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			Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848) 
   Anna Bolena  - Opera Seria in two acts (1830)
 
                
              Enrico, Henry the Eighth of England - Ildebrando D'Arcangelo (bass); 
              Anna Bolena, his second wife - Anna Netrebko (soprano); Giovanna 
              Seymour, Henry’s mistress - Elina Garanca (mezzo); Lord Riccardo 
              Percy, Anna’s former lover - Francesco Meli (tenor); Lord Rochefort, 
              his friend and Anna’s brother - Dan Paul Dumitrescu (baritone); 
              Smeton, a page - Elisabeth Kulmann (mezzo); Sir Hervey, court official 
              - Peter Jelosits 
  Orchestra and Chorus of the Wiener Staatsoper/Evelino Pidň 
  Stage directior: Eric Génovese; Set designers: Jaques Gabel and Claire Sternberg; Costume designs: by Luisa Couderc
 
			rec. live, April 2011, Wiener Staatsoper 
  Picture format: NTSC 16:9; Sound format: PCM Stereo / Dolby Digital 5.0; Region code: 0 
  Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French, Spanish
 
                
              DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 073 4725   
              [193:00 + 4:00 bonus]  
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                  With Anna Bolena Donizetti hit the big time. It was 
                  his thirty-first opera. He had enjoyed some success with Zoraida 
                  Di Granata (see review) 
                  first performed at the Teatro Argentina, Rome, in January 1822. 
                  It had helped mark Donizetti out as one of the young Italian 
                  opera composers who would vie to assume Rossini’s crown. At 
                  this stage the grand maestro had decamped to the better musical 
                  standards in Paris. 
                    
                  As always in Italy at that period there was frequent political 
                  manoeuvring in the field of opera presentation with status and 
                  money the names of the game. In May 1830, the Duke of Litta 
                  and two rich associates formed a Society to sponsor opera at 
                  La Scala whose franchise was due for renewal. They were concerned 
                  to raise the musical standards that had seen Rossini, Meyerbeer 
                  and others decamp to Paris. They engaged several of the leading 
                  singers of the day including Giuditta Pasta and the tenor Rubini. 
                  Donizetti and Bellini, whom they considered to be the two best 
                  active Italian composers, were each contracted to write an opera 
                  for the season to a libretto set by the renowned Romani, widely 
                  recognised as the best in the business. However, Litta and his 
                  associates failed to secure La Scala for their plans, which 
                  were instead realised at the Teatro Carcano. 
                    
                  The Duke and his colleagues chose well as Donizetti’s Anna 
                  Bolena was premiered to acclaim on 26 December 1830, the 
                  opening of the Carnival Season. After the censors forced a change 
                  of subject on Bellini, even after he had already composed at 
                  least five scenes, his proposed opera was put back to 6 March 
                  1831 when La Sonnambula too enjoyed a significant success. 
                  Anna Bolena was soon staged throughout Italy, reaching 
                  London in July 1831 and Paris in the September, it being the 
                  first of Donizetti’s operas to be performed there. The story 
                  concerns the famous roving eye of England’s Henry VIII. Tiring 
                  of his wife Anna (Ann Boleyn), Henry has turned his attentions 
                  to her Lady in Waiting, Giovanna (Jane Seymour). Henry summons 
                  Riccardo Percy back from exile. Percy had once been betrothed 
                  to Anna and Henry hopes to set him up and accuse Anna of infidelity. 
                  The page Smeaton, a travesti role, is also in love with Anna 
                  and circumstances conspire to provide Enrico with an excuse 
                  to imprison all three despite their being innocent. After a 
                  rigged trial all three are condemned to death. In a mad scene 
                  made famous by Callas in the 1950s, Anna is taken to the executioner’s 
                  block as the crowd proclaim their new queen. 
                    
                  Anna Bolena seems to have been the bel canto 
                  flavour of the year in 2011 with this production in Vienna, 
                  a near contemporaneous one in Barcelona and receiving its Metropolitan 
                  Opera, New York, debut on 26 September. The Met production was 
                  one of the first of the season, on 15 October 2011 to be transmitted 
                  live to cinemas worldwide. Was it that opera house intendants 
                  had re-discovered bel canto? Rather it is that a new 
                  generation of divas and divos has emerged who can sing the music 
                  as it was conceived and are also prepared to learn a new work 
                  and influence theatres to present it. Vienna, for the first 
                  - their first ever - Anna Bolena, and for the first 
                  time on their stage together, got two of the greatest of the 
                  day in Anna Netrebko in the eponymous role and Elina Garanca, 
                  an admired Carmen, as Giovanna Seymour. Garanca featured alongside 
                  veteran bel canto soprano Edita Gruberová in Barcelona 
                  and, if rumour is right, should have featured in the Metropolitan 
                  Opera production alongside Netrebko, but pregnancy intervened. 
                    
                  In this production with relatively simple but effective sets 
                  and opulent period costumes, the two ladies mentioned are in 
                  spectacular form as singers and interpreters. I first came to 
                  be aware of Anna Netrebko in recorded performances of La 
                  Traviata in Willi Decker’s updated setting at Salzburg 
                  in 2005 (see review). 
                  Her outstanding histrionic performance as Elvira in Bellini’s 
                  I Puritani from the Met in 2007 (see review) 
                  also made its mark. Post her pregnancy I was at a loss to accept 
                  her vocal change when I heard her performance of Rossini’s Stabat 
                  Mater (see review). 
                  Her voice had changed significantly to my ears and had become 
                  larger with a significant loss of flexibility. By the time I 
                  heard her at the cinema transmission of Anna Bolena 
                  it was obvious that vocal matters had settled down. If she had 
                  lost that sylph-like figure of her 2005 Violetta, and a little 
                  of her coloratura flexibility, her more womanly outline was 
                  also reflected in her voice which was distinctly fuller, warmer 
                  and more dramatic. She presented a most formidable and near 
                  ideal Anna Bolena. These qualities are evident in this Vienna 
                  performance where she gives a demonstration of characterisation 
                  and bel canto vocal virtuosity that is second to none, 
                  Callas included. Add her usual committed acting and this is 
                  as good as it gets, or is likely to get from any rival in the 
                  near future. Her qualities as a singing actress are evident 
                  as early as the act one trio scena and cavatina alongside the 
                  Giovanna of Elina Garanca and the Smeaton of Elisabeth Kulmann 
                  (DVD 1 CHs.5-8). She reaches an apogee of achievement in the 
                  long closing scene of act two as Anna Bolena, in derangement, 
                  realises why her tears flow and the intended outcome for her. 
                  This Anna Bolena crawls forward to her death by what looks more 
                  like a guillotine than an axe block; maybe the producer mixed 
                  up the date of composition with the setting of the work (DVD 
                  2 CHs. 19-23). 
                    
                  Having expanded extensive complimentary adjectives on Netrebko’s 
                  Anna, I have to find different, but equally eulogistic ones 
                  to describe Elina Garanca’s singing and interpretation of Giovanna 
                  Seymour. First of all, her acted portrayal in the wide variety 
                  of emotional situations that the role demands is outstanding. 
                  Her singing, by its diction, expression, smooth legato, wide 
                  range and overall involvement is a match for Anna Netrebko. 
                  Garanca has an appealing velvety patina to her voice whilst 
                  also having a very wide, unforced but focused range. The variety 
                  of her singing in the diverse emotional situations of her pursuit 
                  by Enrico (DVD 1 Chs.9-12), confession to Anna (DVD 2 Chs.2-6) 
                  and fears over being the cause of Anna’s death (CHs. 11-12) 
                  are perfect exemplars. As with her soprano colleague, Garanca’s 
                  is a consummate interpretation by an artist at the top of her 
                  game. 
                    
                  If none of the rest of the cast quite reaches the standards 
                  set by this Anna and Giovanna, none lets the side down. Ildebrando 
                  D'Arcangelo is a tall handsome and seductive Enrico whose smooth 
                  singing only lacks a little lower extension to his burnished 
                  tone. His acted interpretation is notable. As Smeaton, Elisabeth 
                  Kulmann, not long ago a soprano, sings smoothly and acts well, 
                  only needing to walk more like a man and less like a woman ((DVD 
                  1 CHs.20-21). Francesco Meli as Percy, sometime betrothed of 
                  Anna, is a little strained at the very top of his voice otherwise 
                  he sings with flexibility and pleasant lyric tone. Hardly the 
                  most becoming visually, Dan Paul Dumitrescu is a convincing 
                  Rochefort with good variety of tonal colour allied to vocal 
                  strength and good expression. In the pit Evelino Pidň adds to 
                  his reputation in this music with a well-paced and phrased interpretation. 
                    
                  Robert J Farr 
                   
                
                                 
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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