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            Gaetano DONIZETTI 
              (1797-1848)   
              Linda di Chamounix - Melodramma semiseria in three 
              acts (1842)  
                
              Linda, a young Savoyard girl, - Eglise Gutiérrez (soprano); 
              Carlo, Visconte di Sirval, a young nobleman, masquerading as a painter 
              - Stephen Costello (tenor); Marquis of Boisfleury, an old roué 
              with intentions towards Linda - Alessandro Corbelli (buffo); Antonio, 
              Linda’s father - Ludovic Tezier (bass-baritone); Pierotto, 
              an orphan musician - Marianna Pizzolato (mezzo); The Prefect, Bálint 
              Szabó (bass); Maddalena, Linda’s mother - Elisabeth 
              Sikora (soprano)  
              Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London/Sir 
              Mark Elder  
              rec. live, 7 and 14 September 2009, Concert performances of the 
              opera given at Covent Garden  
              Performed in the Critical Edition edited by Gabrielle Dotto  
                
              OPERA RARA ORC43 [3 CDs: 66.55 + 55.14 + 43.24]    
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                  This work comes in at around the sixty-second of what The 
                  New Grove Masters of Italian Opera (Macmillan, 1983) lists 
                  as sixty-six operas by Donizetti. Others give the total at around 
                  seventy. Sorry not to be more exact, but it depends how one 
                  classifies the re-writes. Is Buondelmonte a new opera 
                  rather than a modification of Maria Stuarda, the circumstances 
                  of which I explain in the latest of my reviews of the latter 
                  opera. (See review). 
                  Then there is the matter of revisions. This is important in 
                  respect of the differences in this performance and that on the 
                  Arts label which contains more than eleven minutes more 
                  music (see review). 
                  The difference is accounted for by the additions Donizetti made 
                  for the Paris production in 1843 to accommodate the coloratura 
                  soprano Fanny Tacchinardi Persiani, the creator of the eponymous 
                  Lucia di Lammermoor in Naples in 1835. The matter of 
                  what is included in this recording from the Paris additions 
                  is dealt with in Jeremy Commons’ detailed essay with credit 
                  to Gabrielle Dotto, editor of the new Critical Edition. 
                  One important addition from the Paris revisions that is included, 
                  from what might be considered the original text presented at 
                  the Vienna Kärntnertor on 19 May 1842, is the most famous 
                  tune from the work, the cabaletta O luce di quest’anima 
                  to Linda’s entrance aria (CD 1 tr.6). Critical Editions 
                  are not meant to recreate the text and performance of the first 
                  night but, to quote Gossett, (Divas and Scholars, Chicago, 
                  2006, pp.134 et seq) himself editor of many Rossini and Verdi 
                  Critical Editions, the purpose “is to make available 
                  the best texts that modern scholarship, musicianship and editorial 
                  technique can produce.” The consequence of the Dotto 
                  Critical Edition is to breathe new life into a Donizetti 
                  opera that, perhaps because of its rather facile story - a girl 
                  dallying in a kept situation whilst intent on safeguarding her 
                  virginity - is naïve in the extreme and hardly plausible 
                  in the present day. That is not to mention the French play from 
                  which the opera derives and which takes a somewhat more harsh 
                  and realistic view of the movement of young Savoyards to Paris 
                  to earn money. The performance here, derived from a concert, 
                  can well be seen as the most appropriate context. It was in 
                  this form that Mark Elder also conducted the work in London 
                  in 1998.  
                     
                  Along with this recording, Dotto’s work seems to have 
                  given rise to a clutch of performances including a contemporaneous 
                  one in Bergamo, which may yet, as others have done from that 
                  source, appear on DVD; one can but hope.  
                     
                  The 1843 Paris performances, with Persiani in the title role, 
                  might well have differed in many respects from the premiere 
                  in Vienna with Eugenia Tadolini taking the part. The latter 
                  sang in many of Verdi’s early period works and created 
                  the name role in his Alzira premiered at the San Carlo 
                  in 1845 (Budden, The Operas of Verdi, Vol. 1, pp.226 
                  et seq). It would seem reasonable to suggest that Tadolini’s 
                  voice had more colour and character than that of Persiani. With 
                  its mad scene and fraught emotional duets in act two, Linda 
                  di Chamounix is an ideal opera for a lyric coloratura soprano 
                  capable of a wide range of expression.  
                     
                  In their usual meticulous manner Opera Rara has sought out a 
                  singer who can encompass the lightness and flexibility of Persiani 
                  alongside the more characterful Tadolini. They have come up 
                  with the young Cuban-American soprano, Eglise Gutiérrez, 
                  who is new to me, as have been many other singers on this label. 
                  She has an appealing lightness and flexibility allied to good 
                  legato, variety of tone and good expression. If she sounds a 
                  little tentative, even inhibited from time to time, she is not 
                  alone. I suspect the circumstances of the concert performance 
                  were not conducive to full dramatic conviction despite Elder’s 
                  pacing and view of the score. If the formidable and more experienced 
                  Mariella Devia realises more of the demands on the Arts issue, 
                  Miss Gutiérrez’s performance is commendable for 
                  a young singer and promises a considerable future career, especially 
                  in this repertoire.  
                     
                  Another performer new to me is the tenor Stephen Costello as 
                  Carlo. He is the supposed impecunious painter, in reality Visconte 
                  di Sirval, in whose plush apartment Linda lives in Paris. She 
                  is naïve to the extent of not seeming to cotton on as to 
                  her perceived state of a kept woman, in what might be termed 
                  Violetta mode. This makes her propositioning by the Marquis 
                  of Boisfleury, and the reaction of her father, not too difficult 
                  to comprehend. Costello sings with a welcome clear open ring 
                  to his tone making his ardent declarations in his act two aria 
                  (CD 2 tr.3) eminently believable. His characterisation is a 
                  little vague at times whilst a lack of elegance in his phrasing 
                  might inhibit his promising future, although in recent months 
                  I have seen his name carded at some distinguished operatic addresses. 
                   
                     
                  Characterisation is no problem for Alessandro Corbelli, the 
                  seemingly veteran buffa, as the Marquis of Boisfleury, and whose 
                  earlier behaviour is somewhat implausibly forgiven in the finale 
                  (CD 3 tr.7). There are, however, dry patches in his tone; not 
                  a problem with Ludovic Tezier as Antonio, Linda’s father 
                  nor Bálint Szabó as The Prefect. All three are 
                  superior to their counterparts in the Arts label performance. 
                  If I cannot say the same about Marianna Pizzolato as Linda’s 
                  friend and supporter, the young hurdy-gurdy player, Pierotto, 
                  it is only because of the competition from Sonia Ganassi. Sufficient 
                  compliment to say that I would be happy to hear either in the 
                  theatre and that in this performance Miss Pizzolato is a tower 
                  of strength in both the quality of her singing and also in her 
                  characterisation. Her wide palette of colour is well in evidence. 
                   
                     
                  In the Opera Rara recording of Roberto de Devereux (see 
                  review) 
                  I was not happy about the acoustic in the Royal Opera House 
                  and also the intrusions of applause. I found the sound here 
                  had more presence, especially with the volume turned a little 
                  louder than usual, and the only intrusions for applause are 
                  at the end.  
                     
                  I have only briefly touched on Elder’s contribution in 
                  this recording taken from two concert performances that opened 
                  the Royal Opera House season in 2009. Although this lacks something 
                  of the vitality and verve of a staged live performance, the 
                  absence of stage movement noise and fade are benefits. Elder’s 
                  overall feel for this music, and wide experience of staged productions, 
                  are in evidence in his support for the singers and the challenges 
                  they face in the bel canto repertoire. Gabrielle Bellini 
                  for Arts is more lyrical than Elder who manages the limitations 
                  of a concert performance well to build tension and inflect the 
                  music with more dramatic pulse.  
                     
                  On this Opera Rara issue each of the three acts is contained 
                  on one disc. The set comes with full libretto and translation 
                  in English as well as a synopsis in French and German alongside 
                  the extensive essay by Jeremy Commons already referred to.  
                     
                  Postscript 1. The success of Linda di Chamounix in Vienna 
                  led Donizetti to be commissioned to write a further opera for 
                  the Kärntnertor theatre. This became Maria di Rohan 
                  which waspremiered in June 1843. Donizetti was showered 
                  with honours and appointed Imperial Court Composer. At last 
                  it seemed as though his aspiration to follow Rossini in getting 
                  away, at least in part, from the compositional treadmill was 
                  in sight. But Donizetti had drawn too many short straws in life’s 
                  lottery with the death of his children and his wife at the time 
                  of the composition of Roberto Devereux. Any thoughts 
                  of an easier life were to be short-lived as, during the composition 
                  of his final opera, Dom Sébastien, he was reported 
                  to have exhibited erratic behaviour and flown into uncontrollable 
                  rages. Premiered in Paris in November 1843 it was only modestly 
                  received by the Parisian audience. A revised edition had a better 
                  reception in Vienna the following year. By then Donizetti’s 
                  health was in serious decline and far from enjoying the fruits 
                  of his more recent successes he became increasingly ill from 
                  the effects of tertiary syphilis, known as general paralysis 
                  of the insane. He became paralysed with the consequent cerebra-spinal 
                  degeneration and was placed in an institution. For the last 
                  17 months of his life he was paralysed and finally comatose. 
                  He died at the age of only fifty-one.  
                     
                  Postscript 2. Opera Rara have already recorded Donizetti’s 
                  second Vienna opera, Maria di Rohan, which will be issued 
                  in November 2011. Recorded in November 2009, it features, among 
                  others, soprano Krassimira Stoyanova in the title role, José 
                  Bros and Christopher Purves. Sir Mark Elder conducts the Geoffrey 
                  Mitchell Choir and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. 
                  Like this recording, Maria di Rohan has been made with 
                  the financial support of the Sir Peter Moores Foundation. However, 
                  it will be the last to feature that support which has enabled 
                  Opera Rara to record, and maintain in the catalogue, an unequalled 
                  number of the composer’s operas; around eighteen I believe. 
                  They have the composer’s last staged opera, Caterina 
                  Cornaro scheduled for recording in the autumn of 2011. This 
                  will feature Carmen Giannattasio in the title role. She has 
                  already featured in recordings of Parasina (see review) 
                  and Rossini’s La Donna del Lago (see review) 
                  and Ermione (see review) 
                  for Opera Rara.   
                     
                  In restructuring, to secure financial support, Sir Mark Elder 
                  has become Artistic Director. Philanthropist Ian Rosenblatt 
                  has been appointed Chairman. The website 
                  gives details of Opera Rara and how to subscribe and support 
                  the continuance of their efforts.  
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
                 
                  
                 
                 
             
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