The
original five-act form of
Don Carlos was premiered
at the Paris Opéra on 11 March 1867 and was only modestly
received. The premiere of the Italian translation as
Don
Carlo, fared little better. Both the Italian public
and theatre managements found it over-long and were slow
to take it to their hearts. It was not long before the
act three ballet and then the Fontainebleau act were
dropped altogether. The arrival in Italy of the shorter
and grander
Aida in 1871 added to the difficulty
of the opera’s length. After a failure in Naples in the
same year Verdi made his first alterations to the score
for a revival under his own supervision. Still the fortunes
of the opera disappointed the composer and as early as
1875 he began seriously to consider shortening the work
himself. With other demands he did not begin seriously
on this until 1882, concluding his revision as a four
act opera the following year with the premiere having
to wait until 1884. This new shorter four-act revision
involved much rewording to explain the sequence of events
and maintain narrative and dramatic coherence. Verdi’s
own reworking involved the removal of the Fontainebleau
act, the ballet and the Inquisitor’s chorus in act five
as well as other detailed changes. The full story of
the genesis of Don Carlos, and its various forms, is
told in detail in Part 4 of my
Verdi
Conspectus. The premiere of the new four act
Don
Carlo, which has become known as the 1884 version,
was a great success at La Scala and featured the tenor
Tamagno who created Otello three years later.
As
with the contemporaneously issued Sony DVD of Verdi’s
Falstaff,
also from the Salzburg Festival, (Sony 88697296009 to
be reviewed) this issue is as much a veneration of Karajan
as of Verdi and his opera. Karajan had first conducted
at the Salzburg Festival in 1933 and was Director from
1955-1960 being appointed to the Board of Directors in
1964. He founded the Salzburg Easter Festival in 1967
to go alongside the established Summer Festival. Well
before the time of this recording, Karajan had used the
Salzburg Festival to take total control in the theatre
as director, as well as on the podium. He also chose
his set and costume designers. He had become the Svengali
of Salzburg. This was how he wanted it. Some productions
from the 1970s were filmed by Unitel, often with film
studio additions, and with the sound dubbed, the lip
sync of the singers occasionally betraying that fact
as with the production of Verdi’s
Otello (see
review).
Later, after helping to introduce and launch the CD audio
system, and always enchanted by technology, he founded
Telemondial S.A.M. to produce his complete repertoire
for the emerging video-disc. This also gave him full
control of both vision and sound. As is well known, the
video-disc format didn’t take off. A number of these
operas were issued on VCR before their current emergence
on the Digital Versatile Disc, or DVD, currently the
medium of choice, at least until Blue Ray takes premier
position.
I believe this
Don Carlo
recording was made in 1986, three
years before the conductors death,
which may account for all too evident
signs of under rehearsal and moments
of laggardly tempi. The production
was first seen at Salzburg in 1975
and reprised each year until 1978,
a situation hitherto unheard of
except for a Mozart opera! The first
of those performances forms the
basis for the EMI Classics audio
recording (EMI 769304 2). By the
time of the present recording some
of the cast had moved on. What did
remain the same was the quite magnificent
array of sets. Except for the likes
of the Salzburg Festival and New
York’s Metropolitan Opera such scenery
is rarely seen or afforded on the
opera stage. This is exemplified
in the opening scene at the monastery
of St. Yuste with its mighty gates
and with views through the bars
which seem to go onward to infinity
(CHs 2-4). The following Garden
Scene is equally impressive with
sweeping descending staircases,
crenellated wall at the rear, and
for its extras in front of whom
the dogs are exercised (CH 6). For
the Queen’s Garden of act two the
back wall is changed. But, perhaps
the most impressive is the backing
to the staircases in the
Auto
da-fé scene, a magnificent Renaissance-style
palatial façade (CHs 18-20). After
such splendours the staging of the
King’s study, the setting for Philip’s
soliloquy
Ella giammai mamo
(CH 20) and the mighty confrontation
with the Grand Inquisitor (CHs 20-21),
seem relatively commonplace. But
no, like the setting of the
Prison
Scene with Rodrigo’s murder
and the Eboli inspired insurrection
(CHs 26-28), everything is appropriate
and has its purpose. This is grand
opera in all its splendour and as
Verdi might have expected and seen
at the Paris Opéra for the premiere.
Both sets and costumes are in period
and utterly realistic. If you enjoy
such traditional productions with
period sets and costumes, luxuriate
in this whilst you can. It is of
a lost period in opera production
as producers and designers seek
to bring their own vision, and even
added words to a score. They are
often not at all bothered about
a composer’s intentions, even when
they are clearly stated.
As
I have indicated, the sets and costumes are the same
as for the initial performances in 1975-1978, but there
are significant cast changes and I regret that they are
not for the better. Of the original cast, José Carreras
in the eponymous role has lost the lyric plangency of
his voice in the intervening years. His tone is more
baritonal in timbre and less free at the top. He sings
and acts with commitment and involvement although tending
to force his voice at times. As Princess Eboli, Agnes
Baltsa with her lean tangy tone is one of the few who
can manage with conviction the coloratura of the
Veil
Song (CH 7) and also the more declamatory aria
O
don fatale (CH 25). Unaccountably both the introductory
Sotto
ai folti, immense abeti (beneath these trees) by
the ladies is abbreviated and the second verse of the
Veil Song itself,
Ma discerna appena (I can hardly
see) is omitted entirely. As Baltsa sings and acts everyone
else off the stage this is a significant loss! Piero
Cappuccilli reprises his admired Rodrigo and continues
to field impressive tone and adequate steadiness. His
vocal characterisation and acting are altogether another
matter. Added to their deficiencies he looks rather the
worse for years and altogether too old for fighting in
Flanders.
Physical
appearance is also an issue with Ferruccio Furlanetto’s
portrayal of Philip and Matti Salminen’s as the Grand
Inquisitor. Furlanetto’s Philip looks more like Carlo’s
elder brother than his father; surely the make-up department
and the camera crew could have done better as he sings
about his grey hair. There is better news. Whilst regretting
the lack of Ghiaurov’s outstanding singing in the original
production, Furlanetto’s tone is full and well varied
although he fails to bring out the pain felt by the King
in his famous soliloquy in the manner of his illustrious
predecessor (CH 20). He is perhaps most impressive in
Philip’s duet with Rodrigo which concludes with the ominous
warning to beware the Grand Inquisitor (CH 14). Matti
Salminen looks far too healthy and upright for a blind
nonagenarian. Whilst his singing is strong and appropriately
forceful in the confrontation with Philip, his is not
a natural voice for the role, lacking Italianate squilla
(CHs 21-22). Perhaps the poorest acted impression is
that made by Fiamma Izzo D’Amico as Elisabeth. Born in
Rome in 1964 and supposedly a Karajan ‘discovery’ she
made her operatic debut in 1984 in Treviso. She is a
lovely looking woman, but neither her face nor her acting
convey the emotions of what she is singing. Far too often
she wears a bland look or, at worse, that of a rabbit
caught in a car’s headlights. This appearance at Salzburg
was perhaps a step too soon and too far. The role of
Elisabeth is as much spinto as lyric and her promising
voice is not up to the task. Although she went on to
sing Mimi in
La Boheme at La Scala and appear
at the Metropolitan Opera, she had seemingly disappeared
from the stage by the early 1990s. My colleague Göran
Forsling
reviews a
1987 recital disc of her elsewhere on this site.
The
age of Fiamma Izzo D’Amico brings me to contentious issues
in respect of presentation of this DVD from Sony in PAL
format. If, as the booklet states this recording derived
from 1982 performances, then the soprano was a mere 18
years old at the time and had not made her professional
debut! This might have explained her somewhat overawed
appearance. However, I believe the recording was made
at the 1986 reprise of the production, a mere three years
before Karajan’s death. A DVD issue of the performance
has been available in America as Region 1 NTSC since
2002 with multi-coloured front and with correct Chapter
listings. This issue has the wrong Chapter listings from
20 onwards, the latter being listed twice. The King’s
aria,
Ella giammai mamo should be Chapter 21 and
all subsequent numbers one forward. In reference referrals
above, I have chosen to use the incorrect numbers given
on the rear of the booklet. This being his centenary
year the booklet has a biography of Karajan, an essay
on the origins of the four-act version and a detailed
synopsis, regrettably not track-related. These are in
German and English.
Robert J Farr