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            Gioachino ROSSINI 
              (1792-1868)  
              Otello - Dramma in three acts. (1816)  
                
              Otello, an African in the service of Venice - Michael Spyres (tenor); 
              Desdemona, the lover and secret wife of' Otello - Jessica Pratt 
              (soprano); Elmiro, Desdemona’s father - Ugo Guagliardo (bass); 
              Rodrigo, Desdemona's unsuccessful suitor - Filippo Adami (tenor); 
              Iago, Otello’s secret enemy - Giorgio Trucco (tenor); Emilia, 
              Desdemona's confidante - Geraldine Chauvet (mezzo); The Doge, Sean 
              Spyres (tenor); Lucio, Otello's confidant - Hugo Colin (tenor); 
              A Gondolier, Leonardo Cortellazzi (tenor)  
              Transylvania State Philharmonic Chpoir, Cluj.  
              Virtuosi Brunensis/Antonio Fogliani  
              rec. live, Kursaal, Bad Wildbad, Germany, 12, 17, 19 July 2008 during 
              the 20th Rossini in Wildbad Festival in the new revised edition 
              after the autograph and contemporary manuscripts by Florian Bauer 
               
                
              NAXOS OPERA CLASSICS 8.660275-76 [68.56 + 79.34]   
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                  Most people know Rossini by his comic opera Il Barbiere di 
                  Siviglia premiered in 1816 and never out of the repertoire 
                  throughout its life to the present day. Despite being the most 
                  famous opera composer of his times the same cannot be said of 
                  the other of his thirty-eight operatic compositions. This is 
                  particularly so in respect of his serious operas (opera seria) 
                  and non-more so than those he composed during his time as music 
                  director of the Royal Theatres of Naples, a coveted post. Changing 
                  fashions that followed the emergence of first Verdi, then Puccini 
                  and the verismo composers, contributed to this. Also important 
                  were the consequential changes in the character of voices that 
                  came into being to sing these latter works. This in turn led 
                  to the decline, until the last twenty or so years, of lighter 
                  more flexibly-voiced singers able to cope with the demands of 
                  the florid music involved. It is necessary to be aware of some 
                  of the background to the Naples opera seria such as Otello 
                  fully to appreciate its revolutionary qualities.  
                     
                  Otello was Rossini’s nineteenth opera and the second 
                  of the nine opera seria composed for the Royal Theatres 
                  of Naples. These 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. Barbaja 
                  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 in this latter respect and 
                  in its first two years he composed no fewer than five operas 
                  for other venues, with Il Barbiere di Siviglia being 
                  among four for Rome  
                     
                  In his first Naples opera seria, Elisabetta regina d’Inghilterra, 
                  premiered to great enthusiasm on 4 December 1815, Rossini made 
                  imaginative use of professional musicians and with several innovations. 
                  For the first time he dispensed with unaccompanied recitative 
                  and which added dramatic vigour. He also, for the first time 
                  wrote out in full the embellishments he expected from his singers, 
                  thus avoiding their choosing to show off their vocal prowess 
                  to the detriment of the drama. In Otello Desdemona is 
                  introduced via a duet with Emelia (CD 1 trs.7-8) rather than 
                  the traditional entrance aria. Other innovations occur throughout 
                  the nine Naples opera seria composed during his seven-year 
                  stay.  
                     
                  Rossini went to Rome after the success of Elisabetta 
                  presentingTorvaldo e Dorliska at the Teatro Valle (26 
                  December 1815), and after a hectic period finding a libretto, 
                  Il Barbiere di Siviglia at the Teatro de Torre 
                  Argentina. On his return to Naples he found the San Carlo had 
                  been destroyed by fire. He composed his only Naples opera buffa, 
                  La Gazetta, premiered at the small Teatro de Fiorentina 
                  on 26 September 1816. This premiere had been postponed because 
                  Rossini was indulging his social life to the full, as was his 
                  wont. Perhaps the soprano Isabella Colbran, then the mistress 
                  of Barbaja, and later Rossini’s wife, was also distracting 
                  him. Certainly Barbaja was getting tetchy with the delays in 
                  the completion of the scheduled Otello. He wrote to the 
                  administrator of the Royal Theatres about Rossini’s dilatoriness 
                  in providing the finished work whilst being active with his 
                  social engagements. Otello should have been premiered 
                  on 10 October. It was first postponed for a month 
                  before being eventually staged on 4 December. As the San Carlo 
                  was not yet rebuilt it was staged at the smaller Royal Theatre, 
                  the Teatro del Fondo.  
                     
                  Rossini’s choice of Otello with its tragic ending 
                  was distinctly adventurous. Critics of the libretto assumed 
                  it to be based directly on the Shakespeare’s play. However, 
                  around the late 1970s evidence was presented to the Centre for 
                  Rossini Studies that the source of di Salsa’s libretto 
                  was more likely to have been the play Otello by Baron 
                  Carlo Cozena staged in Naples in 1813. What is certain is that 
                  only in the third act of Rossini’s Otello is there 
                  much relationship with Shakespeare’s play. That act certainly 
                  elicited the composer’s most inspired music with a richly 
                  scored introductory prelude and the interpolation of The 
                  Gondoliers Song (CD 2 tr.12), a brilliant inspiration and 
                  creation. The act also features the only duet for Otello and 
                  Desdemona (CD 2 tr.15). It is set against a growing storm, a 
                  typical Rossinian feature, as the mood moves towards the work’s 
                  dramatic climax. The greatness and sophistication of Rossini’s 
                  music in the third act often blinds critics to the virtues of 
                  that in the first two where the story diverts so much from Shakespeare. 
                   
                     
                  In di Salsa’s libretto Desdemona is secretly pledged to 
                  Otello who has been greeted by the Doge and lauded after his 
                  victory over the Turks in Cyprus. The Doge’s son, Rodrigo, 
                  together with Iago, plots against Otello. Desdemona’s 
                  father Elmiro arranges her marriage to Rodrigo but Otello halts 
                  this and a fight ensues. Iago shows Otello a letter of affection 
                  from Desdemona purporting that it was written to Rodrigo although 
                  it was intended for him. This fuels Otello’s doubts, which 
                  lead to the conclusion of the third act.  
                     
                  Once Rossini was cajoled from the cuisine of Naples and whatever 
                  other extra-mural activities were filling his time, he composed 
                  with speed and felicity. Despite its bloody and tragic ending 
                  the opera was enthusiastically received by press and public 
                  alike. Despite the demand for six tenors, including three outstanding 
                  coloratura tenors, Otello initially spread throughout 
                  the Italian peninsula in its original form. Of particular note 
                  is the confrontation between Otello and Rodrigo in act 2 (CD 
                  2 Trs.7-8) where visceral high Cs from both singersare 
                  required (p179. Rossini. Richard Osborne. Master Musicians 
                  Series. Dent 1987). For a production during Rome’s carnival 
                  in the season of 1819-20 Rossini provided an incongruous happy 
                  ending (lieto fine).  
                     
                  I was particularly interested to hear how Jessica Pratt as Desdemona 
                  measured up to Rossini’s vocal demands in her Willow 
                  Song (CD 2 Trs 13-14) having been impressed by her in the 
                  eponymous role in the British premiere of Rossini’s Armida 
                  at Garsington in 2010 (see review). 
                  As there, she could articulate the words better, but she sings 
                  the role with consummate musicality, strength of voice and tonal 
                  beauty. She does have the tendency to give stress to the emotions 
                  of the character by a swell on the note and could perhaps learn 
                  from the likes of Fleming and Caballé who are softer 
                  in attack but equally dramatic. In the eponymous role here Michael 
                  Spyres has the baritonal hue that Rossini accommodated for the 
                  renowned Giovanni David whilst not quite having the freedom 
                  at the top of the voice that is attributed to that famous predecessor. 
                  In the role of Rodrigo, created by Nozarri, the Naples coloratura 
                  tenor par excellence, Filippo Adami copes amazingly well 
                  (CD 2 Tr.6) and, if he is careful, he could have a good career 
                  in this increasingly staged repertoire. Ugo Guagliardo, born 
                  in Palermo, is excellent as Elmiro whilst French mezzo Geraldine 
                  Chauvet is expressive and nicely contrasted tonally with Jessica 
                  Pratt in the duets between Emilia and her mistress (CD 1 Trs.7-8 
                  and CD 2 Tr.11).  
                     
                  Not altogether common among these Naples opera seria 
                  there are rival recordings. That on Philips (475 448 2) dates 
                  back to 1979 and features a not particularly idiomatic Carreras 
                  but a lovely Desdemona by the lyric mezzo Frederica Von Stade 
                  and Elmiro sung by Sam Ramey as its major strengths. At mid-price 
                  there is no libretto; same goes for this Naxos issue. More recently 
                  Opera Rara, in their usual manner gave it the ‘full works’ 
                  whilst using the critical edition by Michael Collins for the 
                  Rossini Foundation (ORC 18 see review). 
                  Spread over three full priced discs it comes with full libretto, 
                  translation into English, plus an appendix of variants Rossini 
                  composed for other singers in productions elsewhere. Although 
                  not included, these variations accommodated the famous baritone 
                  Tamburini as Iago in Paris and London in the 1830s where the 
                  work was often sung by the so-called Puritani quartet plus the 
                  tenor Ivanoff.   
                   
                  The Naxos booklet has artist profiles and a good track-related 
                  synopsis. There is a libretto, in Italian at the Naxos 
                  website. The booklet essay has self-conflicting incongruities 
                  (p.5) as to the decline of Rossini’s Otello and 
                  the influence of Verdi’s opera. The acoustic is warm whilst 
                  the applause is polite and not unduly intrusive.    
                   
                  Robert J Farr  
                   
                  see also review by Robert 
                  Hugill     
                 
                                                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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