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Gian Carlo MENOTTI (1911-2007)
Goya - Opera in three acts (1986)
Plácido Domingo (tenor) - Francisco de Goya y Lucientes;
Michelle Breedt (mezzo) - Doña Cayetana, Duchess of Alba;
Iride Martinez (soprano) - Maria Luisa, Queen of Spain; Andreas
Conrad(tenor) - Charles IV, King of Spain;Maurizio
Muraro (bass) - Don Manuel Godoy; Christian Gerhaher (baritone)
- Martin Zapater; Nadia Krasteva (mezzo) - A Singer/Leocadia; Petra
Simkova (soprano) - A Maid; Sergio Raonic Lukovic (bass-baritone)
- Innkeeper/Major Domo
Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien, Festival-Chor KlangBogen Wien/Emmanuel
Villaume
Stage Director: Kaspar Bech Holten; Stage and Costume Designer:
Steffen Aarfing; Lighting: Jesper Kongshaug; Choreography: Nikolaus
Adler
Directed for TV and Video by Karin Veitl and Thomas Bogensberger
rec. live, Teater an der Wien, 2004
Sound format: PCM Stereo;
Picture format: 4:3; Region code: 0;
Subtitles: GB, D, FR, ES, IT, Korean
ARTHAUS MUSIK 101576
[101:00]
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It so happened that Gian Carlo Menotti invited Plácido
Domingo for dinner in Scotland in 1977, when the tenor was singing
Don José in Carmen at the Edinburgh Festival.
It turned out that they shared the opinion that in modern music
the human voice was treated as an instrument. Domingo once said:
‘You find the most beautiful passages during the scene
changes, but as soon as the singers appear, the melody disappears.’
It soon followed that Domingo asked: ‘Gian Carlo, why
don’t you write an opera for me?’ Domingo at once
saw an appropriate basis for the opera: the life of Francisco
Goya, the artist he admired most of all. Menotti accepted immediately
and later said: ‘I think it was the only time I accepted
someone else’s idea.’ It was almost a decade before
the opera was finished but in November 1986 it was first performed
in Washington by Washington National Opera. This was Domingo’s
debut there, which eventually led to his taking over the post
as General Director ten years later. The audience loved the
work, the theatre was filled with celebrities, including Queen
Sofia of Spain, and the production was lavish. The critics were
generally of different opinions. I have read the New York Times
acerbic review, where Donal Henahan piles negativisms like ‘Goya
... had everything in its favor except a composer and a librettist
capable of dealing in depth with its operatically promising
subject’ and ‘Mr Menotti has simply piled platitude
on platitude for three acts’. These are comments that
could kill any production, but Domingo still had faith in the
work and when he was invited to appear at the Theater an der
Wien, the stage where Die lustige Witwe was premiered
back in 1905, he chose Goya as a suitable piece, and
the present issue was filmed during performances there in 2004.
I may have a partiality for platitudes and thus I am not in
the least offended by such in this libretto. Musically Menotti
has almost throughout his life been criticized for this and
that, mostly for being out of phase with his time. Still several
of his operas were not just successes with the public but also
rendered him awards, for instance the Pulitzer Prize twice in
the 1950s. I have lately had opportunities to review some of
his best known operas and have to admit that they are much to
my liking. Goya, is, compared to The Medium and
The Consul, more uneven but there is a lot to admire.
Most of all Menotti is strong in his handling of the orchestra
and the interludes are certainly of high quality. Large parts
of the opera consists of recitative that is more routine than
inspirational and when the composer at emotional high-spots
lets loose his creative vein these moments reach heights on
a level with his best music from several decades back. In the
opening of the opera there is Spanish colouring with a guitarist
on stage and there are some ‘arias’ of great beauty
- Paradise of flying angels (Act I, scene 1, Ch 4) -
and the strongest scene is undoubtedly Goya’s long final
monologue. This is powerful and deep-probing music and the appearance
of the Duchess is balm for the torn soul of the old painter.
I won’t deal in depth with either the story or the message
of the opera. Goya is, however, ‘a symbol of the freedom
and constraints of the artist. For Menotti, the main focus was
on the dualism between Goya the artist and Goya the man.’
The sets are spare and Kasper Bech Holten puts the characters
in focus in what can be described as a timeless world. The life
of the artist is largely the same in any historical time.
Centre-stage is naturally Goya himself and, having chosen the
subject for the opera, Placido Domingo is a deeply involved
artist. I have always stated that Mr Domingo could have had
a great stage career also without his singing voice - though
Mr Henahan of the New York Times found him ‘not
a graceful actor’ but admitted that he ‘lent his
famously robust voice to his evening's task like a tenor who
genuinely believes in what he is singing.’ Of course I
don’t know anything about his acting at the Washington
premiere, but eighteen years later in Vienna his portrait of
his great compatriot is certainly all-embracing and I don’t
believe that anyone - unless one has a heart of stone - can
be unmoved by his depiction of the ageing deaf and blind painter.
Domingo is truly magnificent here - and it is the actor, not
the singer, who impresses most. Michelle Breedt as his muse,
the Duchess of Alba, is a marvellous singer, visually appealing
and dramatically convincing. As Martin Zapater, Goya’s
close friend, Christian Gerhaher sings and acts excellently
and Maurizio Muraro as Don Manuel Godoy, Queen Maria Luisa’s
lover, is very good too, while the Queen herself, Iride Martinez,
is a lively actress but vocally a scream.
I must agree that Goya isn’t Menotti at his most
inspired but it is on the other hand not a write-off. Platitudes
or not there is enough substance in the score and the libretto
to make it worth seeing. With some excellent singing and Domingo
in splendid shape rather late in his phenomenal career it can’t
fail to move appreciative and sensitive opera lovers.
Göran Forsling
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