The composer Ildebrando
Pizzetti may be an unknown quantity
for many readers, so I will give a
brief biography. He belonged to the
"Generation of 1880" along
with Ottorino Respighi and Gian-Francesco
Malipiero. They were the first important
Italian figures for quite some time
who were not primarily opera composers.
Pizzetti’s early ambition was to become
a playwright and he even had a couple
of plays published before he turned
wholeheartedly to composing. Like
Respighi he had a lifelong interest
in the early music of Italy, which
is also reflected in his compositions,
not least his choral works, which
are possibly the part of his oeuvre
by which he will be best remembered.
His Messa di Requiem (1922)
for a cappella choir is probably
his masterpiece. It is, as is most
of his music, rather stern and harsh,
true melodies are rare but it has
nonethe less an austere beauty as
repeated listening sessions reveal.
I first heard the Requiem at a concert
some fifteen years ago and immediately
bought the Chandos recording with
the Danish Radio Choir under Stefan
Parkman.
Pizzetti wrote large
quantities of orchestral music, including
a symphony in A (1940) and concertos
for violin and for cello. His chamber
music includes two strings quartets,
a couple of piano trios, violin sonatas
– the one in A championed by Yehudi
Menuhin, He wrote quite a number of
operas, the earliest, Sabina,
as early as 1897. Assassinio nella
Cattedrale was premiered at La
Scala in 1958 with Nicola Rossi-Lemeni
as the Archbishop and Gianandrea Gavazzeni
conducting. It was a success then
and so it was when Herbert von Karajan
brought it to Vienna two years later
with the great Hans Hotter in the
central role. In Britain it was seen
in Coventry in 1962, the same year
as the world premiere of Britten’s
War Requiem, but after that
it mostly collected dust until the
present production. The Basilica di
San Nicola in Bari in southern Italy,
is a cathedral founded in 1087 and
so was a suitable place for the production.
The real life murder of Thomas Becket
occurred on 29 December 1170. The
libretto is by the composer, adapted
from Alberto Castelli’s Italian translation
of the play by T.S. Eliot.
The cast-list is
long but everything focuses on the
Archbishop, so even though there is
a lot of good to middling singing
and acting in the minor roles only
Thomas Becket is a really rounded
character. And Ruggero Raimondi makes
the most of the role. He is a remarkable
singer who made his professional debut
more than forty years ago and having
sung all the great bass roles he has
preserved his voice to a great extent.
It has dried out a little but it is
still a pliant instrument and his
acting abilities have always been
impressive. The recording is a bit
variable and sometimes the voices
become distant while the orchestra
takes over. There are no arias but
the Archbishop’s solos are held in
an arioso that can be both expressive
and beautiful. There is however another
main character: the chorus. As I suggested
earlier Pizzetti’s real forte is choral
writing and the choral scenes here
are truly magnificent. The massed
voices function as the chorus in the
Greek tragedies - as commentators
to the action. T.S. Eliot had both
these and the medieval mystery plays
in mind – as well as the fifteenth
century Everyman. This was
my first contact with this work. There
do exist broadcast tape from the La
Scala premiere and also from the Vienna
premiere (sung in German) but I don’t
know if they have been available commercially.
Anyway I believe that deeper acquaintance
with the work may reveal a similar
greatness as the Requiem did
after a couple of listening sessions.
That greatness lies, as I have said,
primarily in the choral writing. Gregorian
Chant was a central influence on Pizzetti
here seasoned with his personal rugged
harmonies. The choruses radiate a
strange beauty.
The Basilica di San
Nicola is ideal visually with its
beautiful altar paintings. Since this
was filmed during a single performance
– with some close-ups of the Archbishop
probably shot separately – there is
a rare sense of event and continuity.
There will presumably
not be another production of this
work in the foreseeable future. We
have to be grateful to Decca for making
this harsh but fascinating opera available
for the general opera public. It is
also a worthy tribute to the artistry
of Ruggero Raimondi, who must have
learnt the role specifically for this
performance.
Göran
Forsling