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             Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848) 
               
              Marino Faliero - Tragic opera in three acts (1835) 
               
                
              Marino Faliero, elderly Doge of Venice - Giorgio Surian (bass); 
              Elena, his wife, in love with his nephew - Rachele Stanisci (soprano); 
              Fernando, Marino’s nephew - Ivan Magrì (tenor); Israele Bertucci, 
              Captain of the Arsenal - Luca Grassi (baritone); Steno, a young 
              patrician member of the Council of Forty - Luca Dall'Amico (bass-baritone); 
              Leoni, member of the Council of Ten - Leonardo Gramegna (tenor) 
               
              Orchestra and Chorus of the Bergamo Musical Festival Gaetano Donizetti/Bruno 
              Cinquegrani  
              Director: Mario Spada; Set and Costumes: Alessandro Ciammarughi; 
              Video Director: Matteo Ricchetti  
              Filmed: Teatro Donizetti, Bergamo, Italy, 31 October, 2 November 
              2008  
              Picture format: NTSC 16:9. Sound format: PCM 2.0, Dolby Surround 
              5.0, DTS 5.0.  
              Menu language: English; Subtitles: English and Italian  
              Performed in the Critical revision by Maria Chiara Bertieri for 
              BMG Ricordi Music Publishing  
                
              NAXOS   
              2.110616-17 [73.27 + 78.48]  
              8.660303/4 [72.40 + 71.44]   
             
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                  A rhetorical question; when is good not good enough? In the 
                  case of Donizetti’s Marino Faliero it was when it was 
                  up against Bellini’s I Puritani premiered in the same 
                  theatre and with the same principal singers six weeks before 
                  in the winter of 1835. According to the booklet essay, it was 
                  Donizetti’s fiftieth opera. My list says his forty-sixth and 
                  the New Grove a different figure. It’ not that some of us cannot 
                  count but rather what constitutes a new opera. Donizetti famously 
                  re-worked the music of Maria Stuarda into Buondelmonte. 
                  This was after the King of Naples banned the former, at very 
                  short notice, after hearing about the scene between the two 
                  Queens and the physical scrap between the divas that ensued! 
                  I count that as one opera, others as two.  
                   
                  Donizetti and Bellini had first featured together in the Milan 
                  season at the Teatro Carcano in the winter of 1830 when a group 
                  of bankers tried, but failed, to take over the franchise of 
                  La Scala. The bankers had signed up both composers, Felice Romani 
                  the then leading librettist, and a cast of singers including 
                  the leading tenor of the day, Rubini, and the formidable soprano 
                  Giuditta Pasta. Both composers hit the high spots with Anna 
                  Bolena and La Sonnambula respectively, works which 
                  guaranteed each a successful future. Donizetti was the more 
                  prolific often composing and presenting three or four new works 
                  each year. By the time the two composers featured, at Rossini’s 
                  invitation in the 1835 season at the Théâtre Italien, 
                  Paris, Donizetti had presented nineteen operas whilst the 
                  often ailing Bellini managed a mere three. Rossini had gathered 
                  a formidable group of principal singers for the season. These 
                  included the baritone Tamburini and bass Lablache as well as 
                  Rubini and Pasta. This fabulous quartet became known as The 
                  Puritani Quartet as they toured Bellini’s work to London. 
                  Over several seasons they reprised it in Paris, achieving the 
                  singers’ great fame and fortune along the way. Whilst Donizetti 
                  went on to compose a further twenty-two or so operas before 
                  being overtaken by the consequences of tertiary syphilis in 
                  1848 at the age of fifty-one. He was in a comatose state for 
                  the last years of his life. I Puritani was Bellini’s 
                  last opera, he died suddenly six months after the premiere shortly 
                  before his thirty-fourth birthday. There would be no more rivalries 
                  between the two.  
                   
                  Each composer attended the premiere of the other’s opera, so 
                  Donizetti knew what he was up against in terms of music and 
                  audience response. He set a more dark and dramatic libretto 
                  with no happy ending. The story is loosely based on historical 
                  fact of Marino Faliero, an elderly Doge of Venice, who was executed 
                  for plotting to make himself a Royal ruler; an aspiration not 
                  unknown in the Paris of 1835! Marino Faliero was Donizetti’s 
                  first opera for the Théâtre Italien. He tempered 
                  his compositional style towards the French model. Its immediate 
                  successor in the Donizetti oeuvre is Lucia di Lamermoor, 
                  the most romantic and melodic of all his works and very much 
                  in the tradition of Italian opera at the time. Despite being 
                  somewhat overshadowed by Bellini’s opera, Marino Faliero 
                  enjoyed a long and successful run of international performances 
                  throughout the 19th century before disappearing from the stage 
                  until its modern revival in 1966.  
                   
                  This performance from the Bergamo Festival was based in the 
                  town where the composer was born and died. It is set in period 
                  costume and in an evocative and imaginative set, when one can 
                  see it that is. Even allowing for the fact that much of the 
                  plotting goes on at night the stage scene is often under-lit. 
                  The presentation of both the DVD and CD issue has the long act 
                  1 on the first disc with acts 2 and 3 on the second. Thankfully 
                  this issue is by Naxos so that on the DVD the Chapter divisions 
                  are generous and in number sequence, unlike those on the Dynamic 
                  Label from Italian Festivals. Artist profiles are another welcome 
                  virtue to go alongside an informed and informative introductory 
                  essay, and the full list of Chapter and Track divisions and 
                  timings.  
                   
                  As to the singing, not many of these soloists would compete 
                  with the original quartet, but there are not many around that 
                  could. As the ageing Doge the Croat bass Giorgio Surian is an 
                  excellent actor and whilst having moments of vocal unsteadiness, 
                  he has been around for many years, creates a viable character 
                  whose dignity is impressive. Luca Grassi as leader of the anti-patrician 
                  insurrection, Israele Bertucci, acts the role with conviction 
                  and sings with good expression if a little dry of tone. As the 
                  Doge’s wife, who fancies something younger in the form of her 
                  husband’s nephew, Rachele Stanisci, lacks the ideal weight of 
                  voice but is expressive and in tune. Her soft singing in the 
                  last act is especially noteworthy. As her would-be lover, Ferrando, 
                  Ivan Magri has to attempt the high notes written for Rubini, 
                  famous for his skill in the highest tessitura and range. He 
                  fails in this test, although the enthusiastic applause at his 
                  curtain made me wonder about my critical judgement until I repeated 
                  his efforts in the act 2 aria and cavatina, which Rubini had 
                  to encore at the premiere. I find Magri’s tone rather bleaty 
                  and dry.  
                   
                  The conducting of Bruno Cinquegrani is well paced and the chorus 
                  vibrant and involved. It being Paris a ball scene and some dancing 
                  was de rigueur. The trouble with this brings me back 
                  to the stage picture and lighting. Whilst the patterned centre 
                  of the stage, often a point of focus, comes into its own in 
                  the final act as it opens to allow the prisoners to emerge for 
                  their execution. However, as elsewhere, and as with the dancing, 
                  it is so poorly lit as to negate the effect.  
                   
                  A full libretto, in Italian is available at the Naxos 
                  website.  
                   
                  Robert J Farr  
                   
                  see also reviews by Robert 
                  McKechnie and James 
                  Zychowicz 
                   
                 
                
                
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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