Sunday, April 28, 2013

ROSSINI, "Aureliano" (La Scala, 1813) -- tenor role created by Mari, although meant to be created by Giovanni David (throad problems during rehearsals led David to withdraw).

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Aureliano in Palmira is an operatic dramma serio in two acts written by Gioachino Rossini to a libretto in which the librettist was credited only by the initials "G. F. R."
 
The libretto has generally been attributed to Giuseppe Felice Romani,  but sometimes to the otherwise unknown Gian Francesco Romanelli.
 
It has been suggested that the latter name may have resulted from a confusion of Romani with Luigi Romanelli, La Scala's house poet prior to Romani's appointment to the post.
 
 
The story was based on the libretto by Gaetano Sertor for Pasquale Anfossi's 1789 opera Zenobia in Palmira.
 
The melodrama centers around the rivalry between the Roman Emperor Aureliano and Prince Arsace of Persia over the beautiful Zenobia, Queen of Palmira.
 
The Act 1 duet between Zenobia and Arsace,
 
Se la m'ami, o mia regina ("If you love me, oh my queen"), was greatly admired by Stendhal.
 
Although he had never seen a complete performance of Aureliano in Palmira, he heard the duet in a concert in Paris and described its music as "sublime" and one of the best duets that Rossini had written.
 
Other music from this opera, particularly the overture, was later reused by Rossini in Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra and in The Barber of Seville.
 
It premiered at La Scala in Milan on 26 December 1813.
 

 

 

Aureliano in Palimira was Rossini's second commission from La Scala.
 
It opened the theatre's Carnival season with the famed castrato, Giovanni Battista Velluti as Arsace.
 
It was the only role that Rossini wrote for the castrato voice.
 
Rossini had originally written the role of
Aureliano for Giovanni David,
one of the most renowned tenors of the day.
 
 
However, throat problems during rehearsals led
David to withdraw from the production, and Luigi Mari took his place.
 
The popular soprano, Lorenza Correa, sang the role of Queen Zenobia.
 
The orchestra at the premiere was conducted by Alessandro Rolla, with the staging directed by Alessandro Sanquirico.
 
The opera's opening night proved disappointing to the Milanese critics who praised the production but considered the music inferior to that of Rossini's Tancredi which had premiered in Venice earlier that year.
 
There was also criticism of the three principal singers.
 
Nevertheless, it had a run of 14 performances at La Scala that season and was performed sporadically in various Italian theatres (including the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples) between 1814 and 1831.
 
It was also performed in London in 1826, again with Velluti as Arsace.
 
The opera then fell more or less into obscurity.
 
Its first modern performance was in September, 1980 at the Teatro Politeama in Genoa conducted by Giacomo Zani, with Paolo Barbacini as Aureliano, Helga Müller-Molinari as Arsace, and Luciana Serra as Zenobia.
 
There was another major revival in 1996 at the "Rossini in Wildbad" Festival conducted by Francesco Corti, with Donald George as Aureliano, Angelo Manzotti as Arsace, and Tatiana Korovina as Zenobia.

 


Lorenza Corrèa, who created the role of Zenobia
RoleVoice typePremiere Cast, 26 December 1813[9]
(Conductor: Alessandro Rolla)
Aureliano, imperatore di RomatenorLuigi Mari
Zenobia, regina di Palmira, amante di ArsacesopranoLorenza Corrèa
Arsace, Principe di  Persiacastrato / contraltoGiambattista Velluti
Publia, figlia di Valeriano, amante segreta di Arsace
 
mezzo-sopranoLuigia Sorrentini
Oraspe, generale di PalmiratenorGaetano Pozzi
Licinio, tribunobassPietro Vasoli
Il Gran Sacerdote bassVincenzo Botticelli
Priests, Palmyran maidens, Palmyran, Persian, and Roman soldiers; shepherds and shepherdesses; Roman, Palmyran, Persian soldiers

 


Stage setting from Act I in the original production at La Scala
Place: in and around the city of Palmyra
Time: 271-272 A.D.[10]

 

Queen Zenobia, her lover Arsace, and the priests offer sacrifices in the Temple of Isis and pray for their deliverance from the approaching Roman army.

Persian General Oraspe enters to the strains of martial music and announces that Aureliano's Roman army is at the gates of Palmyra.

Arsace pledges his Persian troops to defend the city.

After a dramatic battle scene on the plains outside the city, the Persians are defeated.

The Roman soldiers celebrate their victory.

Aureliano arrives and addresses Arsace, now a prisoner.

He responds to the Emperor with dignity and affirms his love for Zenobia, saying that he is prepared to die for her.

Inside Palmyra's walls, Zenobia has hidden the kingdom's treasures in the vaults beneath the palace. She decides to make a last stand with her troops to save the city. She asks Aureliano for a truce so that she can speak with him and obtain the liberty of the prisoners, including Arsace. On Aureliano's refusal to free the prisoners, she asks to at least see Arsace for a last time. Zenobia and Arsace weep over their fate. Aureliano enters and promises to free Arsace on condition that he abandons Zenobia. Arsace refuses and is sentenced to death. The Roman and Palmyran armies prepare for a last battle.

 


Stage setting from Act II in the original production at La Scala


Palmyra has now been conquered by the Romans.

Aureliano enters Zenobia's palace and offers his love to her, which she refuses.

Meanwhile Oraspe frees Arsace who then flees to the hills by the Euphrates river where he is sheltered by a group of shepherds.

Arsace's soldiers join him and tell him that Zenobia has been taken prisoner. Arsace sets off to free her and launch a new attack against the Romans with the Palmyran troops.

In the palace, Aureliano proposes to Zenobia that they reign together over Palmyra. Once again Zenobia refuses.

Later that night, Arsace and Zenobia meet again in the moonlight and embrace. When they are discovered by the Roman troops, they ask to die. Although he secretly admires their courage and devotion to each other, Aureliano decrees that they will end their days in separate cells.

Publia, the daughter of Valeriano, a Roman general, and secretly in love with Arsace, begs Aureliano to take pity on him.

The final scene takes place in a large chamber of Zenobia's palace. The leaders and priests of the defeated Palmyrans are gathered in supplication before Aureliano. Oraspe, Arsace and Zenobia are led into the chamber in chains. Aureliano, has a change of heart and frees Zenobia and Arsace to reign together over Palmyra provided they both swear fealty to the Roman Empire. This they do, and praise Aureliano for his generous heart. The chorus sings joyfully, "Torni sereno a splendere all'Asia afflitta il dì." ("May the day dawn serene and shining for suffering Asia.")

Recordings

YearCast:
Aureliano, Zenobia, Arsace, Gran Sacerdote
Conductor,
Opera House and Orchestra
Label [11]
1981Paolo Barbacini,
Luciana Serra,
Helga Müller-Molinari,
Carlo Cava
Giacomo Zani,
Orchestra of the Teatro dell'Opera Giocosa di Genova and the Gregorio Magno Chorus
Audio CD: Sarx ANG
Cat: 97001
1996Donald George,
Tatiana Korovina,
Angelo Manzotti,
Alexander Alnicolli
Francesco Corti,
I Virtuosi di Praga orchestra and the Czech Chamber Chorus
(Live recording from the "Rossini in Wildbad" Festival)
Audio CD: Bongiovanni
Cat: GB 2201/2-2

References

Richard Osborne 2007, p. 216; Roccatagliati 2001.
 
Weinstock 1968, pp. 40, 494; Charles Osborne 1994, p. 38.
 
 Lindner 1999, pp. 19–20, 30–31 (note 8), explains that the first printed libretto identified the librettist with the initials "G. F. R.", but later librettos and the Ricordi vocal score (1855) "spell out (Giuseppe) Felice Romani", while another libretto from Reggio Emilia (1816), and several others based on it, give the name Gian Francesco Romanelli, or in some cases Gian Francesco Romani, neither of which is otherwise known.
 
The latter attributions, plus stylistic considerations, led Mario Rinaldi (1965) to assume that Felice Romani was not the librettist, and his arguments were later supported by scholars such as Herbert Weinstock, Celletti, and Carlo Marcello Rietmann.
 
However, Rinaldi's weak argument was conclusively refuted by Marco Beghelli in 1991.
 
Since an early version of the libretto was approved by the censors on 23 June 1813, and Luigi Romanelli, La Scala's house librettist, did not retire until 14 December 1813 when Felice Romani took his place,  'Gian Francesco Romanelli' is derived from Luigi Romanelli and Felice Romani, owing to later ignorance of the true meaning of the acronym.
 
The tight chronological linking of the two could have easily prompted such a blend.
 
^ Original French: "Ravi par l'accord parfait des voix délicieuses qui nous faisaient entendre 'Se la m'ami, o mia regina', je me suis supris plusieurs fois à croire que ce duetto est le plus beau che Rossini ait jamais écrit. Ce que je puis assurer c'est qu'il produit l'effet auquel on peut reconnaître la musique sublime: il jette dans une rêverie profonde." in Stendhal, Vie de Rossini, M. Lévy, 1854, pp. 105-106.
 
^ Rockwell, John (27 December 1992). "RECORDINGS VIEW; So What Happened To the Rossini Year?". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 March 2008. 
 
^ Lindner 1999, p. 19.
 
^ 'Aureliano in Palmira' in Piero Gelli (ed.) (2005), Dizionario dell'Opera, Baldini Castoldi Dalai, ISBN 888490780
 
^ Review of the opening night in Il Corriere Milanese, December 1813, summarized in the Archivi Teatro Napoli (in Italian). Accessed 25 March 2008
 
^ Lindner 1999, p. 19.
 
^ Charles Osborne 1994, p. 38.
 
^ Recordings of Aureliano in Palmira on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk

Cited sources

Holden, Amanda, editor (2001). The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam. ISBN 0-14-029312-4.

Lindner, Thomas
(1999) "Rossini's Aureliano in Palmira: A Descriptive Analysis", The Opera Quarterly, vol. 15 (1), pp. 18-32, Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oq/15.1.18

Osborne, Charles (1994). The Bel Canto Operas of Rossini, Donizetti, and Bellini. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press. ISBN 978-0-931340-71-0.

Osborne, Richard (2007). Rossini: His Life and Works, second edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-518129-6.

Roccatagliati, Allesandro (2001). "Romani, (Giuseppe) Felice" in Sadie 2001.

Sadie, Stanley, editor; John Tyrell; executive editor (2001). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edition. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5 (hardcover). OCLC 419285866 (eBook).

Weinstock, Herbert (1968). Rossini: A Biography. New York: Knopf. OCLC 192614 and 250474431. Reprint (1987): New York: Limelight. ISBN 978-0-87910-071-1.

Other sources

Beghelli, Marco; Gallino, Nicola, editors (1991). Tutti i libretti di Rossini. Milan: Garzanti. ISBN 978-88-11-41059-1.

Beghelli, Marco; Smith, Candace, translator (1996). "The Opera of Misunderstandings", p. 10 in the booklet accompanying the Bongiovanni recording, catalog no. GB 2201/2-2.

Kaufman, Tom (1999). "A Performance History of Aureliano in Palmira", The Opera Quarterly, vol. 15 (1), pp. 33-37, Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oq/15.1.33.

Rinaldi, Mario (1965).
Felice Romani: Dal melodramma classico al melodramma romantico.
Rome: De Santis. View all formats and editions at WorldCat.


Scarton, Cesare; Tosti-Croce, Mauro (2001). "Aureliano in Palmira: Un percorso storico-drammaturgico da François Hédelin d'Aubignac a Felice Romani" (in Italian). Bollettino del centro rossiniano di studi, vol. 41, pp. 83–165. ISSN 0411-5384.

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