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            Vincenzo BELLINI 
              (1801-1835)  
              Il Pirata - Melodramma in two acts (1827)  
                
              Ernesto, Duke of Caldora and Anjou partisan - Ludovic Tézier 
              (baritone); Imogene, Ernesto’s wife, previously in love with 
              Gualtiero - Carmen Giannattasio (soprano); Gualtiero, Count of Moltanto, 
              now an Aragonese pirate leader - José Bros (tenor); Itulbo, 
              companion of Gualtiero - Mark Le Brocq (tenor); Il solitario, a 
              hermit and former tutor of Gualtiero - Brindley Sherratt (bass), 
              Adele, Imogene’s chief lady in waiting - Victoria Simmonds 
              (mezzo)  
              London Philharmonic Orchestra. Geoffrey Mitchell Choir/David Parry 
               
              rec. Henry Wood Hall, London, March/April 2010  
                
              OPERA RARA ORC45 [3 CDs: 39.02 + 46.49 + 73.37]   
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                   Vincenzo Bellini was born in Catania, Sicily, during 
                  the night of 2 November 1801. Both his father and grandfather 
                  were musicians, the later having settled in Catania from central 
                  Italy. Despite Vincenzo’s early signs of musical precocity, 
                  and the family’s musical lineage, the father was severely 
                  opposed to the son pursuing a musical career. A number of friends, 
                  as well as family, exerted pressure and eventually Bellini’s 
                  father relented and Vincenzo was sent to study at the Real Collegio 
                  in Naples in 1819. This was the establishment where Donizetti, 
                  supported by Mayr, had studied a few years earlier. A wealthy 
                  nobleman and the local municipality of Catania supported Bellini’s 
                  studies.   
                   
                  Bellini was a diligent student. He also made a lifelong friend 
                  of a fellow student named Florimo with whom he corresponded 
                  assiduously throughout his life on all matters including his 
                  music and love affairs. Much of that correspondence is extant 
                  and gives many insights into Bellini’s mental and financial 
                  state. Going to Naples, with a population of five hundred thousand 
                  from Catania, with only thirty-six thousand, must have been 
                  a cultural shock for Bellini. So too must have been the 1820 
                  revolution in Naples which saw the temporary removal of the 
                  King and his reinstatement two months later. Both Bellini and 
                  Florimo were implicated. They were not prosecuted after a confession 
                  and on condition of a very public proclamation of loyalty to 
                  King Ferdinand.  
                     
                  Bellini’s second opera, Bianca e Fernando, drew 
                  the attention of Domenico Barbaja, the impresario who had taken 
                  Rossini to Naples in 1815. By this time Barbaja was also the 
                  impresario of La Scala, Milan and of the leading theatre in 
                  Vienna. Early in 1827 Barbaja invited Bellini to compose for 
                  La Scala. The young composer left Naples in April 1827 to go 
                  to Milan. There he was introduced to the classically educated 
                  Felice Romani, the official librettist of La Scala. It was Romani 
                  with whom he would collaborate in the creation of all his remaining 
                  and greatest operas except his last. He provided around one 
                  hundred and twenty libretti to various composers in the primo 
                  ottocento. The composers included Rossini, Donizetti, Mayr, 
                  Mercadante and many others. Bellini also became romantically 
                  entangled with Giuditta Turina the unhappy wife of a rich silk 
                  merchant whom she had married at the age of sixteen on the arrangement 
                  of her parents.  
                     
                  Bellini’s third opera, Il pirata, was premiered 
                  at La Scala in October 1827. Enthusiastically received, it was 
                  performed fifteen times in the season, always to full houses. 
                  It became Bellini’s first international success. Despite 
                  the presence of the coloratura tenor Rubini, Bellini made a 
                  determined attempt to move away from the Rossinian manner of 
                  florid decoration towards a more dramatic effect. As well as 
                  this move there were also more significant, although subservient, 
                  signs of the long-flowing melodies that were to become the composer’s 
                  hallmark.  
                     
                  The action of the story takes place in the 13th century 
                  in the vicinity of the Caldaro Castle, Sicily. Gualtiero, the 
                  exiled Count of Montalto is living as the head of a band of 
                  pirates. He returns to find his beloved Imogene has, in order 
                  to save her father’s life, been forced to marry his enemy, 
                  Ernesto. It is Ernesto who discovers the two lovers at a secret 
                  rendezvous. A duel follows and Ernesto is killed. Gualtiero 
                  is arrested and condemned to death. When Imogene discovers this 
                  she loses her reason.  
                     
                  I usually await a new release from Opera Rara with eager anticipation. 
                  Normally this is because the release enables me to hear music 
                  that is new to me by a composer whose oeuvre I am generally 
                  familiar with. If the anticipation of the arrival of the review 
                  copies of Il Pirata lacked some of the usual tingle it 
                  was because there are two other studio recordings of the opera 
                  already available The first, that from EMI and recorded in Rome 
                  in 1970, features the redoubtable Montserrat Caballé 
                  as Imogene (CMS 7 64169 2). The second, a digital recording 
                  conducted by Marcello Viotti and recorded in Berlin in 1994, 
                  features Lucia Aliberti in that role. That latter recording 
                  is included in the collection of all ten of Bellini’s 
                  operas issued by the Italian label Dynamic (see review). 
                  It did not take long listening to this performance before my 
                  tingle was back. The first cause was the outstandingly well-balanced 
                  recording quality. By comparison the EMI Rome recording sounds 
                  very dated as well as being rather over-bright and edgy. The 
                  Dynamic issue, recorded in the Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin, 
                  is warm and a touch too reverberant. The second virtue of this 
                  Opera Rara issue is the vibrancy of David Parry’s conducting 
                  and the drama he conjures from Bellini’s creation. These 
                  are the qualities which, I suggest, the composer was striving 
                  for in moving away from the Rossinian pattern. To that vibrancy 
                  I add the thrust, involvement and idiomatic quality of the Geoffrey 
                  Mitchell Choir. This is particularly intense in choir’s 
                  role as pirates. They exceed by far their Roman counterparts. 
                  Put together, these qualities contribute an evident overall 
                  frisson, too rarely obtained in studio recordings. They are 
                  vital additions to the usual benefits of balance and the absence 
                  of intrusive applause.  
                     
                  Bellini, above even his contemporary compatriot bel canto 
                  composers, demands a lot from his singers. The accompanying 
                  essay is by Benjamin Walton, the author of the similar essay 
                  in Opera Rara’s recording of Bellini’s fourth opera, 
                  La Straniera (see review). 
                  He recounts how Bellini worked on and with the famous tenor 
                  Rubini to get him to invest more character into his singing 
                  (pp 30-32). The music Bellini wrote for Rubini in this and subsequent 
                  operas, particularly in I Puritani, is our own window 
                  on the nature and range of the tenor’s voice. Sometimes 
                  I have found José Bros’s tone rather white and 
                  lacking in elegance of phrase. In this recording the role seems 
                  to be more congruent to his bright flexible lyric tenor. He 
                  is expressive and vocally appealing apart from a few moments 
                  of pressure when he exhibits some spread in the voice and badly 
                  curdles one note (CD 3. tr.10). Apart from Gualtiero’s 
                  act one scene and cavatina (CD 1. Trs.3-6), and the act two 
                  scene and aria (CD 3. Trs.16-18) Bellini did not litter the 
                  score with solo opportunities for Rubini. His other, no less 
                  demanding contributions, are in duet with Imogene (CD 2. Trs.3-7 
                  and CD 3. Trs.9-10).  
                     
                  Bellini was even sparer in the provision of solo opportunities 
                  to his baritone, the redoubtable Tamburini who sang the role 
                  of Ernesto, the husband of Imogene. For him the composer provided 
                  only one solo, the act one aria Si vincemmo (CD 2. Trs.10-11) 
                  where he celebrates victory with his knights whilst regretting, 
                  in the second verse, that Gualtiero escaped his vengeance. This 
                  aria is comparable with the duet with Imogene in act two when 
                  Ernesto accuses his wife of hiding her grief as illness, being 
                  an evil mother to their son and a wicked wife who conceals a 
                  blind love for Gualtero (CD 3. Trs.3-7). Ludovic Tézier 
                  sings the part with welcome variety of colour along with well-covered 
                  steady tone. With several small involvements, Victoria Simmonds 
                  contributes some lovely well-shaped phrases and steady impressive 
                  tone and characterisation. Likewise Mark Le Brocq as Itulbo 
                  is vocally distinctive and phrases nicely.  
                     
                  Despite all the virtues set out for this issue outlined above, 
                  the overall quality of any performance of Bellini’s Il 
                  Pirata opera stands or falls by that of the singer of Imogene. 
                  Created by the diva Henriette Méric-Lalande, who also 
                  launched the leading soprano roles in four of Bellini’s 
                  operas, her qualities met the composer’s demands in a 
                  way that others, including Rubini’s wife, did not. This 
                  is described in the booklet (p.36 et seq). In more recent times 
                  the role has attracted Callas as well as Caballé. As 
                  represented by this recording Carmen Giannattasio can stand 
                  alongside those great divas. She is more of the dramatic school 
                  of Callas rather than the elegiac bel canto of Caballé. 
                  Her warm dramatic voice is full of varieties of colour and expression. 
                  She has no curdled notes whilst lacking the absolute clarity 
                  of diction of the Spanish singer who, by comparison on her dated 
                  recording sounds thin-toned. Carmen Giannattasio’s act 
                  one scene and cavatina (CD 1. Trs.7-10) with its poignant tones 
                  contrasts well with her rendering of the famous mad scene (CD 
                  3 Trs. 20-23). Throughout she brings good characterisation and 
                  variety of tonal colour as well as phrasing alongside vocal 
                  flexibility. Her performance here matches that which received 
                  widespread approbation in Opera Rara’s recording of Rossini’s 
                  Ermione (see review). 
                  I look forward, with eager anticipation, to hearing her performance 
                  in the forthcoming Opera Rara recording of Donizetti’s 
                  highly dramatic final written opera, Caterina Cornaro. 
                  This was completed as the tertiary syphilis he carried began 
                  its inevitable final progression. It was staged in January 1844 
                  at the San Carlo, Naples. After a reprise at Parma the following 
                  year it vanished until it returned to Naples in 1972 with Leyla 
                  Gencer. I have heard a pirate recording and the music should 
                  fit Giannattasio’s voice and skills well.  
                     
                  Benjamin Walton’s long essay (pp. 9-46) in the accompanying 
                  booklet of this issue is informative, albeit overdoing the background 
                  of the literary source of the libretto somewhat. The article 
                  and a synopsis are given in English and French with a full libretto 
                  and translation into the former only.   
                     
                  Recorded over two years ago, this recording of Il Pirata 
                  carries the imprimatur of the financial support given by the 
                  Peter Moores Foundation. No longer benefiting from that 
                  support, Opera Rara has to husband its resources and recordings 
                  with care and look for funds elsewhere. They are currently seeking 
                  financial help from all bel canto lovers for a forthcoming recording 
                  of Donizetti’s rarely heard Belisario, premieredthe 
                  year after the debut of Maria Stuarda in Milan and Lucia 
                  di Lammermoor in Naples. It is further fruit of the composer’s 
                  highly creative period. This is to be recorded in London in 
                  autumn 2012 and will cost in the region of £150,000. It 
                  will follow a recording of the composer’s opéra-comique 
                  Rita,written in 1841 but not staged until 1860 
                  and for which funds are also sought. Both works will also be 
                  conducted by Sir Mark Elder but with the latter recorded in 
                  Manchester with the Hallé Orchestra in early September 
                  2012. It will feature Manchester-trained English coloratura 
                  tenor Barry Banks alongside baritone Christopher Maltman and 
                  Katarina Karnéus, the Stockholm-born and London-trained 
                  winner of the Cardiff Prize in 1995. Details of both recordings 
                  and how you can help fund them can be obtained via e-mail from 
                  info@opera-rara.com 
                   
                     
                  September 2012 will also see the release of an earlier recording 
                  of Rossini’s twelfth opera Aureliano in Palmira 
                  (1815). It has been rarely heard since except in so far as the 
                  composer plagiarised some of his own music, not least the overture 
                  which appears in little modified form in Elisabetta Regina 
                  d’Inghilterra (1815) and Il Barbiere di Siviglia, 
                  the following year. An exciting year ahead for bel canto 
                  enthusiasts!    
                   
                  Robert J Farr   
                   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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