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Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
Ernani - Lyric dramain four parts (1844)
Ernani, a bandit - Marco Berti (tenor); Don Carlo, King of Spain
- Carlo Guelfi (baritone); Don Ruy de Silva, a Spanish grandee -
Giacomo Prestia (bass); Elvira, Silva’s niece and loved by
Ernani - Susan Neves (soprano); Don Riccardo, the King’s equerry
- Samuele Simoncini (tenor); Jago, equerry to Silva - Alessandro
Svab (bass)
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro Reggio, Parma, Italy/Antonello
Allemandi
Performed in the Critical Edition by Claudio Gallico.
rec. Teatro Reggio, Parma, May 2005, annual Verdi Festival
Director, Set and Costume designer: Pier’Alli
Video Director: Tiziano Mancini
Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French,
Spanish, Chinese, Korean and Japanese
Booklet essay in English, German Italian and French
Video format: 1080i. Aspect ratio: 16:9. Sound Format: DTS-HD MA
5.01
C MAJOR 720904
[130:00 + 10:00]
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Ernani is the fifth opera in the Verdi canon and is based
on Victor Hugo’s play Hernani. It is numbered five
in the present C Major Tutto Verdi series from the Parma
Festival. To celebrate Verdi’s bicentenary the series
will tackle all twenty-six of Verdi’s operas, plus the
Requiem, all to be released in the coming months on DVD
and Blu-Ray.
In the Verdi oeuvre Ernani follows directly after Nabucco
and I Lombardi premiered at La Scala in March 1842 and
February 1843 respectively. These works had been resounding
successes and placed the thirty-year-old Verdi alongside his
older compatriot, Donizetti, at the forefront of Italian opera
composers. Venice’s premier theatre, La Fenice, was La
Scala’s biggest rival in Northern Italy. It was the theatre
where Rossini had won international fame with Tancredi
in 1813 and also concluded his Italian career in triumph with
Semiramide in 1823. After that performance Rossini was
escorted to his lodgings by a flotilla of gondolas, a water-borne
band playing a selection from his score. A success in Venice
had its own particular flavour and the prospect was an attraction
for Verdi when an invitation came from the Society that owned
the Gran Teatro La Fenice. At first he dallied with an
opera based on the history of Venice using one of the poems
by Byron as the basis for the libretto. Both poems, Marino
Faliero, used earlier by Donizetti, (see review)and
I due Foscari, dealt with the darker side of Venice’s
history. The city fathers would rather portray its Festival
side and Verdi was warned off. However, he did use the second
of those poems for his sixth opera of that title, given in Rome
later the same year as the premiere of Ernani.
The composer, aware of his increasing value drove a hard bargain
by which La Fenice would stage I Lombardi as well as
presenting the new opera to a libretto of Verdi’s own
choice. To write the verses he chose Piave, a native of Venice,
and who was to be his collaborator in nearly half of his subsequent
works. Although the subject of Ernani had already been
featured in operas by others, and even considered by Bellini,
Verdi’s music brought out the story as no other had done
before. Ernani is written in traditional form with arias,
cabalettas and group scenes with virile chorus contributions
being an additional attraction. Verdi articulates the character
of the conflicting roles, and their various relationships, so
that each has clear identification in the music. This manner
had, perhaps, been missing in his earlier successful operas,
which had succeeded on the basis of the popular appeal of their
thrusting melodies. Ernani has a density of musical invention
and melody that is perhaps only matched by Macbeth before
being equalled in Rigoletto, both with libretti by Piave,
and the great mature period operas that followed. Nevertheless
Ernani had only a moderate success at its premiere, the
vocal limitations of some of the soloists being to blame. It
had to wait until productions at Vienna in May 1844, and La
Scala six months later, for full recognition of its qualities.
For the La Scala performances Verdi made additions to the role
of Silva that are present here. Ernani was the first
of Verdi’s operas to be translated into English and was
admired by George Bernard Shaw. Within a year it was staged
by at least thirty different Italian theatres and as far afield
as Vienna. It remained in the Italian repertoire in Verdi’s
lifetime, falling from favour in the early part of the twentieth
century; even today performances are scarce.
When reviewing this performance on CD (see review)
I recounted that I had never had a bad night in the theatre
with Ernani in the UK. Being impressed by the photographs
of a resplendent staging in the accompanying booklet, I conjectured
that a DVD might have distracted from some rather variable singing.
That is in fact how it turned out when the performance first
appeared on DVD issued by the Dynamic label (see review).
In the title role Marco Berti’s tight top and somewhat
dry tone is not improved by his rather wooden acting. However,
that earlier dry tone (CHs. 4-6) does warm as the performance
progresses and even exhibits signs of vocal sensitivity in the
finale (CHs. 37-39). Both Carlo Guelfi as Carlo and Giacomo
Prestia are physically imposing, the latter’s acted portrayal
of the old and implacable Silva being particularly convincing
(CHs.18-27). Carlo Guelfi’s strong tones as Carlo enable
the dramatic situations to come over effectively with well-covered
and coloured tone to the fore. He is particularly strong in
Part 3, at Charlemagne’s Tomb (CHs.28-35) when Carlo first
threatens dire consequences for the plotters (CH.29). After
his elevation to the crown of Charlemagne he is more clement
(CHs.33-35). The other side of the coin comes with Susan Neves
as Elvira. Along with Carlo Guelfi she is vocally a tower of
strength. Visually she is less pleasing, tending to float around
the stage in her ornate full-skirted 16th century
costumes. Her introductory Sorte la notte, Ernani
involami (CHs. 7-9) is a little tentative, but once into
her stride her full voice emerges with good variety of tonal
colour and modulation.
The costumes are in period and the sets, apart from a rather
dull and indeterminate Part 1, simple but effective. The chorus
are fully and their acted commitment is not in doubt. Their
singing is both strong and vibrant.
Antonello Allemandi’s conducting is variable in tempi
between fast, for the trios of Part 1 (CHs.10 and 12) and Part
2 (CHs.18-19) and a more languid approach. You can hear the
latter in some of the solos where he seems over-eager to support
his singers by allowing time for them to phrase, but putting
them under extra pressure to hold the vocal line. This is particularly
evident in the case of Giacomo Prestia’s Silva when his
sonorous tones and elegant phrasing becomes a little wavery.
Allemandi also ups the tempi for the vibrant chorus singing
of Ernani’s troops. This is as viscerally thrilling as
early Verdi scenes of this nature should be, particularly with
the chorus in virile voice as I have noted already.
Photographed in HD, and despite some gloomy settings the picture
is clear with the sound uniformly good. One clearly detects
the difference when singers turn their backs from the orchestra
and conductor.
Thankfully these issues from C Major avoid the idiosyncratic
numbering of the Chapters found on the earlier Dynamic issue,
making double-checking, or repeating an aria or section, much
easier. There is competition on DVD from La Scala in 1982 featuring
Domingo in the title role alongside Mirella Freni, Renato Bruson
and Nicolai Ghiaurov vibrantly conducted by Riccardo Muti. Also
available is a 1983 performance from the Metropolitan Opera
conducted by James Levine: a starry cast of Pavarotti, Sherrill
Milnes and Ruggero Raimondi with Leone Mitchell as Elvira. Both
are in 4:3 aspect ratio and visually show their age compared
with HD. It is possible that the performance using the same
Met production and sets which was transmitted live to cinemas
around the world on 25 February 2012 will appear on DVD as other
such High Definition transmissions have. The cast includes Marcello
Giordani in the title role, Hvorostovsky, Furlanetto with Angela
Meade, an impressive Elvira.
The present production and staging combines to overcome some
vocal and acted weaknesses. It’s a fully satisfactory
performance of an under-performed opera brimming with the composer’s
compositional melody and vitality.
Robert J Farr
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