Johann Simon MAYR (1763-1845)
Medea in Corinto - Tragic Melodramma in two acts (1813)
Creonte, King of Corinth - Alastair Miles (bass); Egeo, Athenian King engaged
to marry Creusa - Alek Schrader (tenor); Medea, sorceress and daughter of
King Colcis - Nadja Michael (soprano); Glasone, her husband and Chief of the
Argonauts - Ramón Vargas (tenor); Creusa, daughter of the King of Corinth
- Elena Issalagova (soprano); Evandro - Kenneth Robertson (tenor); Tideo -
Francesco Petrozzi (baritone); Ismene - Laura Nicorescu (mezzo)
Bavarian State Orchestra and Chorus/Ivor Bolton
Stage Director: Hans Neuenfels. Set Designer: Anna Viebrock. Costume Designer:
Elina Schnizer
rec. live, National Theatre, Munich, 2010,
Sound Format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.0. Picture Format: NTSC/16:9
Region Code: 0
Subtitles in Italian (original language), English, German, French, Spanish,
Chinese and Korean
Booklet essay and synopsis in English, French and German
ARTHAUS MUSIK BLU-RAY 108 030 [151:00 + 48:00]
German-born Mayr was studying in Italy when his patron died. Faced with an
uncertain future the composer Niccolo Piccinni encouraged him to write opera.
Mayr’s first opera, Saffo (1794), attracted other commissions. His
Ginevra di Scozia premiered in Trieste (1801) made him known throughout
Italy. Subsequently Mayr wrote operas for Naples, Rome, Milan and Venice and
they were also performed in Germany, London, St. Petersburg and New York.
In all he wrote over sixty operatic works, many in the buffo style. He brought
increased vividness and orchestral detail to opera buffa, with depictions
of storms, earthquakes and the like as well as complex choral scenes. These
built on, and extended, the compositional style of Domenico Cimarosa (1749-1801)
and Giovanni Paisiello (1740-1816). His influence is readily heard in the
operas of Rossini (1792-1868) and Donizetti (1797-1848) in particular.
As well as composition of operas, Mayr found fame as a composer of church
music, as the author of a treatise on Haydn and as the founder of a conservatory
in Bergamo where his students included Donizetti whom he taught without charge
for ten years. Mayr also paid for Donizetti’s study with Padre Mattei a renowned
teacher of counterpoint. He later also ceded commissions to his pupil that
helped his career to take off. Mayr’s most famous work is his Medea in
Corinto (1813). He eventually went blind and Verdi, recognising his influence
on Italian music, perhaps even his own, attended his funeral. According to
the booklet essay (p.8) Verdi gave the oration. Mayr’s main works can be said
to unite the stylistic characteristics of Viennese classicism with Italian
melodic exuberance. Although his music is largely forgotten today all the
major European theatres saw productions during his lifetime.
For a long time, the only operas by Mayr’s featured on records were Ginevra
di Scozia and Medea in Corinto, each issued by Opera Rara
on three CDs. The former (ORC 11) was recorded at a revival in Trieste to
commemorate the two hundredth anniversary of the premiere. It features Elizabeth
Vidal and Daniella Barcelona among the principals. The latter (ORC 23) has
the spinto soprano Jane Eaglen alongside Opera Rara regulars and the Rossini
specialist Raul Gimenez. There is also an extracts disc from this issue focusing
on Eaglen (ORR 215). In 2008, Opera Rara also issued a CD entitled Mayr
Rediscovered (ORR 244) involving excerpts from eight of his operas including
the two mentioned as well as Fedra, a recording of which was issued
by Oehms Classics. This was derived from performances in the State Theatre
Braunschweig during performances in March 2008 (see review).
Interest in the composer and his works has been stimulated by the establishment
of the International Simon Mayr Society in Ingolstadt in 1995. This
was to mark the 150th anniversary of the composer’s death. The
Society numbers among its objects bringing his operas before the public and
the production of Critical Editions such as that used here. The year 2010
has seen at least two productions of this opera: the other being at St Gallen
in Switzerland (Opera Magazine. April 2010, p.451). This recording, issued
on DVD and Blu-Ray, claims to be a world premiere filming of one of Mayr’s
operas.
Mayr’s Medea In Corinto is based on the ancient tragedy of the eponymous
sorceress who kills her children in a mad act of blind revenge against their
father, her faithless husband Giasone (Jason). Director Hans Neuenfels believes
the story deals with timeless subjects and stages this tragedy of betrayed
love, lust for power and murderous hatred as a socio-political thriller updated
to the present day. Typical of the anti-traditional regietheater Munich
productions the controversial director interweaves scenes of seemingly gratuitous
brutality. Designer Anna Viebrock's stage is set on two levels, allowing a
mixture of realities. The costumes range in period from Hymeniaos in green
tights to the mythological appearance of a prancing constantly grinning Amour
with two incongruous silver wings on his back. The ladies are in knee length
modern-day haute couture, or at least the Primark version, with hats that
might require extra security checks at your local airport. For the men lounge
suits are generally sufficient for carrying pistols and the knives for cutting
throats. Situations, rather than specific time-frames, are what seems important
to Neuenfels.
Mayr’s justifiable claim to fame rather than neglect arises from his skilled
orchestration. The music of the opera is full of melodic inspiration, and
his use of text is exemplary with orchestration that moves significantly beyond
Gluck, who one senses, is an influence. The arias are in the bel canto
tradition with plenty of space for decoration. Looking at the cast of
the premiere in Naples and seeing the names of Isabella Colbran in the title
role, the baritonal tenor Andrea Nozzari as Giasone and the lighter-toned
coloratura tenor Manuel Garcia as Egeo one has a sense of the musical demands
on at least some of the principals. The heaviest singing load in terms of
musical and histrionic demand is to be found in the title role. Munich has
it absolutely right in casting Nadja Michael. She has the soprano extension
required but added to strength in the lower, mezzo part of the voice, as one
might expect in a singer assaying that fach not so long ago. Her entrance
aria (CHs 8-10) and mini mad scene as Medea contemplates the killing of her
children (CH.33) are sung and acted with rare conviction. For me the choice
of Ramón Vargas for the role of Giasone seemed strange. I had never thought
of him as a baritonal tenor, particularly having seen him as Don Ottavio only
recently in the Metropolitan Opera transmission of Don Giovanni; Ottavio
is a role whose vocal requirements are the antithesis of baritonal with floated
notes the order of the day particularly in Dala sua pace. Vargas certainly
copes well, and seemingly without undue vocal strain with the wide tessitura
albeit his acting is not in the same league as his Medea. A pleasing discovery
for me is to be heard in the singing of Alek Shrader as Egeo, the suitor of
Creusa who has been promised to Giasone by her father Creonte, played here
as a hunchback by Alastair Miles. Shrader’s plangent well articulated tone
and fluent coloratura in the demanding tessitura bodes well (CHs. 23-14 and
27); I look forward to hearing him again.
Of the Corinthian contingent, Alastair Miles creates a mean old king with
his lean bass and committed acting. The role does not have its own aria. As
his daughter Creusa, Elena Issalagova looked more the part in her smart outfits.
Contrast this with her singing that is secure rather than characterful; still,
better that way round. To finish my comments on a wholly positive note: I
commend the superb orchestral contribution by early music expert Ivor Bolton
moving up a generation or three. He does Mayr proud, as does the violinist
who accompanies Medea on stage (CH.10) as the sorceress divests herself of
her rush skirt and bodice baubles, to leave herself, for most of the remainder
of the opera, in a neat black number in the form of her underskirt!
The accompanying booklet has full chapter details and timings. Regrettably
these are for the DVD format rather than the dual layer Blu-Ray format, but
the numbering for the latter is in sequence from the end of act one. There
is an interesting essay in English, French and German; likewise a synopsis.
There is no explanation as to the overture at Chapter 7 (3:14) complete with
a visual announcement: This is the end of the overture.
The bonus interviews are interesting even if Vargas mixes up the tenors from
the premiere. He refers to Manuel Garcia as the creator of the role of Giasone.
In fact Manuel Garcia created the role of Egeo not Giasone. Garcia also created
the role of Norfolk in Rossini’s first opera seria for Naples, Elisabetta
regina d’Inghilterra (4 October 1815) and Almaviva in the composer’s consummate
opera buffa Il Barbiere di Siviglia premiered in Rome the following
February. As well as his own skills Garcia is famous as the father of Maria
Malibran. Andréa Nozzari created the role of Giasone with his distinctive
baritonal range and tenor coloratura. He also created roles in all nine of
the opera seria Rossini wrote for Naples.
Robert J Farr
Arresting music for the bel canto enthusiast.