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Werther in Bologna


I am preparing to conduct Werther for the first time, the opera in four acts by librettists Édouard Blau, Paul Milliet and Georges Hartmann, set to music by Jules Massenet after a difficult creation process followed by an equally complicated history of first performances.

The idea of basing a libretto on the famous Die Leiden des jungen Werther, Goethe’s 1774 epistolary novel, which had enjoyed extraordinary success all over Europe in the pre-Romantic age, was a courageous one, particularly in terms of Massenet’s artistic style and the final years of the nineteenth century in which it had developed, and above all of the literary and social influences which the young Goethe’s tale had generated over the course of a century, when the composer approached it after others had attempted in vain to do the same.

The idea of basing a libretto on the famous Die Leiden des jungen Werther, Goethe’s 1774 epistolary novel, which had enjoyed extraordinary success all over Europe in the pre-Romantic age, was a courageous one, particularly in terms of Massenet’s artistic style and the final years of the nineteenth century in which it had developed, and above all of the literary and social influences which the young Goethe’s tale had generated over the course of a century, when the composer approached it after others had attempted in vain to do the same.

I am enchanted by Werther for different reasons, mainly because, as Massenet had noted, ‘Dans la partition de Werther, l’orchestre représente symboliquement le principal personnage’. The “main character”, the orchestra, impressively amplifies the emotions of the characters thanks to an unusual use of instruments. An example of this is Charlotte’s aria, ‘Va! Laisse couler mes larmes!’, which makes use of a saxophone. But it is the entire orchestral nuance of Werther which shapes a tragedy with unmistakably French sensitivity, filtered and enhanced by elements reminiscent of Tchaikovsky, Schubert and Schumann. The references to Wagnerian language, particularly the harmonic composition and the central motifs are more subtle but do not detract from the originality and compactness of Massenet’s masterpiece, so French and yet so universal, tragic and moving, lyrical and dramatic. The central role of the tenor makes Werther someone ‘other’ than Goethe’s original, colouring his brief life with passion, beauty, altruism and nostalgia for the tragic loss of youth along with all its dreams. The beauty of the music does everything else, resulting in the poignant emotional involvement of the audience with the protagonist.

 

📷 Andrea Ranzi / TCBO

Opening the tenth Donizetti Opera Festival with Roberto Devereux


On 28th October 1837, Roberto Devereux, an opera in three acts by Gaetano Donizetti to a libretto by Salvadore Cammarano, premiered at the Teatro San Carlo, Naples. This work, based on Jacques-François Ancelot’s tragedy Elisabeth d’Angleterre, was a resounding success. It marked the completion of Donizetti’s “Tudor Trilogy” and has remained a staple in the Donizetti repertoire from the 19th century to the present day. When I think about Donizetti’s personal struggles during the composition of Devereux, I get chills. Yet, as I study the opera, I find proof of the brilliance of this genius: during one of the darkest periods of his life, he crafted one of his most innovative works. We can never do enough to honour this extraordinary composer. I am thrilled to announce that this season I will conduct Roberto Devereux twice, and above all that I’m inaugurating Donizetti Opera 2024 on 15th November with this work. We have chosen the recent critical edition by Julia Lockhart, who has adhered closely to the version staged for the premiere in Naples. The plot of Roberto Devereux is relatively faithful to its literary source, which in turn drew on historical fact, though with considerable poetic licence, first and foremost the final abdication of Elisabetta, which never actually took place. Cammarano came up with a fast-moving libretto, to which Donizetti corresponded fittingly, seeking and finding an innovative dramatic succinctness, perfect for the sombre hue of a forecasted tragedy. It is clear why the audience at the premiere applauded and demanded that both composer and librettist take a curtain call. The staging of our Roberto Devereux in Bergamo is by the great Shakespearean director and artistic director of the Glyndebourne Festival, Stephen Langridge, and I will have at my disposal the Orchestra Donizetti Opera, the Coro dell’Accademia della Scala prepared by Salvo Sgrò, and an excellent cast of Belcanto specialists