fbpx
Wikipedia

Cavalleria rusticana

Cavalleria rusticana (pronounced [kavalleˈriːa rustiˈkaːna]; Italian for 'Rustic Chivalry') is an opera in one act by Pietro Mascagni to an Italian libretto by Giovanni Targioni-Tozzetti and Guido Menasci, adapted from an 1880 short story of the same name and subsequent play by Giovanni Verga. Considered one of the classic verismo operas, it premiered on 17 May 1890 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome. Since 1893, it has often been performed in a so-called Cav/Pag double-bill with Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo.[1]

Cavalleria rusticana
Opera by Pietro Mascagni
Scene from the world premiere of the opera
LibrettistGiovanni Targioni-Tozzetti and Guido Menasci
LanguageItalian
Based onCavalleria rusticana
Premiere
17 May 1890 (1890-05-17)

Composition history edit

 
Mascagni (center) with his librettists, Giovanni Targioni-Tozzetti (left) and Guido Menasci

In July 1888 the Milanese music publisher Edoardo Sonzogno announced a competition open to all young Italian composers who had not yet had an opera performed on stage. They were invited to submit a one-act opera which would be judged by a jury of five prominent Italian critics and composers. The best three would be staged in Rome at Sonzogno's expense.

Mascagni heard about the competition only two months before the closing date and asked his friend Giovanni Targioni-Tozzetti, a poet and professor of literature at the Italian Royal Naval Academy in Livorno, to provide a libretto. Targioni-Tozzetti chose Cavalleria rusticana, a popular short story (and play) by Giovanni Verga, as the basis for the opera. He and his colleague Guido Menasci set about composing the libretto, sending it to Mascagni in fragments, sometimes only a few verses at a time on the back of a postcard. As Mascagni believed that the work was hastily written and not reflective of his best efforts, his courage deserted him and he placed the draft in a drawer, from where his wife, Argenide Marcellina "Lina" Mascagni, removed it and submitted it on the last day that entries would be accepted.[2] In all, 73 operas were submitted, and on 5 March 1890, the judges selected the final three: Niccola Spinelli's Labilia, Vincenzo Ferroni [it]'s Rudello, and Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana.[3]

There have been two other operas based on Verga's story. The first, Mala Pasqua! (Bad Easter!) by Stanislao Gastaldon, was entered in the same competition as Mascagni's. However, Gastaldon withdrew it when he received an opportunity to have it performed at the Teatro Costanzi, where it premiered on 9 April 1890.[4] In the 1907 Sonzogno competition, Domenico Monleone submitted an opera based on the story, and likewise called Cavalleria rusticana. The opera was not successful in the competition but premiered later that year in Amsterdam and went on to a successful tour throughout Europe, ending in Turin. Sonzogno, wishing to protect the lucrative property which Mascagni's version had become, took legal action and successfully had Monleone's opera banned from performance in Italy.[5] Monleone changed the opera ‘beyond recognition’, setting the music to a new libretto. In this form it was presented as La giostra dei falchi in 1914.[5]

Performance history edit

Premiere edit

Cavalleria rusticana opened on the evening of 17 May 1890 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome to a half empty house. However, the audience included not only the most authoritative music critics in the country but also Queen Margherita, a great music lover. It was a success from its opening notes. Following Stagno's rendition of the Siciliana behind the curtain, the audience leapt to their feet with a thunderous applause not heard for many years. The Siciliana was encored as were several other numbers in the opera.[6] It was a sensation, with Mascagni taking 40 curtain calls and winning the First Prize.[6][7]

Subsequent performances edit

Although Mascagni had started writing two other operas earlier (Pinotta, premiered in 1932, and Guglielmo Ratcliff, premiered in 1895), Cavalleria rusticana was his first opera to be completed and performed. It remains the best known of his fifteen operas and one operetta (). Apart from Cavalleria rusticana, only Iris and L'amico Fritz have remained in the standard repertory, with Isabeau and Il piccolo Marat on the fringes of the Italian repertoire. Its success has been phenomenal ever since its first performance. At the time of Mascagni's death in 1945, the opera had been performed more than 14,000 times in Italy alone.[8]

In 1890, following its run of sold-out performances at the Teatro Costanzi, the opera was produced throughout Italy and in Berlin. It received its London premiere at the Shaftesbury Theatre on 19 October 1891 and its Covent Garden premiere on 16 May 1892.[9]

American producers vied with each other (sometimes through the courts) to be the first to present the opera in that country. Cavalleria rusticana finally had its American premiere in Philadelphia at the Grand Opera House on 9 September 1891, followed by a performance in Chicago on 30 September 1891. The opera premiered in New York City on 1 October 1891, with two rival performances on the same day: an afternoon performance at the Casino, directed by Rudolph Aronson, and an evening performance at the Lenox Lyceum, directed by Oscar Hammerstein.[9]

 
Gemma Bellincioni as Santuzza, and her husband, Roberto Stagno, as Turiddu, in the 1890 premiere of Cavalleria rusticana

The opera received its first performance at the Metropolitan Opera on 30 December 1891 in a double bill with a fragment of Gluck's Orfeo ed Euridice, and has since received over 700 performances there.

The opera was played during the 1920s in African-American theaters in Chicago. For example, the Vendome, featuring the orchestra of Erskine Tate, played music from this opera. Notably, Louis Armstrong performed and memorized the trumpet solo, coming out of the pit and mounting the stage to play it.[10]

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 17 May 1890
Conductor: Leopoldo Mugnone
Santuzza, a peasant girl soprano or mezzo-soprano[11] Gemma Bellincioni
Turiddu, a young villager recently returned from the army tenor Roberto Stagno
Lucia, his mother contralto Federica Casali
Alfio, a carter baritone Gaudenzio Salassa
Lola, Alfio's wife mezzo-soprano Annetta Gulì

Synopsis edit

Place: A 19th-century Sicilian village[12]
Time: Easter morning

Before the action takes place, the young villager Turiddu returns from military service to find out that his fiancée Lola had married the carter[13] Alfio while he was away. In revenge, Turiddu seduced Santuzza, a young woman in the village. As the opera begins, Lola, overcome by her jealousy of Santuzza, has begun an adulterous affair with Turiddu.

The main square of the village

Offstage, Turiddu is heard singing a siciliana, "O Lola ch'ai di latti la cammisa" ("O Lola, you whose blouse is as white as milk", commonly rendered in English as "O Lola! like the snow, pure in thy whiteness!"). To one side is the church; to the other is Lucia's wine shop and the house where she lives with her son, Turiddu. The villagers move about the square, singing of the beautiful spring day, "Gli aranci olezzano sui verdi margini" (literally, "Oranges smell good on the green edges", rendered as "The air is sweet with orange blossoms" in the English libretto) and a hymn to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Some villagers enter the church, and others wander off still singing.

Santuzza, having slept with Turiddu and suspecting that he has betrayed her for Lola, is distraught and approaches Lucia as she comes out of her house. Santuzza asks for Turiddu, but Lucia replies that he has gone to another town to fetch some wine. Santuzza tells her that he was seen during the night in the village. Lucia asks her inside to talk, but just at that moment, Alfio arrives on his wagon, accompanied by the villagers. He praises the joys of a teamster's life and the beauty of Lola his bride. Alfio asks Lucia for some of her fine old wine. She tells him it has run out and Turiddu has gone away to buy more. Alfio replies that he had seen Turiddu early that morning near his cottage. Lucia starts to express surprise, but Santuzza stops her.

Alfio leaves. The choir inside the church is heard singing the "Regina coeli". Outside, the villagers sing an Easter Hymn, "Inneggiamo, il Signor non è morto" ("Let us sing hymns, the Lord is not dead", or "We rejoice that our Saviour is living!" in the English version) joined by Santuzza. The villagers enter the church, while Santuzza and Lucia remain outside. Lucia asks Santuzza why she signalled her to remain silent when Alfio said that he had seen Turiddu that morning. Santuzza exclaims, "Voi lo sapete" ("You well know") and tells Lucia the story of her seduction by Turiddu and his affair with Lola. Lucia pities Santuzza, who feels dishonoured, having been seduced by Turiddu only to be abandoned by him for his old flame, Lola. Santuzza feels she cannot enter the church, but begs Lucia to go inside herself and pray for Santuzza who stays behind to try to plead with Turiddu to leave Lola and return to her.

 
Santuzza pleads with Turiddu not to meet with Lola again

Turiddu arrives. Santuzza upbraids him for pretending to have gone away, when he was actually seeing Lola. Lola enters the square singing. She mocks Santuzza and goes inside the church. Turiddu turns to follow Lola, but Santuzza begs him to stay. Turiddu pushes her away. She clings to him. He loosens her hands, throws her to the ground, and enters the church. Alfio arrives looking for Lola. Santuzza tells him that his wife has betrayed him with Turiddu. Alfio swears to take vendetta (revenge) which causes Santuzza to repent for having disclosed the affair and begs Alfio to stop, but to no avail.

The square is empty as the orchestra plays the famous Intermezzo.

 
Turiddu bites Alfio's ear

The villagers come out of the church. Turiddu is in high spirits because he is with Lola and Santuzza appears to have gone. He invites his friends to his mother's wine shop where he sings a drinking song, "Viva, il vino spumeggiante" ("Hail to the bubbling wine!"). Alfio joins them. Turiddu offers him wine, but he refuses it. All understand that trouble is in the air. The women leave, taking Lola with them. In a brief exchange of words, Alfio challenges Turiddu to a duel. Following Sicilian custom, the two men embrace, and Turiddu, in a token of acceptance, bites Alfio's ear, drawing blood which signifies a fight to the death. Alfio leaves and Turiddu calls Lucia back. He tells her that he is going outside to get some air and asks that she be a kindly mother to Santuzza if he should not return: "Un bacio, mamma! Un altro bacio!—Addio!" ("One kiss, mother! One more kiss! – Farewell!").

Turiddu rushes out. Lucia, weeping, wanders aimlessly around outside her house. Santuzza approaches and throws her arms around her. The villagers start to crowd around. Voices are heard in the distance and a woman cries, "They have murdered Turiddu!" Santuzza faints and Lucia collapses in the arms of the women villagers.

Instrumentation edit

Mascagni calls for a standard-sized orchestra consisting of 2 flutes, 2 piccolos, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (triangle, cymbals, bass drum, side drum, tamtam, tubular bells), harp, organ and strings.

Recordings edit

 
Advertisement for 1930 radio broadcast with Lisa Roma

There have been over 100 full-length recordings of Cavalleria rusticana published since it was first recorded in Germany in 1909.[14][15] As in live performances of the opera, recordings of the work have often been paired with Ruggero Leoncavallo's Pagliacci. In addition to the original Italian, recordings of the work in the English, French, German, and Hungarian languages have been released.[16] Mascagni himself conducted the opera in two recordings, the better-known of which is the 1940 EMI recording made to mark the 50th anniversary of the opera's premiere. The performance by the La Scala orchestra and chorus with Lina Bruna Rasa as Santuzza and Beniamino Gigli as Turiddu also has a spoken introduction by Mascagni. Originally released as an LP, it is available on CD under several historical recording labels.[17]

Radio edit

A double-bill performance of Cavalleria and Pagliacci was transmitted as the first broadcast by New York City's Metropolitan Opera on 11 December 1910.[18] Radio pioneer Lee de Forest talked Giulio Gatti-Casazza, the Met manager, into sending the program over the airwaves by using a backstage radio transmitter and a rooftop antenna, "using a long fishing pole for his mast." Enrico Caruso and Emmy Destinn were in the leading roles.[19]

Few listened. There were no radios. But public receivers had been set up in several well-advertised locations in New York City, and people could catch at least an inkling of the music on earphones. The next day, The New York Times reported that static and other interference "kept the homeless song waves from finding themselves."[19]

In Los Angeles, an "Italian Night" concert was heard live "in its entirety" on May 6, 1930, as the third program of the Adohr opera series over radio station KFI, featuring "A distinguished cast ... headed by Lisa Roma, noted lyric soprano ... Music lovers should not fail to tune in."[20]

 
Poster for the Carmine Gallone film version of Cavalleria rusticana (1953)

A notable use of the Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana in the United States was as the theme for a regular radio broadcast, Symphony of the Rockies, which featured "a small string group playing light classical music" in the 1930s and 1940s over Denver radio station KOA, then owned and operated by the NBC network. It "was a 'feed' to the entire network from the KOA studios."[21]

Film edit

Apart from video recordings of live performances, there have been several cinematic versions of Cavalleria rusticana, the most notable of which are:

Costumed excerpts from the opera are performed in Mario Lanza's popular films The Great Caruso (1951) and Because You're Mine (1952). The opera's symphonic Intermezzo has figured in the soundtrack of several films, most notably in the opening and closing credits of Raging Bull[22] and in the finale of The Godfather Part III, which also featured a performance of the opera as a key part of the film's climax.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ Sims 2007.
  2. ^ Pasles, Chris (5 September 1991). "Music : Plots of Revenge on Faithless Lovers Bring Overnight Success". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  3. ^ Willard 1893.
  4. ^ Sanvitale, Francesco, La romanza italiana da salotto 2017-01-18 at the Wayback Machine, EDT srl, 2002, p. 491
  5. ^ a b Stevens 2001
  6. ^ a b Weaver 1987.
  7. ^ Anon. 1945.
  8. ^ Schweisheimer 1946.
  9. ^ a b Kobbé 1919.
  10. ^ Brothers, Thomas (2014). Louis Armstrong: Master of Modernism. New York: W. W. Norton. pp. 186–187. ISBN 978-0-393-06582-4.
  11. ^ Talk Classical (2013). Santuzza: Mezzo or Soprano??? Available at: https://www.talkclassical.com/threads/santuzza-mezzo-or-soprano.27629/ (Accessed: March 07 2023)
  12. ^ Synopsis is based on Targioni-Tozzetti, G. and Menasci, G. (1902). Libretto: Cavalleria rusticana 2009-03-26 at the Wayback Machine in Italian and English translation by Willard G. Day. F. Rullman
  13. ^ In Italian carrettiere, presumably an owner-driver of the traditional Sicilian cart
  14. ^ Recordings on the opera on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk 2012-04-16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 6 February 2010
  15. ^ For extensive annotated discographies, see Mascagni.org Archived 2012-06-30 at archive.today and Flury, R. (2001) Pietro Mascagni - A Bio-Bibliography, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-29662-6
  16. ^ Gruber, Paul (5 May 1993). The Metropolitan Opera Guide to Recorded Opera. W. W. Norton. ISBN 9780393034448. Retrieved 5 May 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  17. ^ Mallach, Alan (2002). Pietro Mascagni and His Operas 2017-01-25 at the Wayback Machine, p. 298. University Press of New England. ISBN 1555535240
  18. ^ Joseph McLellan, "Texaco & the Met: Premium Performance; the 50th Season of Radio Broadcast Begins," Washington Post, 17 December 1989 (registration required) 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ a b Fantel, Hans (14 January 1990). "Sound: Out of De Forest and Onto the Air Came Music". The New York Times.
  20. ^ Daggett, John S. (6 May 1930). "Receiving Set Boon to Home". Los Angeles Times. p. 21. ProQuest 162333416.
  21. ^ Melrose, Frances (12 July 1998). . Rocky Mountain News. Denver. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012.
  22. ^ Powrie & Stilwell 2006, p. 21.
  23. ^ Lauri-Lucente 2003.

Sources edit

  • Anon. (13 August 1945). "Cavalleria's Crown". Time.
  • Kobbé, Gustav (1919). The Complete Opera Book. G. P. Putnam & Sons.
  • Lauri-Lucente, Gloria (2003). (paper presented at the British Council conference, Reading Screens: From text to film, TV and new media, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 6–12 April 2003). Archived from the original on 6 June 2011.
  • Powrie, Phil; Stilwell, Robynn Jeananne (2006). Changing Tunes: The Use of Pre-existing Music in Film. Ashgate. ISBN 0-7546-5137-1.
  • Schweisheimer, W[aldemar] (April 1946). "Pietro Mascagni – A Tragic Figure?". The Etude.
  • Sims, Michael (2007). "Cavalleria rusticana, I [sic] Pagliacci, and the Verismo Style" (Programme notes). Concert Opera Boston. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  • Stevens, D. (25 July 2001). "Cav and Cav: Take 2, They're Small". International Herald Tribune.
  • Weaver, William (1987). Opera's irrestistible twins. Decca Record Company.
  • Willard, Ashton R. (March–August 1893). "Pietro Mascagni, the Author of the Cavalleria rusticana". The New England Magazine. VIII.

Further reading edit

  • Cavalleria rusticana, work detail, Mascagni.org (accessed 8 June 2007)
  • Rosenthal, H. and Warrack, J. (1979) The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera, 2nd Edition, Oxford University Press p. 88
  • (2003) Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci: A Teacher's Guide and Resource Book (accessed 23 May 2007)

External links edit

cavalleria, rusticana, other, uses, disambiguation, pronounced, kavalleˈriːa, rustiˈkaːna, italian, rustic, chivalry, opera, pietro, mascagni, italian, libretto, giovanni, targioni, tozzetti, guido, menasci, adapted, from, 1880, short, story, same, name, subse. For other uses see Cavalleria rusticana disambiguation Cavalleria rusticana pronounced kavalleˈriːa rustiˈkaːna Italian for Rustic Chivalry is an opera in one act by Pietro Mascagni to an Italian libretto by Giovanni Targioni Tozzetti and Guido Menasci adapted from an 1880 short story of the same name and subsequent play by Giovanni Verga Considered one of the classic verismo operas it premiered on 17 May 1890 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome Since 1893 it has often been performed in a so called Cav Pag double bill with Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo 1 Cavalleria rusticanaOpera by Pietro MascagniScene from the world premiere of the operaLibrettistGiovanni Targioni Tozzetti and Guido MenasciLanguageItalianBased onCavalleria rusticanaPremiere17 May 1890 1890 05 17 Teatro Costanzi Rome Contents 1 Composition history 2 Performance history 2 1 Premiere 2 2 Subsequent performances 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 5 Instrumentation 6 Recordings 7 Radio 8 Film 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksComposition history edit nbsp Mascagni center with his librettists Giovanni Targioni Tozzetti left and Guido Menasci In July 1888 the Milanese music publisher Edoardo Sonzogno announced a competition open to all young Italian composers who had not yet had an opera performed on stage They were invited to submit a one act opera which would be judged by a jury of five prominent Italian critics and composers The best three would be staged in Rome at Sonzogno s expense Mascagni heard about the competition only two months before the closing date and asked his friend Giovanni Targioni Tozzetti a poet and professor of literature at the Italian Royal Naval Academy in Livorno to provide a libretto Targioni Tozzetti chose Cavalleria rusticana a popular short story and play by Giovanni Verga as the basis for the opera He and his colleague Guido Menasci set about composing the libretto sending it to Mascagni in fragments sometimes only a few verses at a time on the back of a postcard As Mascagni believed that the work was hastily written and not reflective of his best efforts his courage deserted him and he placed the draft in a drawer from where his wife Argenide Marcellina Lina Mascagni removed it and submitted it on the last day that entries would be accepted 2 In all 73 operas were submitted and on 5 March 1890 the judges selected the final three Niccola Spinelli s Labilia Vincenzo Ferroni it s Rudello and Mascagni s Cavalleria rusticana 3 There have been two other operas based on Verga s story The first Mala Pasqua Bad Easter by Stanislao Gastaldon was entered in the same competition as Mascagni s However Gastaldon withdrew it when he received an opportunity to have it performed at the Teatro Costanzi where it premiered on 9 April 1890 4 In the 1907 Sonzogno competition Domenico Monleone submitted an opera based on the story and likewise called Cavalleria rusticana The opera was not successful in the competition but premiered later that year in Amsterdam and went on to a successful tour throughout Europe ending in Turin Sonzogno wishing to protect the lucrative property which Mascagni s version had become took legal action and successfully had Monleone s opera banned from performance in Italy 5 Monleone changed the opera beyond recognition setting the music to a new libretto In this form it was presented as La giostra dei falchi in 1914 5 Performance history editPremiere edit Cavalleria rusticana opened on the evening of 17 May 1890 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome to a half empty house However the audience included not only the most authoritative music critics in the country but also Queen Margherita a great music lover It was a success from its opening notes Following Stagno s rendition of the Siciliana behind the curtain the audience leapt to their feet with a thunderous applause not heard for many years The Siciliana was encored as were several other numbers in the opera 6 It was a sensation with Mascagni taking 40 curtain calls and winning the First Prize 6 7 Subsequent performances edit Although Mascagni had started writing two other operas earlier Pinotta premiered in 1932 and Guglielmo Ratcliff premiered in 1895 Cavalleria rusticana was his first opera to be completed and performed It remains the best known of his fifteen operas and one operetta Si Apart from Cavalleria rusticana only Iris and L amico Fritz have remained in the standard repertory with Isabeau and Il piccolo Marat on the fringes of the Italian repertoire Its success has been phenomenal ever since its first performance At the time of Mascagni s death in 1945 the opera had been performed more than 14 000 times in Italy alone 8 In 1890 following its run of sold out performances at the Teatro Costanzi the opera was produced throughout Italy and in Berlin It received its London premiere at the Shaftesbury Theatre on 19 October 1891 and its Covent Garden premiere on 16 May 1892 9 American producers vied with each other sometimes through the courts to be the first to present the opera in that country Cavalleria rusticana finally had its American premiere in Philadelphia at the Grand Opera House on 9 September 1891 followed by a performance in Chicago on 30 September 1891 The opera premiered in New York City on 1 October 1891 with two rival performances on the same day an afternoon performance at the Casino directed by Rudolph Aronson and an evening performance at the Lenox Lyceum directed by Oscar Hammerstein 9 nbsp Gemma Bellincioni as Santuzza and her husband Roberto Stagno as Turiddu in the 1890 premiere of Cavalleria rusticana The opera received its first performance at the Metropolitan Opera on 30 December 1891 in a double bill with a fragment of Gluck s Orfeo ed Euridice and has since received over 700 performances there The opera was played during the 1920s in African American theaters in Chicago For example the Vendome featuring the orchestra of Erskine Tate played music from this opera Notably Louis Armstrong performed and memorized the trumpet solo coming out of the pit and mounting the stage to play it 10 Roles editRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 17 May 1890Conductor Leopoldo Mugnone Santuzza a peasant girl soprano or mezzo soprano 11 Gemma Bellincioni Turiddu a young villager recently returned from the army tenor Roberto Stagno Lucia his mother contralto Federica Casali Alfio a carter baritone Gaudenzio Salassa Lola Alfio s wife mezzo soprano Annetta GuliSynopsis editPlace A 19th century Sicilian village 12 Time Easter morning Before the action takes place the young villager Turiddu returns from military service to find out that his fiancee Lola had married the carter 13 Alfio while he was away In revenge Turiddu seduced Santuzza a young woman in the village As the opera begins Lola overcome by her jealousy of Santuzza has begun an adulterous affair with Turiddu The main square of the villageOffstage Turiddu is heard singing a siciliana O Lola ch ai di latti la cammisa O Lola you whose blouse is as white as milk commonly rendered in English as O Lola like the snow pure in thy whiteness To one side is the church to the other is Lucia s wine shop and the house where she lives with her son Turiddu The villagers move about the square singing of the beautiful spring day Gli aranci olezzano sui verdi margini literally Oranges smell good on the green edges rendered as The air is sweet with orange blossoms in the English libretto and a hymn to the Blessed Virgin Mary Some villagers enter the church and others wander off still singing Santuzza having slept with Turiddu and suspecting that he has betrayed her for Lola is distraught and approaches Lucia as she comes out of her house Santuzza asks for Turiddu but Lucia replies that he has gone to another town to fetch some wine Santuzza tells her that he was seen during the night in the village Lucia asks her inside to talk but just at that moment Alfio arrives on his wagon accompanied by the villagers He praises the joys of a teamster s life and the beauty of Lola his bride Alfio asks Lucia for some of her fine old wine She tells him it has run out and Turiddu has gone away to buy more Alfio replies that he had seen Turiddu early that morning near his cottage Lucia starts to express surprise but Santuzza stops her Alfio leaves The choir inside the church is heard singing the Regina coeli Outside the villagers sing an Easter Hymn Inneggiamo il Signor non e morto Let us sing hymns the Lord is not dead or We rejoice that our Saviour is living in the English version joined by Santuzza The villagers enter the church while Santuzza and Lucia remain outside Lucia asks Santuzza why she signalled her to remain silent when Alfio said that he had seen Turiddu that morning Santuzza exclaims Voi lo sapete You well know and tells Lucia the story of her seduction by Turiddu and his affair with Lola Lucia pities Santuzza who feels dishonoured having been seduced by Turiddu only to be abandoned by him for his old flame Lola Santuzza feels she cannot enter the church but begs Lucia to go inside herself and pray for Santuzza who stays behind to try to plead with Turiddu to leave Lola and return to her nbsp Santuzza pleads with Turiddu not to meet with Lola again Turiddu arrives Santuzza upbraids him for pretending to have gone away when he was actually seeing Lola Lola enters the square singing She mocks Santuzza and goes inside the church Turiddu turns to follow Lola but Santuzza begs him to stay Turiddu pushes her away She clings to him He loosens her hands throws her to the ground and enters the church Alfio arrives looking for Lola Santuzza tells him that his wife has betrayed him with Turiddu Alfio swears to take vendetta revenge which causes Santuzza to repent for having disclosed the affair and begs Alfio to stop but to no avail nbsp Cavalleria rusticana Intermezzo sinfonico source source Fulda Symphonic Orchestra Problems playing this file See media help The square is empty as the orchestra plays the famous Intermezzo nbsp Turiddu bites Alfio s ear The villagers come out of the church Turiddu is in high spirits because he is with Lola and Santuzza appears to have gone He invites his friends to his mother s wine shop where he sings a drinking song Viva il vino spumeggiante Hail to the bubbling wine Alfio joins them Turiddu offers him wine but he refuses it All understand that trouble is in the air The women leave taking Lola with them In a brief exchange of words Alfio challenges Turiddu to a duel Following Sicilian custom the two men embrace and Turiddu in a token of acceptance bites Alfio s ear drawing blood which signifies a fight to the death Alfio leaves and Turiddu calls Lucia back He tells her that he is going outside to get some air and asks that she be a kindly mother to Santuzza if he should not return Un bacio mamma Un altro bacio Addio One kiss mother One more kiss Farewell Turiddu rushes out Lucia weeping wanders aimlessly around outside her house Santuzza approaches and throws her arms around her The villagers start to crowd around Voices are heard in the distance and a woman cries They have murdered Turiddu Santuzza faints and Lucia collapses in the arms of the women villagers Instrumentation editMascagni calls for a standard sized orchestra consisting of 2 flutes 2 piccolos 2 oboes 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 4 horns 2 trumpets 3 trombones tuba timpani percussion triangle cymbals bass drum side drum tamtam tubular bells harp organ and strings Recordings editMain article Cavalleria rusticana discography nbsp Advertisement for 1930 radio broadcast with Lisa Roma There have been over 100 full length recordings of Cavalleria rusticana published since it was first recorded in Germany in 1909 14 15 As in live performances of the opera recordings of the work have often been paired with Ruggero Leoncavallo s Pagliacci In addition to the original Italian recordings of the work in the English French German and Hungarian languages have been released 16 Mascagni himself conducted the opera in two recordings the better known of which is the 1940 EMI recording made to mark the 50th anniversary of the opera s premiere The performance by the La Scala orchestra and chorus with Lina Bruna Rasa as Santuzza and Beniamino Gigli as Turiddu also has a spoken introduction by Mascagni Originally released as an LP it is available on CD under several historical recording labels 17 Radio editA double bill performance of Cavalleria and Pagliacci was transmitted as the first broadcast by New York City s Metropolitan Opera on 11 December 1910 18 Radio pioneer Lee de Forest talked Giulio Gatti Casazza the Met manager into sending the program over the airwaves by using a backstage radio transmitter and a rooftop antenna using a long fishing pole for his mast Enrico Caruso and Emmy Destinn were in the leading roles 19 Few listened There were no radios But public receivers had been set up in several well advertised locations in New York City and people could catch at least an inkling of the music on earphones The next day The New York Times reported that static and other interference kept the homeless song waves from finding themselves 19 In Los Angeles an Italian Night concert was heard live in its entirety on May 6 1930 as the third program of the Adohr opera series over radio station KFI featuring A distinguished cast headed by Lisa Roma noted lyric soprano Music lovers should not fail to tune in 20 nbsp Poster for the Carmine Gallone film version of Cavalleria rusticana 1953 A notable use of the Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana in the United States was as the theme for a regular radio broadcast Symphony of the Rockies which featured a small string group playing light classical music in the 1930s and 1940s over Denver radio station KOA then owned and operated by the NBC network It was a feed to the entire network from the KOA studios 21 Film editApart from video recordings of live performances there have been several cinematic versions of Cavalleria rusticana the most notable of which are The 1916 silent film accompanied by Mascagni s score directed by Ugo Falena with Gemma Bellincioni who had created the role of Santuzza in the opera s world premiere The 1953 film directed by Carmine Gallone using actors miming the voices of opera singers with a young Anthony Quinn as Alfio miming to the voice of Tito Gobbi Released in the US in 1963 with the title Fatal Desire It was filmed for Australian television in 1959 The 1968 film directed by Ake Falck with Fiorenza Cossotto as Santuzza Gianfranco Cecchele as Turiddu Giangiacomo Guelfi as Alfio and Anna di Stasio as Lucia La Scala Milan conducted by Herbert von Karajan The 1982 film directed by Franco Zeffirelli using opera singers for actors with Placido Domingo as Turiddu Elena Obraztsova as Santuzza Renato Bruson as Alfio and Fedora Barbieri as Lucia Costumed excerpts from the opera are performed in Mario Lanza s popular films The Great Caruso 1951 and Because You re Mine 1952 The opera s symphonic Intermezzo has figured in the soundtrack of several films most notably in the opening and closing credits of Raging Bull 22 and in the finale of The Godfather Part III which also featured a performance of the opera as a key part of the film s climax 23 References edit Sims 2007 Pasles Chris 5 September 1991 Music Plots of Revenge on Faithless Lovers Bring Overnight Success Los Angeles Times Retrieved 6 October 2022 Willard 1893 Sanvitale Francesco La romanza italiana da salotto Archived 2017 01 18 at the Wayback Machine EDT srl 2002 p 491 a b Stevens 2001 a b Weaver 1987 Anon 1945 Schweisheimer 1946 a b Kobbe 1919 Brothers Thomas 2014 Louis Armstrong Master of Modernism New York W W Norton pp 186 187 ISBN 978 0 393 06582 4 Talk Classical 2013 Santuzza Mezzo or Soprano Available at https www talkclassical com threads santuzza mezzo or soprano 27629 Accessed March 07 2023 Synopsis is based on Targioni Tozzetti G and Menasci G 1902 Libretto Cavalleria rusticana Archived 2009 03 26 at the Wayback Machine in Italian and English translation by Willard G Day F Rullman In Italian carrettiere presumably an owner driver of the traditional Sicilian cart Recordings on the opera on operadis opera discography org uk Archived 2012 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 6 February 2010 For extensive annotated discographies see Mascagni org Archived 2012 06 30 at archive today and Flury R 2001 Pietro Mascagni A Bio Bibliography Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 29662 6 Gruber Paul 5 May 1993 The Metropolitan Opera Guide to Recorded Opera W W Norton ISBN 9780393034448 Retrieved 5 May 2018 via Internet Archive Mallach Alan 2002 Pietro Mascagni and His Operas Archived 2017 01 25 at the Wayback Machine p 298 University Press of New England ISBN 1555535240 Joseph McLellan Texaco amp the Met Premium Performance the 50th Season of Radio Broadcast Begins Washington Post 17 December 1989 registration required Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Fantel Hans 14 January 1990 Sound Out of De Forest and Onto the Air Came Music The New York Times Daggett John S 6 May 1930 Receiving Set Boon to Home Los Angeles Times p 21 ProQuest 162333416 Melrose Frances 12 July 1998 Airing Memories of Rhapsody on Radio Rocky Mountain News Denver Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Powrie amp Stilwell 2006 p 21 Lauri Lucente 2003 Sources edit Anon 13 August 1945 Cavalleria s Crown Time Kobbe Gustav 1919 The Complete Opera Book G P Putnam amp Sons Lauri Lucente Gloria 2003 Cavalleria rusticana and metatextuality in Francis Ford Coppola s The Godfather III paper presented at the British Council conference Reading Screens From text to film TV and new media Corpus Christi College Oxford 6 12 April 2003 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Powrie Phil Stilwell Robynn Jeananne 2006 Changing Tunes The Use of Pre existing Music in Film Ashgate ISBN 0 7546 5137 1 Schweisheimer W aldemar April 1946 Pietro Mascagni A Tragic Figure The Etude Sims Michael 2007 Cavalleria rusticana I sic Pagliacci and the Verismo Style Programme notes Concert Opera Boston Retrieved 30 June 2020 Stevens D 25 July 2001 Cav and Cav Take 2 They re Small International Herald Tribune Weaver William 1987 Opera s irrestistible twins Decca Record Company Willard Ashton R March August 1893 Pietro Mascagni the Author of the Cavalleria rusticana The New England Magazine VIII Further reading editCavalleria rusticana work detail Mascagni org accessed 8 June 2007 Rosenthal H and Warrack J 1979 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera 2nd Edition Oxford University Press p 88 San Francisco Opera Guild 2003 Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci A Teacher s Guide and Resource Book accessed 23 May 2007 External links edit nbsp Media related to Cavalleria rusticana at Wikimedia Commons Cavalleria rusticana Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Libretto of Cavalleria rusticana accessed 17 September 2011 Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cavalleria rusticana amp oldid 1177419671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.