. Rossini saw 
                  this as a considerable advantage as he aspired to push the boundaries 
                  of his opera composition into more adventurous directions. Under 
                  the terms of the contract, Rossini was to provide two operas 
                  each year for Naples whilst being permitted to compose occasional 
                  works for other cities. The composer tended to push the limits 
                  of this contract and in the first two years he composed no fewer 
                  than five operas for other venues, with Il Barbiere di Siviglia 
                  being among four for Rome  
                     
                  Although not all of Rossini’s nine Naples opera seria 
                  were outstanding successes, only Ermione was considered 
                  to have been an out and out failure. It survived for only five 
                  performances and was then not heard again until concert performances 
                  in Sienna in 1977 and Padua in 1986. The latter seems to have 
                  stimulated the Erato recording of the same year, both 
                  featuring Cecilia Gasdia in the eponymous role, Ernesto Palacio 
                  as Pirro and Chris Merritt as Oreste; Claudio Scimone is the 
                  conductor (Warner 
                  2564 68751-9). The emergence of a provisional Critical Edition 
                  by Patricia Brauner and Philip Gossett provided the basis for 
                  the staged performance at the Pesaro Rossini Festival in 1987. 
                  This featured Montserrat Caballé as Ermione and Marilyn 
                  Horne as Andromaca. It too was a disaster. Gossett in an excoriating 
                  criticism of both conductor, for lack of preparation, and the 
                  soprano diva for mangling the score (Divas and Scholars. 
                  Chicago 2006 pp 6-7) has continued to maintain the work to be 
                  “One of the finest works in the history of 19thcentury 
                  Italian opera.” Given Gossett’s eminence as 
                  a scholar in this field this is a considerable statement.  
                     
                  After the 1987 Pesaro staging, performances followed elsewhere. 
                  Most significant were those in Rome, San Francisco, and Buenos 
                  Aires as well as at the 1995 and 1996 Glyndebourne Festivals 
                  and all of which involved Anna Caterina Antonacci in the eponymous 
                  role. Her performance in that latter production, along with 
                  an admired cast, is available on DVD (review) 
                  and does much to confirm Gossett’s view as does this present 
                  recording. As to the reason for the initial failure, many have 
                  been suggested. Stendhal, in his famous Life of Rossini 
                  (1824) suggests that the failure was due to the characters spending 
                  much of their time on stage ranting at each other. More likely 
                  is the view of contemporary scholars who, in the context of 
                  Rossini’s operatic oeuvre at the time, view its structure 
                  as several steps too far for the Naples audience of 1819. In 
                  his introductory essay to this issue Jeremy Commons (p.18) states 
                  “Ermione is, quite simply, the most experimental 
                  opera Rossini ever wrote; an opera in which he broke down the 
                  accepted musical structures of the day.”There 
                  are few formal arias or even duets; the chorus or other individuals 
                  often interrupt those that are present. Of those present, notable 
                  are Orestes’ cavatina Reggia abboritta (CD 1 tr.12), 
                  the duet between Orestes and Ermione Amati? Ah si mio ben! 
                  at the start of the act 1 finale (CD 2 trs.2-3) and the duet 
                  between Ermione and Pirro (CD 1 trs.8-10). Perhaps the most 
                  notable however, is Ermione’s recitative Che feci? 
                  Dove son? and the following andantino Parmi che ad ogni 
                  istante (CD 2 tr.20) in the finale to the opera as she regrets 
                  her hasty decision to persuade Orestes to kill Pirro and which 
                  is followed by the dramatic duet with Orestes when she berates 
                  him for not recognising her love for Pirro (tr.21).  
                     
                  Ermione is based on Racine’s Andromaque of 1667, 
                  the first great tragedy of Jean Racine and regarded as a pinnacle 
                  of French drama. The librettist, Leone Tottola, was true to 
                  the origins and there is no attempt at a happy ending as was 
                  often the contemporary practice and expectation. Despite these 
                  factors the score has many of Rossini’s hallmarks of melody 
                  as well as the drama of his opera seria. What any performance 
                  must have, and gets here, is vibrancy and momentum. For this 
                  the conductor, David Parry, deserves the highest praise. To 
                  this must be added the contribution of the chorus who play a 
                  vital role in the evolving drama. The Geoffrey Mitchell Choir, 
                  a presence on many Opera Rara recordings, bring an involvement 
                  and commitment to the performance of the highest standard in 
                  repertoire that will be unknown to them. Add a first class recording 
                  quality and only the accomplishments of the soloists remain 
                  before we can claim an outstanding performance.  
                     
                  The soloists at the premiere and abbreviated run in Naples those 
                  years ago included the redoubtable, if declining in skill, Isabella 
                  Colbran. She was joined by the two famous tenors on the San 
                  Carlo roster, Andrea Nozzari as Pirro and Giovanni David as 
                  Oreste. Both were noted for their formidable techniques; the 
                  former having a somewhat baritonal timbre whilst the latter’s 
                  ability in florid singing was perhaps only surpassed by the 
                  incomparable Rubini. In the Warner recording, Ernesto Palacio, 
                  nowadays famous as the teacher of Juan Diego Florez, can be 
                  recognised by his soft-grained timbre and sensitive phrasing 
                  whilst Chris Merritt, on best vocal behaviour, sings Orestes. 
                  On the basis of the casting in the original Naples performances 
                  I would have expected the roles to be reversed. In this performance 
                  Pirro is sung quite superbly by Paul Nillon who inflects his 
                  singing with passion and more beauty of tone and phrase than 
                  I have often heard from him. Colin Lee, sings Orestes. Lee is 
                  often the back-up to the renowned Florez in the high tessitura 
                  of Rossini performances at the major addresses, perhaps getting 
                  to sing at the end of the run after opening night and the headlines. 
                  Well, that is changing pretty fast with his now being carded 
                  as Tonio for the whole of La Fille du Régiment 
                  at Covent Garden in 2011. He has already featured alongside 
                  Florez in the recent La Donna del Lago in Paris as well 
                  as singing the role of Arturo in the Metropolitan Opera’s 
                  relay of Lucia di Lammermoor, now available on DVD. As 
                  well as having the necessary vocal flexibility, he fields more 
                  body of vocal tone than his Peruvian coeval. This enables him 
                  to invest significant characterisation in his interpretation 
                  without distortion of his singing or vocal line. This quality 
                  is particularly appropriate and appreciated in the act one duet 
                  with Ermione as noted above.  
                     
                  Carmen Giannattasio’s warm soprano scales the vocal challenges 
                  of the role. She conveys Ermione’s various complex emotions 
                  to near perfection. Her singing in the act two finale is of 
                  the highest standard conveying the character’s over-wrought 
                  state prior to her collapse. She does this significantly better 
                  than the leaner-toned Cecilia Gasdia on the rival set; overall 
                  the role fits her like a glove. Certainly her contribution is 
                  the most significant in a generally distinguished group of soloists. 
                  That is not to understate the contribution of the tenors mentioned 
                  or that of the third tenor, Bülent Bezdüz as Pylade. 
                  His timbre is distinct from that of his colleagues whilst conveying 
                  the character well. Graeme Broadbent as Fenicio sings sonorously 
                  in the lower register, more a Zaccaria in waiting; higher up 
                  the scale he is a little less convincing. I greatly admired 
                  Dublin-born Handel specialist Patricia Bardon as Malcolm in 
                  Opera Rara’s recording of La Donna del Lago (see 
                  review). 
                  I find her distinctive low mezzo vocally firm, tonally even 
                  and certainly expressive. Seeing and hearing her as Carmen earlier 
                  this year for Welsh National Opera (see review) 
                  confirmed my impression. If she does not quite manage to reach 
                  the heights of her performance in the earlier Opera Rara Rossini, 
                  recorded live at the Edinburgh festival in 2006, hers is still 
                  a worthy and well-sung interpretation (CD 1 tr.3 and CD 2 trs.10-12). 
                  All the lesser roles are well taken with distinctive vocal qualities 
                  that make following the libretto easy in the various concerted 
                  passages.   
                     
                  The recording is clear and well balanced, far preferable to 
                  the recessed sound on the Warner. Although the Warner performance 
                  is at bargain price the presence of the full libretto and translation 
                  is vital in this opera of complex ensembles. Add the extra ten 
                  or so minutes of music in the Ricordi edition and this recording 
                  and performance is a clear winner. It’s yet another success 
                  for Opera Rara as they work their way through the nine Neapolitan 
                  opera seria.  
                     
                  Robert J Farr    
                 
                                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                
               
             
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