The world of early 18th century opera was very different
to that of, say, Mozart. The story was the thing. Librettos were offered to
musicians as a means of getting the poetic drama before the public. Thus the
great librettists were set multiple times. So it was with Vienna's imperial
poet Metastasio's
Catone in Utica. This story, set in the ancient Numidian
city of Utica - now a ruin in Tunisia - involves the Roman Cato the Younger
and his conflict with Julius Caesar. The plot itself is the usual mixture
of love and betrayal, but because it was by Metastasio there were at least
two settings, by Vinci and Hasse, even before Vivaldi composed the present
piece.
Unfortunately the first act of his setting has gone missing and thus whilst
we know the libretto, we don't know anything about the music. In an attempt
to present as complete a work as possible for Naïve's Vivaldi Edition,
of which this is an amazing Volume 55, it was decided to record a reconstruction
of Act 1, followed by Vivaldi's own music for Acts 2 and 3. The reconstruction
by Alessandro Ciccolini is as scholarly as one could wish and the details
are exhaustively described and charted in the accompanying booklet. What we
hear is derived from 'real' Vivaldi but extrapolated into a full set of arias
and recitatives. Just one aria in Act 1 is fully Vivaldi in that he composed
it all, it is believed, for this opera. For the listener, the result of all
this effort is 69 minutes of 'almost Vivaldi' followed by 92 minutes of actual
Vivaldi. The only thing not explained in the documentation is why this decision
was made. We are not told why they did not simply record Acts 2 and 3 which
exist as an autograph score by the 'Red Priest' himself. I found this fact
oddly disturbing because, so convincing is Ciccolini's reconstruction, one
is left marvelling that it is possible to produce such realistic ersatz Vivaldi.
Can one imagine doing this with Beethoven or Brahms? However, to give this
some context, this is not the first time this particular opera has been reconstructed
and recorded. A previous effort by Jean-Claude Malgoire and La Grande Ecurie
et la Chambre du Roy is available on Dynamic.
There can be no doubt that this opera is a delight from start to finish. Vivaldi
is his usual inventive self - at least those bits he actually wrote - with
an ear for the felicitous phrase and the finest of lyrical invention. He is
judicious in his use of the orchestra; mostly just strings and wind but near
the end with the addition of triumphal brass. Only once do we have a chorus,
the soloists together, and it lasts less than a minute. The six soloists are
very fine, though I did question the vocal control of Roberta Mameli as Cesare
in just one Act 1 aria
Vaga sei nè sdegni tuoi. The orchestra
under their experienced American director Alan Curtis, are quite wonderful.
Curtis has a musical CV of the first order as scholar, player and conductor.
His baroque and early classical discography is very impressive. The present
recording is little short of spectacular in its realism. The orchestra spreads
convincingly and the soloists were standing just behind my speakers, especially
the centre speaker which was actually off. That is how good a sound-picture
engineer Jean-Daniel Noir has achieved.
Dave Billinge
A magnificent recording of yet another splendid Vivaldi opera, the 18th in
Naïve's great series.
See also review by
Brina Wilson and Geoffrey
Molyneux