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Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
Oberto, Conte di Bonifaci - Opera in two acts (1839)
Oberto - Giovanni Parodi (bass); Leonora, his daughter deceived
by Riccardo - Francesca Sassu (soprano); Riccardo, Count of Salinguerra,
betrothed to Cuniza - Fabio Sartori (tenor); Cuniza, set to marry
Riccardo - Mariana Pentcheva (mezzo); Imelda, Cuniza’s confidant
- Giorgia Bertagni (mezzo)
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro Regio, Parma/Antonello Allemandi
rec. Verdi Theatre, Busetto, October 2007.
Director, Sets and Costumes: Pier´Alli
Video director: Tiziano Mancini
Video format: 1080i; Aspect: 16:9; Sound Format: DTS-HD MA 5.01
Booklet notes: English, German, French
Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French,
Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Japanese
C MAJOR BLU RAY
720104 [124:00 + 10:00]
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Oberto was the first complete and staged opera by Giuseppe
Verdi. This recording is numbered one in a complete edition
of his operas, called Tutto Verdi. All recorded at the
Parma Verdi Festival the edition marks the bicentenary of the
great Italian opera composer’s birth with recordings of
all twenty-six of his operas. This simple statement on the product
case begs a lot of questions not least whether Oberto
was Verdi’s first shot at opera composition. There is
extant correspondence indicating an opera by him called Rocester.
It was never staged. Whether it formed the basis for Oberto,
or if any of the music written for it has otherwise been utilised
is not known. A second obvious statement needs making: it is
that there are twenty-eight different titles in the Verdi canon.
Two titles are not included in this series, first, Jérusalem
(1847), which was a re-write of his fourth opera, I Lombardi
(1843) to a French libretto for the composer’s debut at
the Paris Opéra and Aroldo (1857). The latter
was a re-write of Stiffelio (1850) designed to get away
from the portrayal of a married Protestant Minister that offended
some audience sensibilities. Both operas contain new music,
much as did Verdi’s revisions of Macbeth and Simon
Boccanegra for example, whilst their musical core is as
in the original.
Oberto was staged for the first time at La Scala, Milan,
in November 1839 when the composer was twenty-six years of age,
by which age Rossini had twenty-four operas to his name! As
a young and unknown composer, Verdi followed the general format
of opera productions at the time. Even so, there are already
many scenes in this early work that reveal unmistakable signs
of the composer's individual style. The fact that it was premiered
at La Scala and the impresario Bartolomeo Merelli stood all
the costs of production and staging indicates that he recognised
the individuality and musical quality in Verdi’s first
effort. Due to illness among singers, Oberto conte di Boniface,
No. 1 in the Verdi oeuvre was not premiered until the 17 November
1839 rather than the spring as planned. During the rehearsals
Verdi’s second child, his son Icilio, died. The opera
was a big enough success for Merelli to extend the number of
scheduled performances to fourteen that season and twelve the
next. He also sold the score to Ricordi for the not inconsiderable
sum of two thousand Austrian Lire thus recouping some of his
investment. More importantly for Verdi, Merelli contracted the
composer for three more operas to be presented over the next
two years for a fee of four thousand Lire each together with
half the money raised if the score were sold. Oberto
is also significant insofar as it shows the composer drawn from
the start of his career to the often-troubled father-daughter
relationship that was to occur overtly in so many of his works.
The story concerns the conflict between two families in the
early thirteenth century in what became Italy. Oberto of San
Bonifaccio was driven into exile leaving his daughter, Leonora,
behind. Whilst he was away, one of the opposing family, using
a false name but really Riccardo, courts and seduces Leonora
with the promise of marriage before deserting her in favour
of Cuniza. Leonora meets her father, who has returned in disguise
near Cuniza’s castle. He bitterly reproaches her, refusing
her embrace. When Cuniza learns of Riccardo’s promise
she renounces her intended marriage. Meanwhile Oberto challenges
Riccardo to a duel. Despite the latter promising to marry Leonore,
the two men fight and Oberto is killed. Leonore refuses to accept
Riccardo saying her future life will be as a nun.
This performance was recorded at the Teatro Verdi in the town
of Bussetto, where Verdi lived and later bought his estate.
It was the place where as a child he had lodged with Barezzi,
who later financed his musical education in Milan and whose
daughter he married. She, together with their two young children
died as Verdi sought to build his career. The building of the
theatre and its naming brought some conflict between Verdi and
the town council who expected him to contribute to its building.
He eventually did so, but never entered it. It seats only about
three hundred, fewer for opera productions. Its cramped stage
conditions are challenging for directors. Franco Zeffirelli
has produced operas there, as has the vastly experienced Pier
Luigi Pizzi who presented I Vespri Siciliani in 2003
(see review). The theatre is also used for the production of
the composer’s ninth opera, Attila, in this Tutto
Verdi collection (under review).
The costumes are in period whilst the set, on the small stage
of the Verdi Theatre in Bussetto, is extremely simple with representations
of rooms, and a forest, situated at the stage rear and revealed
by opening screens. Director Pier´Alli brings the singers
and chorus forward at every opportunity, using adjacent boxes
to accommodate the latter on occasions. The use of the hands
is an important component of the acting and in this respect
the Leonore of Francesca Sassu is particularly responsive. Her
soprano is warm-toned, if thinning a little in the upper region
(CHs.6-8 and 37). Nonetheless her assumption is a significant
one in the dramatic realisation of the opera. As her father,
Oberto, Giovanni Parodi is imposing of stature and sings with
steady tone and good diction whilst expressing the emotions
of the words well (CHs. 10, 27-28). As his adversary, the seducer
Riccardo, the rather chunky Giorgia Bertagni sings with a bright
rather dry lyric tenor voice. He can and does sing softly, but
only loses that dryness at forte (CHs.4 and 33). A little stiff
in her acting Mariana Pentcheva as Cuniza has an even, well
projected, mezzo voice (CHs. 23-24). The comprimario role of
Imelda, sung by Fabio Sartori, has more than usual to sing in
the duets and particularly in the rondo finale for the three
women where all the ladies fulfil the dramatic and vocal demands
well (CHs. 36-38). On the rostrum Antonello Allemandi teases
out the Verdian characteristics of the music and supports his
singers with gentle élan whilst ensuring the dramatic
moments get full value.
The main competition on DVD comes from a performance in Bilbao
in 2007 conducted by Yves Abel (Opus Arte OA 0982 D). With more
grandiose sets it has strengths and is competitive; as of the
present it is not available on Blu-Ray. On CD there is an outstanding
contender on the Philips label under Marriner. Recorded in 1997
it features Sam Ramey as Oberto, Maria Guleghina as Leonora
and Violetta Urmana, then singing as a mezzo, as Cuniza.
Robert J Farr
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