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| Verdi: Les Vêpres Siciliennes / Rossi, Brumaire, Et Al | |||||
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Release Date: 01/11/2005 Label: Opera Rara Catalog #: 303 Spars Code: n/a Composer: Giuseppe Verdi Performer: Jean Bonhomme, Neilson Taylor, Ayhan Baran, Stafford Dean, Neil Howlett, Pamela Bowden, Bernard Dickerson, Josella Ligi, Gerald English, Michael Rippon, Nigel Rogers, Jacqueline Brumaire Conductor: Mario Rossi Orchestra/Ensemble: BBC Concert Orchestra, BBC Singers
Number of Discs: 3 |
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$79.99
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| Notes & Reviews | Back to Top | ||||
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Les Vêpres Siciliennes is one of Verdi’s misunderstood operas. In a clumsy translation, the work is usually presented to audiences today as I vespri Siciliani and, as such, gives a false representation of Verdi’s original concept. This opera was composed for the Paris Opera to a libretto by Eugene Scribe, one of the greatest poets of the day, and Charles Duveyrier. Verdi embraces the French idiom – the musical forms, the orchestration, the vocal writing – with the same grandeur and sense of occasion as Rossini and Meyerbeer before him.
This is Opera Rara’s third of five sets in its Verdi Originals series and this BBC recording of the opera finally restores the original French libretto. The opera is set in Palermo in 1282, at the time of the French occupation Of Sicily. The young Sicilian, Henri, is in love with Hélène, an Austrian duchess being held hostage by Guy de Montfort, the French Governor of Sicily. Henri and Hélène wish to overthrow the French, but this is complicated by the fact that Henri’s loyalties are about to be divided when he learns that his father is Guy de Montfort. The opera is accompanied by a wonderful 272 page booklet, which includes illustrations from Opera Rara’s own extensive archive and features the original French libretto translated into English, German and Italian. In his informative article, opera expert, Mark Everist, details the history of the opera. R E V I E W S "With this highly recommendable Vêpres Siciliennes, solidly led by Mario Rossi, Opera Rara continues its welcome "Verdi Originals"...This issue of Verdi's first French grand opera was perhaps most urgently needed of the CD transfers, since there is still no rival in the catalogue...This is a welcome issue for all serious Verdians." - OPERA NEWS This is a very valuable recording, the only one of Verdi's original, French version of what is better known as I vespri Siciliani. It was taped in live performance on May 10, 1969 (and first broadcast by the BBC on February 15, 1970). Its digital remastering is superb: it could pass for a studio performance made in the last decade. The Ballet Music was recorded later (and likely is included here so the opera could be "complete") and is led by Ashley Lawrence; as Verdi's ballet music goes, it's fine stuff. The rest of the performance is conducted by Mario Rossi, whose work I'm mostly familiar with from old RAI Turin recordings of the standard Italian repertoire. Here he shows himself to be not only sensitive to this somewhat odd, sprawling work, but equally sensitive to the fact that he is leading a French opera, and that a certain very French, smoother-than-Italian style is required. The performance is very good, without being star-studded. Tenor Jean Bonhomme sings Henri (Arrigo) with a voice that defines "French lyric tenor". The transition to high notes is remarkably easy and he's careful about Verdi's dynamic markings. He even gets up to the high-D (a seemingly unnecessary piece of cruelty on Verdi's part) in the last act with a certain amount of grace, although it's not a note you'd want to hear first thing in the morning. His attention to the text, particularly in his duets with his father, is admirable. Hélène is sung by Jacqueline Brumaire, a fine lyric soprano with the needed coloratura for the "Bolero" and a musical intelligence that allows her to seem more dramatic than her voice actually is. She never uses chest voice and takes the easier option at the close of her big solo in Act 4, but she also emphasizes just the right phrases to catch our attention at the proper moments. Ayhan Baran's rich bass voice is well-used as Procida. In his big, opening solo and his many ensembles he resonates with just the buzz he should; in a cast with larger-voiced principals he might not have been as effective. Finest among the main quartet is baritone Neilson Taylor as Monfort. Verdi wrote his most beautiful and plangent aria for this character (at the start of Act 3), and here, and elsewhere, Taylor (whom I've otherwise never heard) sings with such elegance of line, such a lovely sustained pianissimo, that he melts the heart. His more forceful singing is equally expressive. The remainder of the cast is good enough, seeming more at home in French than we might have imagined. As I said at the start of this review, this is a very valuable issue. --Robert Levine, ClassicsToday.com |
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| Works on This Recording | Back to Top | ||||
| 1. |
I vespri siciliani by Giuseppe Verdi | ||||
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Performer:
Jean Bonhomme (Tenor),
Neilson Taylor (Tenor),
Ayhan Baran (Baritone),
Stafford Dean (Bass), Neil Howlett (Baritone), Pamela Bowden (Mezzo Soprano), Bernard Dickerson (Tenor), Josella Ligi (Soprano), Gerald English (Tenor), Michael Rippon (Baritone), Nigel Rogers (Tenor), Jacqueline Brumaire (Soprano) Conductor: Mario Rossi Orchestra/Ensemble: BBC Concert Orchestra, BBC Singers Period: Romantic Written: 1855; Italy |
Date of Recording: 05/10/1969 Venue: Live Camden Theatre, London, England Language: French |
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