Sunday, April 28, 2013

Metastasio/Caldara, "Adriano in Siria" -- Also by Pergolesi, Bach, Anfossi.

Speranza

Metastasio’s "Ancient Roman" libretto "Adriano in Siria" was first set to music by Caldara (Vienna, 1732).

It was subsequently adapted for many more settings over the next century.

Set in Antioch after the Roman emperor Hadrian has conquered the Parthians, the plot is a typical Metastasian intrigue of political machinations provoked by jealousy and love.

The intransigent vanquished King Osroa is determined to wreak revenge upon the conqueror Hadrian, who has abandoned his Roman lover Sabina and now lusts after the king’s daughter Emirena – but she and the Asian prince Farnaspe are in love and engaged to be married.

The third setting of Metastasio’s libretto was composed in 1734 by Pergolesi for the Teatro San Bartolomeo in Naples to celebrate the birthday of the Spanish Queen Mother Isabella FARNESE (Spain having captured Naples from the Austrians a few months previously).

Alas, Pergolesi’s dramma per musica was a
commercial flop and its score lay unperformed
until its first modern revival at Florence in 1985.

This 2010 staging by Ignacio García took place at the Teatro GB Pergolesi in Iesi (the composer’s birthplace).

The stage action is pleasingly literal, sensible and unpretentious.

García allows the performers and
audience enough mental space
to concentrate fully on the
rhetorical power of the soliloquy
convention, without
any ill-conceived attempt to
subvert Metastasio’s language
and action into something sexy and post-modern.


Instead, the restrained use of physical
movement means that each small
gesture and conceptual idea (such as the gentle use
of live caged birds as a metaphor for captivity)
achieves greater clarity and impact than had they been swamped by
over-active busyness.

The elegant set of broken ancient columns, rubble and a few human skulls is a simple and quietly effective universe in which all three acts take place consistently.

There is clumsy or ironic subversion of the
lieto fine in this exemplarily loyal production,
although plenty of entertaining comic
relief is offered by the lowbrow intermezzo Livietta e Tracollo performed between the acts – as was done during Pergolesi’s original performances in 1734.

The antics of the squabbling comic couple (sung spiritedly by Monica Bacelli and Carlo Lepore) give a sharp artistic
contrast to the Metastasian
drama concerned with virtue,
selflessness and heroic stoicism –
and give us a tantalising glimpse of the aesthetic diversity of Neapolitan opera during the settecento.

It is startling to hear a passage during the first part of the farcical intermezzo that is almost identical a section of Pergolesi’s famous Stabat mater, and Tracollo’s fraudulent impersonation of a wise astronomer (‘Vedo l’aria che s’imbruna’) is as lyrical and imaginative as any of the ‘serious’ arias in Adriano.

Ottavio Dantone praises Pergolesi as the finest Italian opera composer of the 18th century, and his proposal is supported by a fine performance featuring the zesty playing of Accademia Bizantina.

The arias for Farnaspe (written for the castrato Caffarelli – Handel’s original Serse) are dramatically and musically accomplished, especially the gorgeous ‘Lieto così tal volta’ at the end of Act 1, which features enchanting use of solo oboe and pizzicato strings while the hero imagines himself freed from his prison cell.

Emirena is sung superbly by Lucia Cirillo (the tender lament ‘Prigioniera abbandonata’), and Nicole Heaston’s performance as Sabina is simply sensational, from her immaculate long-held high notes (‘Chi soffre senza pianto’) to flawless wide leaps of an octave and a half and wonderful embellishments (‘Splenda per voi sereno’).

This is an exceptionally fine production that offers a great deal of integrity and fascination.

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