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        Gioachino ROSSINI (1792-1868)
          Adelaide Di Borgogna - Music drama in two acts (1817) 
          Adelaide, widow of Lotario, King of Italy - Jessica Pratt (soprano); 
          Ottone, Emperor of Germany - Daniela Barcellona (mezzo); Adalberto, 
          Berengario’s son - Bogdan Mihai (tenor); Berengario - Nicola Ulivieri 
          (bass); Eurice, Berengario’s wife - Jeanette Fischer (soprano); Ernesto, 
          an officer - Clemente Antomnio Daliotti (tenor); Iroldo, former governor 
          of Canosso - Francesca Pierpaoli Wilde (tenor) 
          Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro 
          Comunale di Bologna/Dimitri Jurowski 
          rec. live, Teatro Rossini, 2011 Rossini Opera Festival, Pesaro, August 
          2011 
          Stage director, Set Lighting and Costume designer: Pier' Alli 
          Video Director: Tiziano Mancini 
          Sound Format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio 5.1 
          Picture Format: 16:9, 1080i full HD 
          Subtitle Languages: Italian (original language), English, German, French, 
          Spanish, Japanese, Korean 
          Bonus: the making of  Adelaide di Borgogna
          ARTHAUS MUSIK 108 060   
          [137:00 +17:00 bonus]     
        
As I noted in respect of Arthaus Music’s Blu-Ray issue of Rossini’s 
            first composition, Demetrio e Polibio from Pesaro the words 
            World Premiere Recording should only be used when accurate. 
            In that case the most common known recording dated back to 1992. Wrongly 
            used again here the excuse is less forgivable. Adelaide Di Borgogna 
            was performed and recorded, under the aegis of Opera Rara at the Edinburgh 
            Festival in 2005, the CDs appearing a year later (review). 
            Accuracy demands that where appropriate the word Video be added to 
            the advertising hype at Arthaus Musik. 
              
            Accuracy also demands some background in respect of the composition 
            of Adelaide Di Borgogna. Richard Osborne gives the work short 
            space and little explanation as to its composition in his otherwise 
            valuable book (The Belcanto Operas, Methuen, 1994 p.80), 
            nor does he explain why it did not open the Carnival Season at the 
            Teatro Argentina as contracted. The booklet note with this issue, 
            whilst giving some historical background in respect of Rossini in 
            Rome, and his relationship with the impresario, seems to mix up La 
            Cenerentola with the delay in the premiere of the new opera and 
            which meant a loss of money to the impresario (p.7). 
              
            The success of Rossini’s Tancredi, premiered in Venice’s 
            on 6 February 1813, firmly established the young man’s reputation 
            as being amongst the leading young Italian opera composers of his 
            day. He quickly consolidated that position with the sparkling L’Italiana 
            in Algeri also premiered in Venice on 22 May the same year. Whilst 
            Milan was less impressed with Il Turco in Italia (14 August 
            1814) other Italian cities took it up with enthusiasm. These three 
            works put Rossini in a pre-eminent position among his competitors 
            causing the formidable impresario of the Royal Theatres of Naples, 
            Domenico Barbaja, to offer him the musical directorship of the theatres. 
            Under the terms of his contract, Rossini was to provide two operas 
            each year for Naples whilst being permitted to compose occasional 
            operas for other cities. Rossini spent eight years in Naples composing 
            nine of his opera serie which contain some of his greatest 
            music. In the first two years of his contract he also composed no 
            fewer than five operas for other cities, including four for Rome. 
            These include Il Barbiere di Siviglia premiered on 20 February 
            1816 – which has become the composer’s most popular. His second most 
            popular opera, La Cenerentola, was also premiered in Rome 
            in January 1817 after which he squeezed in La Gazza Ladra 
            for Milan in May. 
              
            Rossini’s popularity in Rome contributed to his accepting a further 
            commission for that city even as he was rehearsing Armida 
            for the San Carlo in Naples in November. Barbaja had demanded a spectacular 
            from the composer to launch the refurbished San Carlo after a disastrous 
            fire the year before. With Rinaldo and Armida scheduled 
            to descend on a cloud, and other magical effects, rehearsals were 
            demanding of his time. Despite that, Rossini signed another Rome contract 
            to open the carnival season at the Teatro Argentina on 26 December 
            1817. 
              
            Some have suggested that the pressure of time for the new Rome opera 
            left the composer over-stretched and the result was too many corners 
            being cut. The chosen subject of Adelaide Di Borgogna was 
            to be Rossini’s first opera seria for Rome. It was to be his twenty-fifth 
            opera. He pillaged the overture from his first staged work, La 
            Cambiale di Matrimonio, premiered in 1810. There are other recognisable 
            self-plagiarisms as well as instances where he used the music in later 
            works. More importantly, for this opera seria Rossini did not utilise 
            the more complex skills he had acquired at the San Carlo, aided by 
            its professional orchestra. Instead he reverted to the earlier form 
            of secco recitative and aria. It was not unlike Mozart going back 
            to that formal and somewhat static genre for his La Clemenza di 
            Tito after his three great da Ponte works had seemed to take 
            opera composition in an altogether different and more entertaining 
            direction. In Mozart’s case it was force of circumstances. What made 
            Rossini revert is not known. As the autograph does not survive we 
            do not know to what extent Rossini farmed out the recitatives, or 
            any of the other music, under the pressure of time. Adelaide Di 
            Borgogna was not a success in Rome and although it was seen in 
            other parts of Italy it had disappeared after around 1825. In the 
            essay accompanying the Opera Rara issue, Dr Jeremy Commons examines 
            these issues, and whilst accepting some of the arguments about weak 
            passages, argues strongly in favour of the work. 
              
            Schmidt’s libretto is set in 10th century Italy. It tells 
            the story of Adelaide whose husband has been killed by Berengario. 
            She can be returned to the throne if she marries Adalberto his son. 
            The German Emperor, Ottone, a trousers role, comes to her aid and, 
            after his defeat of Berengario, Adelaide and her saviour end in love 
            and triumph. This production updates the time to nearer the unification 
            of Italy in 1861, one hundred and fifty years before this performance. 
            Perhaps the production was intended as a celebration of the event, 
            albeit being rescued by a German, and having lived under Austrian 
            occupation for so long it is hardly likely. The army costumes in particular 
            are indeterminate eighteenth or nineteenth century. There are few 
            stage props with the whole illustrated by projections, as is the director’s 
            speciality. Some might be deemed appropriate and relevant; others 
            less so. The positive view is that they are, in my view, preferable 
            to the treatment of Sigismondo and Mosè in Egitto 
            at Pesaro in 2010 (review) 
            and 2011 (review) 
            respectively, albeit he mars his creativity with stupid fighting with 
            umbrellas (CH.25) and a surfeit of shimmering water. The work does 
            refer to Como, and it does rain in that area more often than in Pesaro, 
            but the umbrella scene in particular is an aberration of taste and 
            an insult to the audience. Elsewhere, the backdrops and projections 
            sometimes create an elegant atmosphere as in the Church Scene (CH.16). 
              
            Apart from the tedium of constant secco recitatives, some items of 
            the music, particularly the duets, have plenty of Rossinian brio and 
            thrust, or at least as far as the variable tempi of the conductor 
            allows. They show the master’s hand whilst having provision for vocal 
            display and dramatic cohesion. These occasions are amply utilised 
            by an outstanding quartet of main soloists. In the eponymous role, 
            the young Australian coloratura soprano, Jessica Pratt, who I admired 
            in the British premiere of Armida at Garsington in 2010, 
            (review) 
            is very good; a considerable career is well under way in this repertoire. 
            Her coloratura is exact and the top of the voice gleams. I was a little 
            uncertain at one point if her tone needed more body (CH.14) and was 
            immediately bowled over by her singing in the following duet with 
            Ottone (CH.15). It is a tour de force and is justifiably 
            applauded with enthusiasm. 
              
            Any soprano duet with the formidable mezzo Daniela Barcellona in any 
            Rossini trouser role is going to get applause. Barcellona is the Rossini 
            mezzo de nos jours. There has been nobody of her singing 
            and acting skill in these roles and this repertoire since the formidable 
            Marilyn Horne hung up her vocal chords. It was no mistake on Rossini’s 
            part that in the act two finale the mezzo Ottone gets the best bits 
            (CH.28). In this performance Daniela Barcellona is formidable at this 
            point whilst Jessica Pratt gives her considerable all in the preceding 
            near ten minute duet with her mezzo colleague (CH.27). 
              
            If Jessica Prat is admirable in coloratura so too is the tenor Bogdan 
            Mihai as Aldalberto. A little stiff in his acting, his flexible pleasant 
            tone and formidable technique are heard to good effect, particularly 
            in duets with his father (CH.16), Ottone (CH.9) and Adelaide (CHs. 
            19-21). His father, Berengario, is well sung and acted by the bass 
            Nicola Ulivieri whose sonorous, steady and characterful singing is 
            a strength (CH.12), and like that of Bogdan Mihai, is not equalled 
            on the Opera Rara recording. Add these two to the principal ladies 
            and there is the making of a near ideal quartet for Semiramide 
            when Pesaro get around to it. Also worthy of mention is the ever-reliable 
            Jeanette Fischer in the comprimario role of Eurice, Berengario’s wife. 
              
            Whilst the chorus of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna is outstanding 
            I fear that conductor, Dimitri Jurowski, does not exhibit much feel 
            for the Rossini idiom. It is a pity that Alberto Zedda, co-author 
            – with Gabriele Gravagna - of the Critical Edition used, is not on 
            the rostrum rather than wasting his time in the bonus about the making 
            of the film and the production. The picture quality is excellent as 
            are the video choices of Tiziano Mancini. 
              
            Robert J Farr 
           
	   
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