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Gioachino ROSSINI
(1792-1868)
Il Viaggio a Reims - Comic Opera in One Act
(1825) [164:00]
Corinna – Elena de la Merced (soprano); La Marchesa Melibea – Paula
Rasmussen (mezzo); La Contessa di Folleville – Mariola Cantarero
(soprano); Madama Cortese – Maria Bayo (soprano); Il Cavaliere Belfiore
– Josep Bros (tenor); Il Conte di Liberskof – Kenneth Tarver (tenor);
Lord Sidney – Simon Orfila (bass); Don Profondo – Nicola Ulivieri
(bass); Il Barone di Trombonok – Enzo Dara (bass); Don Alvaro –
Angel Odena (baritone); Don Prudenzio – Stephen Morscheck (baritone);
Don Luigino – Josep Ruiz (tenor); Della – Claudia Schneider (mezzo);
Maddalena – Mirela Pintó (soprano); Modestina – Mercè Obiol (mezzo);
Zefirino – David Alegret (tenor); Antonio – Alex Sanmarti (baritone);
Gelsomino – Jordi Casanova (tenor)
Symphony Orchestra and Chorus of the Gran Teatre del Liceu/Jesús
López-Cobos
Stage Director – Sergei Belbel; Video director – Roni Bargalló
rec. filmed, live, Gran Teatre del Liceu, Barcelona, March 2003
Sound format – Dolby Digital 2.0 and 5.1
Subtitles in English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Catalan
Picture format 16:9; Region Code 0
no text or translation included
ARTHAUS MUSIK 107 135
[164:00]
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Il Viaggio a Reims was the first opera that Rossini wrote
in Paris. It was written in Italian; not French. In that respect
it is unlike the remaining four operas that he wrote for that
city - for the Théâtre-Italien. It was intended very much
as an occasional piece for the Coronation of Charles X in 1825.
Accordingly it requires extravagant vocal resources, with parts
for no less than ten principals as well as many minor parts,
chorus, ballet and orchestra. Rossini allowed only a very small
number of performances and went on to reuse much of the material
in Le Comte Ory in 1828. Reconstruction from a variety
of manuscripts in the 1970s and 1980s led to its first modern
performances in Pesaro in 1984. Those performances were recorded,
as were later performances in Berlin, in both cases under Claudio
Abbado.
The plot, such as it is, concerns a group of travellers on their
way to the coronation. They stay at an inn overnight. The first
part of the opera relates their various loves, losses (of hearts
and luggage) and other concerns. They then discover that horses
are not available to take them to Rheims and decide instead
to go directly to Paris after a public entertainment they give
which forms the finale to the opera. This involves each of the
guests offering a musical tribute to the King in their own national
style. The production on this disc transfers the action to a
spa hotel, with the tone set straightaway at the start when
the conductor descends to the pit from the stage as if entering
a swimming pool. Various baths and water treatments are indeed
used as the background to the bulk of the action in the first
part of the production. Entertaining as this can be, it does
not get around the essential problem for the producer of very
long musical numbers which require considerable virtuosity to
perform. Neither the plot nor the music seem to need the addition
of movement. At times a sort of desperation creeps in with the
producer seeing a need for action but which makes less and less
impact. Despite this, the handsome costumes and set, and the
generally good-humoured atmosphere are appealing and do not
contradict or get in the way of the music. An interval is inserted
about two-thirds of the way through, presumably for the comfort
of performers and audience. It is placed just after what was
later to emerge as the Act 1 finale to Le Comte Ory and
does no great harm. The final section of the opera allows the
producer to project his view that the opera is “a mockery –
light-hearted but heavy with meaning – of the ruins of our highly
celebrated, eccentric, absurd and contradictory Europe ...”.
He regards the guests as representing a reactionary civilisation
which ignores the changes that are taking place before it. Maybe
that is so, but - fortunately, perhaps - he does not make too
much of this. The video director makes even less of it by allowing
the final action, in which the lower orders – the strolling
players – take over the seats of the wealthy guests, to be virtually
ignored by the camera. I am grateful for this, as it is hard
to attach any real significance to the long-winded antics and
feeble plot of this occasional piece. It is essentially a peg
on which Rossini hung some of his very best music. Heretically
I believe that this music appears to superior effect in Le
Comte Ory where the plot and music fit together more snugly.
The former is much more interesting and better constructed,
with more interesting characters and action. Admittedly the
music is at times altered to its detriment, but overall it surely
works better in the theatre.
It is nonetheless of absorbing interest to see and hear so much
magnificent music in its original context, and with only minimal
producer’s license being exercised. Admittedly if you want to
hear it sung and played to its fullest effect then either of
Abbado’s audio recordings would be a preferred option. The singing
there is for the most part much more satisfactory. Of the principals
in the present performance Elena de la Merced is superb as the
improvising singer, Corinna. Her two long solos are crucial
turning points; very much a plus. Enzo Dara appears also in
both of Abbado’s recordings, so that it is no surprise that
he is fully at home with the music. He also makes the most of
what could have been a very tiresome characterisation as a standard
comic German with a Hitler moustache. For the rest, given the
large number of principal parts the standard is high. Only Kenneth
Tarver’s unstylish and strained Libenskorf is a real disappointment.
None however stands out as they do in the array of stars gathered
for the audio versions. The orchestra, including flute and harp
soloists who appear on stage, play in a stylish and lively manner
under Jesús López-Cobos. Their contribution is a major part
of the listener’s enjoyment. The booklet contains a brief synopsis
and a long and far from clear essay by the producer but no information
about the singers.
For all my comments on the production there is much to be said
for this recording which gives a fair representation of one
of Rossini’s most extraordinary concoctions.
John Sheppard
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