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Giovanna d'Arco

Giovanna d'Arco (Joan of Arc) is an operatic dramma lirico with a prologue and three acts by Giuseppe Verdi set to an Italian libretto by Temistocle Solera, who had prepared the libretti for Nabucco and I Lombardi. It is Verdi's seventh opera.

Giovanna d'Arco
Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Title page of a variant of the first edition vocal score
LibrettistTemistocle Solera
LanguageItalian
Based onSchiller's play Die Jungfrau von Orleans
Premiere
15 February 1845 (1845-02-15)

The work partly reflects the story of Joan of Arc and appears to be loosely based on the 1801 play Die Jungfrau von Orleans by Friedrich von Schiller. Verdi wrote the music during the autumn and winter of 1844/45 and the opera had its first performance at Teatro alla Scala in Milan on 15 February 1845.

This opera is not to be confused with Rossini's cantata of the same name, which was composed in 1832 for contralto and piano, and runs approximately 15 minutes.

Giuseppe Verdi

Libretto edit

By the middle of the 19th century, the story of Joan of Arc had served as the basis for many operas, including those of Nicola Vaccai (1827) and Giovanni Pacini (1830), both of which were strongly reminiscent of Schiller's play. Solera was asked by Verdi's publisher, Giovanni Ricordi, for assurances that his libretto violated no copyright, noting that he had heard of a French treatment of the subject. Solera denied that Schiller's play was the source of his work and wrote that the work was "an entirely original Italian drama […] I have not allowed myself to be imposed upon by the authority either of Schiller or Shakespeare […] My play is original" (emphasis in original).[1] Musicologist Julian Budden believes that "invention was not Solera's strong suit" and describes Solera's work as "merely Schiller diluted". He criticized the flow of the libretto compared to the play, writing that "characters are reduced to a minimum" and "for poetry and humanity we are given theatrical sensationalism".[2]

Performance history edit

19th century The first Giovanna was Erminia Frezzolini, who had previously appeared in Verdi's I Lombardi alla prima crociata two years earlier. She was paired with her husband, tenor Antonio Poggi, as Charles, King of France. Baritone Filippo Colini portrayed Giovanna's father Giacomo. Verdi himself thought highly of the opera but was unhappy with the way it was staged and "with the deteriorating standards of Merelli's productions" overall.[3] Due to Merelli's underhand negotiations to acquire the rights to the score from Ricordi, the composer vowed never to deal with the impresario nor set foot on the stage of La Scala again.[4] La Scala did not stage another Verdi premiere until the revised version of Simon Boccanegra 36 years later.[5]

 
Antonio Poggi who sang the role of Charles VII

While the critics were rather dismissive of the opera, it was "ecstatically received" by audiences.[3] and was given a respectable 17 performances.[6]

For the opera's first production in Rome, three months after the Milan premiere, the papal censor required that the plot be cleared of any direct religious connotations. The title was changed to Orietta di Lesbo, the setting was shifted to the Greek island and the heroine, now of Genoese descent, became a leader of the Lesbians against the Turks.[7][8][9] Performances under this title were also given in Palermo in 1848.[10]

For the next 20 years Giovanna d'Arco had steady success in Italy, with stagings in Florence, Lucca, and Senigallia in 1845, Turin and Venice in 1846, Mantua in 1848, and Milan in 1851, 1858, and 1865.[11] It was also presented elsewhere in Europe,[6] Over the course of the nineteenth century, stagings declined to a very few.

20th and 21st centuries

In 1951 Renata Tebaldi sang the title role in Naples, Milan (a studio-recorded broadcast) and Paris, in a tour that led to further revivals.[6] The US premiere was given in March 1966, in a concert performance at Carnegie Hall, New York, with Teresa Stratas in the title role.[12] Its first stage performance in the US was given in 1976 by Vincent La Selva at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[13] It received its UK premiere at the Royal Academy of Music in London on 23 May 1966.[3]

Fully staged productions were mounted by the San Diego Opera in June 1980 as part of its short-lived "Verdi Festival",[14] and by the Royal Opera, London in June 1996 with Vladimir Chernov as Giacomo and June Anderson as Giovanna. In September 2013, Chicago Opera Theater staged performances of the opera.[15]

La Scala, Milan, presented the opera for the first time in 150 years in 2015 in a new production with Anna Netrebko in the title role.[16] The Berliner Operngruppe under Felix Krieger presented the opera in March 2018 at Konzerthaus Berlin.

Roles edit

 
Erminia Frezzolini, the first Giovanna
Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 15 February 1845[17]
(Conductor: – Eugenio Cavallini)
Giovanna soprano Erminia Frezzolini
Carlo VII, King of France tenor Antonio Poggi
Giacomo, shepherd and father of Giovanna baritone Filippo Colini
Talbot, an English Commander bass Francesco Lodetti
Delil, a French officer tenor Napoleone Marconi
French and English soldiers, French courtiers, villagers, nobles, angels, demons – Chorus

Synopsis edit

 
Temistocle Solera, librettist of the opera
Time: 1429
Place: Domrémy, Reims and near Rouen, France

Prologue edit

Scene 1: The French village of Domrémy

Charles (the not-yet-crowned King of France) describes to his officers and the villagers his vision of the Virgin Mary commanding him to surrender to the invading English army and laying down his weapons at the foot of a giant oak tree. (Aria: Sotto una quercia parvemi – "Beneath an oak she appeared to me"). Later, he expresses his frustration with the limitations of being a ruler. (Aria: Pondo è letal, martirio – "A deadly burden, a torment").

Scene 2: A forest

By a giant oak tree, Giacomo prays for the safety of his daughter Giovanna, who before she falls asleep by a nearby shrine offers prayers to be chosen to lead the French forces. (Aria: Sempre all'alba ed alla sera – "always at dawn and in the evening"). Suddenly, Charles arrives, prepared to lay down his arms at the base of the tree. Meanwhile, the sleeping Giovanna has visions in which angels ask her to become a soldier and lead France to victory (Tu sei bella, the Demons' Waltz). She cries out that she is ready to do so. Charles overhears her and thrills at her courage. Her father Giacomo weeps, believing that his daughter has given her soul to the Devil out of her devotion to the future King.

Act 1 edit

 
Disegno per copertina di libretto, drawing for Giovanna d'Arco (undated).

Scene 1: Near Reims

Commander Talbot of the English army tries to convince his discouraged soldiers that their imminent surrender to the French is not due to forces of evil. Giacomo arrives and offers up his daughter, believing her to be under the influence of the Devil: Franco son io ("I am French, but in my heart…") and So che per via dei triboli ("I know that original sin").

Scene 2: The French court at Reims

Preparations are under way for Charles' coronation. Giovanna longs for her simple life back home. (Aria: O fatidica foresta – "O prophetic forest"). Charles confesses his love for Giovanna. She withdraws despite her feelings toward the King, because her voices have warned her against earthly love. Charles is taken to the Cathedral at Reims for his coronation.

Act 2 edit

The Cathedral square

The villagers of Reims have gathered in the Cathedral square to celebrate Giovanna's victory over the English army. The French soldiers lead Charles into the Cathedral. Giacomo has decided he must repudiate his daughter who, he believes, has entered a pact with the Devil. (Aria: Speme al vecchio era una figlia – "An old man's hope was a daughter"). He denounces her to the villagers (Aria: Comparire il ciel m'ha stretto – "Heaven has forced me to appear") and they are persuaded, although the King refuses to listen. Charles pleads with Giovanna to defend herself, but she refuses.

Act 3 edit

At the stake

Giovanna has been captured by the English army and is awaiting her death at the stake. She has visions of battlefield victories and begs God to stand by her, explaining how she has shown her obedience by forsaking her worldly love for the King as the voices had commanded. Giacomo overhears her pleas and recognizes his error. He loosens his daughter's bonds and she escapes. She rushes to the battlefield to turn the French defeat into victory once more.

Giacomo pleads with the King, first for punishment and then for forgiveness, which Charles grants. Charles learns of the French victory on the battlefield but also of Giovanna's death. (Aria: Quale al più fido amico – "Which of my truest friends"). As her body is carried in, Giovanna suddenly revives. Giacomo reclaims his daughter, and the King professes his love. The angels sing of salvation and victory, as Giovanna dies and ascends into heaven.

Orchestration edit

Giovanna d'Arco is scored for piccolo (briefly doubling second flute), flute, two oboes (second doubling cor anglais), two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, six or nine offstage trumpets, three trombones, cimbasso, timpani, snare drum, bass drum and cymbals (cassa), cymbals (piatti), triangle, bell, cannon, wind band, wind band of brass instruments only, offstage band, bass drum for band, harp, harmonium, strings.

Music edit

Few scholars regard the quality of the music very highly. David Kimball writes: "For modern ears no opera illustrates more disconcertingly than Giovanna d'Arco the chasm between Verdi's best and worst music." He praises some of the solo and ensemble music, but finds that the choruses "embody 19th century taste at its most abysmal".[3] Parker says that the musical emphasis was on Joan herself and includes some "powerfully original ensembles", but says that the choruses were "probably intended as a sequel to the grand choral tableau works Verdi and Solera had previously created together."[18]

Baldini's assessment is mixed. He endorses Massimo Mila's view that the opera demonstrates "that way of making a hedonistic and vacuously melodious opera which was the norm in contemporary Italian theatres."[19] Baldini found merit in Giovanna's cavatina in the Prologue where she prays to be chosen to lead the forces: Sempre all'alba ed alla sera ("always at dawn and in the evening"). Budden also calls it a work of "brilliant patches", says that "the best things in it surpass anything that Verdi had written up to that time", and finds the soprano part to be of "rare distinction" and the solo numbers and many of the ensembles to be of "high caliber".[20]

Recordings edit

Several recordings of live performances of Giovanna d'Arco have been released. The only studio recording dates from 1972 and features James Levine conducting with Montserrat Caballé, Plácido Domingo, and Sherrill Milnes. Domingo sang the tenor role of Carlo on that recording and the baritone role of Giacomo in a live performance recorded in 2013 with Anna Netrebko.

Year Cast
(Giovanna,
Carlo VII,
Giacomo)
Conductor,
Opera House and Orchestra
Label[21]
1951 Renata Tebaldi,
Carlo Bergonzi,
Rolando Panerai
Alfredo Simonetto,
RAI Milano Symphonic Orchestra and Chorus
Audio CD: Melodram
Cat: 27021
1972 Montserrat Caballé,
Plácido Domingo,
Sherrill Milnes
James Levine,
London Symphony Orchestra,
Ambrosian Opera Chorus
Audio CD: EMI Classics
Cat: 7-63226-2
1990 Susan Dunn,
Vincenzo La Scola,
Renato Bruson
Riccardo Chailly,
Teatro Comunale di Bologna Orchestra and Chorus.
(Staged and directed by German film maker Werner Herzog)
DVD: Kultur
Cat: D4043
2008 Svetla Vassileva,
Evan Bowers,
Renato Bruson
Bruno Bartoletti,
Teatro Regio di Parma
DVD:C Major
Cat:721208[22]
2013 Anna Netrebko,
Francesco Meli,
Plácido Domingo
Paolo Carignani,
Münchner Rundfunkorchester,
Philharmonia Chor Wien
Audio CD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 4792712
2016 Jessica Pratt,
Jean-François Borras,
Julian Kim
Riccardo Frizza,

Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia Chorus of Teatro Petruzzelli Bari Festival della Valle d'Itria, Martina Franca

Audio CD and DVD: Dynamic

Cat: 8007144376765

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Budden, p. 205.
  2. ^ Budden, p. 205 ff.
  3. ^ a b c d David Kimball (2001), in Holden, p. 983.
  4. ^ Budden, p. 206.
  5. ^ Kimbell (1981).
  6. ^ a b c George Martin, "Verdi Onstage in the United States: Giovanna d'Arco", The Opera Quarterly, 21 (2):242, 2005 (by subscription only).
  7. ^ Prag, R., "Giovanna d'Arco. Giuseppe Verdi", The Opera Quarterly, 14 (2): 164, 1997.
  8. ^ Osborne, p. 47.
  9. ^ Weaver, p. 123 ff.
  10. ^ Orietta di Lesbo in Palermo, on librettodopera.it: . Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  11. ^ Performances in Italy[permanent dead link] on librettodopera.it. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  12. ^ Schoenberg, Harold C. (2 March 1966). "'Giovanna d'Arco,' Verdi Without a Spark". New York Times. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  13. ^ NYGO's repertoire: . Archived from the original on 3 September 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  14. ^ San Diego Opera's 1980 performance: . Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ Chicago Opera Theater website: . Archived from the original on 28 March 2013. Retrieved 8 April 2013. Retrieved 8 April 2013.
  16. ^ Maddocks, Fiona (13 December 2015). "Giovanna d'Arco review – a first night to remember at La Scala". The Observer. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  17. ^ List of singers taken from Budden, p. 204.
  18. ^ Parker, p. 430.
  19. ^ Mila, p. 163, in Baldini, p. 98.
  20. ^ Budden, p. 223.
  21. ^ Recordings on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  22. ^ "Giovanna d'Arco". Naxos.com.

Cited sources

Other sources

External links edit

giovanna, arco, joan, operatic, dramma, lirico, with, prologue, three, acts, giuseppe, verdi, italian, libretto, temistocle, solera, prepared, libretti, nabucco, lombardi, verdi, seventh, opera, opera, giuseppe, verdititle, page, variant, first, edition, vocal. Giovanna d Arco Joan of Arc is an operatic dramma lirico with a prologue and three acts by Giuseppe Verdi set to an Italian libretto by Temistocle Solera who had prepared the libretti for Nabucco and I Lombardi It is Verdi s seventh opera Giovanna d ArcoOpera by Giuseppe VerdiTitle page of a variant of the first edition vocal scoreLibrettistTemistocle SoleraLanguageItalianBased onSchiller s play Die Jungfrau von OrleansPremiere15 February 1845 1845 02 15 Teatro alla Scala Milan The work partly reflects the story of Joan of Arc and appears to be loosely based on the 1801 play Die Jungfrau von Orleans by Friedrich von Schiller Verdi wrote the music during the autumn and winter of 1844 45 and the opera had its first performance at Teatro alla Scala in Milan on 15 February 1845 This opera is not to be confused with Rossini s cantata of the same name which was composed in 1832 for contralto and piano and runs approximately 15 minutes Giuseppe Verdi Contents 1 Libretto 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Prologue 4 2 Act 1 4 3 Act 2 4 4 Act 3 5 Orchestration 6 Music 7 Recordings 8 References 9 External linksLibretto editBy the middle of the 19th century the story of Joan of Arc had served as the basis for many operas including those of Nicola Vaccai 1827 and Giovanni Pacini 1830 both of which were strongly reminiscent of Schiller s play Solera was asked by Verdi s publisher Giovanni Ricordi for assurances that his libretto violated no copyright noting that he had heard of a French treatment of the subject Solera denied that Schiller s play was the source of his work and wrote that the work was an entirely original Italian drama I have not allowed myself to be imposed upon by the authority either of Schiller or Shakespeare My play is original emphasis in original 1 Musicologist Julian Budden believes that invention was not Solera s strong suit and describes Solera s work as merely Schiller diluted He criticized the flow of the libretto compared to the play writing that characters are reduced to a minimum and for poetry and humanity we are given theatrical sensationalism 2 Performance history edit19th century The first Giovanna was Erminia Frezzolini who had previously appeared in Verdi s I Lombardi alla prima crociata two years earlier She was paired with her husband tenor Antonio Poggi as Charles King of France Baritone Filippo Colini portrayed Giovanna s father Giacomo Verdi himself thought highly of the opera but was unhappy with the way it was staged and with the deteriorating standards of Merelli s productions overall 3 Due to Merelli s underhand negotiations to acquire the rights to the score from Ricordi the composer vowed never to deal with the impresario nor set foot on the stage of La Scala again 4 La Scala did not stage another Verdi premiere until the revised version of Simon Boccanegra 36 years later 5 nbsp Antonio Poggi who sang the role of Charles VII While the critics were rather dismissive of the opera it was ecstatically received by audiences 3 and was given a respectable 17 performances 6 For the opera s first production in Rome three months after the Milan premiere the papal censor required that the plot be cleared of any direct religious connotations The title was changed to Orietta di Lesbo the setting was shifted to the Greek island and the heroine now of Genoese descent became a leader of the Lesbians against the Turks 7 8 9 Performances under this title were also given in Palermo in 1848 10 For the next 20 years Giovanna d Arco had steady success in Italy with stagings in Florence Lucca and Senigallia in 1845 Turin and Venice in 1846 Mantua in 1848 and Milan in 1851 1858 and 1865 11 It was also presented elsewhere in Europe 6 Over the course of the nineteenth century stagings declined to a very few 20th and 21st centuriesIn 1951 Renata Tebaldi sang the title role in Naples Milan a studio recorded broadcast and Paris in a tour that led to further revivals 6 The US premiere was given in March 1966 in a concert performance at Carnegie Hall New York with Teresa Stratas in the title role 12 Its first stage performance in the US was given in 1976 by Vincent La Selva at the Brooklyn Academy of Music 13 It received its UK premiere at the Royal Academy of Music in London on 23 May 1966 3 Fully staged productions were mounted by the San Diego Opera in June 1980 as part of its short lived Verdi Festival 14 and by the Royal Opera London in June 1996 with Vladimir Chernov as Giacomo and June Anderson as Giovanna In September 2013 Chicago Opera Theater staged performances of the opera 15 La Scala Milan presented the opera for the first time in 150 years in 2015 in a new production with Anna Netrebko in the title role 16 The Berliner Operngruppe under Felix Krieger presented the opera in March 2018 at Konzerthaus Berlin Roles edit nbsp Erminia Frezzolini the first Giovanna Role Voice type Premiere Cast 15 February 1845 17 Conductor Eugenio Cavallini Giovanna soprano Erminia Frezzolini Carlo VII King of France tenor Antonio Poggi Giacomo shepherd and father of Giovanna baritone Filippo Colini Talbot an English Commander bass Francesco Lodetti Delil a French officer tenor Napoleone Marconi French and English soldiers French courtiers villagers nobles angels demons ChorusSynopsis edit nbsp Temistocle Solera librettist of the opera Time 1429 Place Domremy Reims and near Rouen France Prologue edit Scene 1 The French village of DomremyCharles the not yet crowned King of France describes to his officers and the villagers his vision of the Virgin Mary commanding him to surrender to the invading English army and laying down his weapons at the foot of a giant oak tree Aria Sotto una quercia parvemi Beneath an oak she appeared to me Later he expresses his frustration with the limitations of being a ruler Aria Pondo e letal martirio A deadly burden a torment Scene 2 A forestBy a giant oak tree Giacomo prays for the safety of his daughter Giovanna who before she falls asleep by a nearby shrine offers prayers to be chosen to lead the French forces Aria Sempre all alba ed alla sera always at dawn and in the evening Suddenly Charles arrives prepared to lay down his arms at the base of the tree Meanwhile the sleeping Giovanna has visions in which angels ask her to become a soldier and lead France to victory Tu sei bella the Demons Waltz She cries out that she is ready to do so Charles overhears her and thrills at her courage Her father Giacomo weeps believing that his daughter has given her soul to the Devil out of her devotion to the future King Act 1 edit nbsp Disegno per copertina di libretto drawing for Giovanna d Arco undated Scene 1 Near ReimsCommander Talbot of the English army tries to convince his discouraged soldiers that their imminent surrender to the French is not due to forces of evil Giacomo arrives and offers up his daughter believing her to be under the influence of the Devil Franco son io I am French but in my heart and So che per via dei triboli I know that original sin Scene 2 The French court at ReimsPreparations are under way for Charles coronation Giovanna longs for her simple life back home Aria O fatidica foresta O prophetic forest Charles confesses his love for Giovanna She withdraws despite her feelings toward the King because her voices have warned her against earthly love Charles is taken to the Cathedral at Reims for his coronation Act 2 edit The Cathedral squareThe villagers of Reims have gathered in the Cathedral square to celebrate Giovanna s victory over the English army The French soldiers lead Charles into the Cathedral Giacomo has decided he must repudiate his daughter who he believes has entered a pact with the Devil Aria Speme al vecchio era una figlia An old man s hope was a daughter He denounces her to the villagers Aria Comparire il ciel m ha stretto Heaven has forced me to appear and they are persuaded although the King refuses to listen Charles pleads with Giovanna to defend herself but she refuses Act 3 edit At the stakeGiovanna has been captured by the English army and is awaiting her death at the stake She has visions of battlefield victories and begs God to stand by her explaining how she has shown her obedience by forsaking her worldly love for the King as the voices had commanded Giacomo overhears her pleas and recognizes his error He loosens his daughter s bonds and she escapes She rushes to the battlefield to turn the French defeat into victory once more Giacomo pleads with the King first for punishment and then for forgiveness which Charles grants Charles learns of the French victory on the battlefield but also of Giovanna s death Aria Quale al piu fido amico Which of my truest friends As her body is carried in Giovanna suddenly revives Giacomo reclaims his daughter and the King professes his love The angels sing of salvation and victory as Giovanna dies and ascends into heaven Orchestration editGiovanna d Arco is scored for piccolo briefly doubling second flute flute two oboes second doubling cor anglais two clarinets two bassoons four horns two trumpets six or nine offstage trumpets three trombones cimbasso timpani snare drum bass drum and cymbals cassa cymbals piatti triangle bell cannon wind band wind band of brass instruments only offstage band bass drum for band harp harmonium strings Music edit nbsp Overture source source Played in 1991 by the U S Marine Band 8 38 Problems playing this file See media help Few scholars regard the quality of the music very highly David Kimball writes For modern ears no opera illustrates more disconcertingly than Giovanna d Arco the chasm between Verdi s best and worst music He praises some of the solo and ensemble music but finds that the choruses embody 19th century taste at its most abysmal 3 Parker says that the musical emphasis was on Joan herself and includes some powerfully original ensembles but says that the choruses were probably intended as a sequel to the grand choral tableau works Verdi and Solera had previously created together 18 Baldini s assessment is mixed He endorses Massimo Mila s view that the opera demonstrates that way of making a hedonistic and vacuously melodious opera which was the norm in contemporary Italian theatres 19 Baldini found merit in Giovanna s cavatina in the Prologue where she prays to be chosen to lead the forces Sempre all alba ed alla sera always at dawn and in the evening Budden also calls it a work of brilliant patches says that the best things in it surpass anything that Verdi had written up to that time and finds the soprano part to be of rare distinction and the solo numbers and many of the ensembles to be of high caliber 20 Recordings editSeveral recordings of live performances of Giovanna d Arco have been released The only studio recording dates from 1972 and features James Levine conducting with Montserrat Caballe Placido Domingo and Sherrill Milnes Domingo sang the tenor role of Carlo on that recording and the baritone role of Giacomo in a live performance recorded in 2013 with Anna Netrebko Year Cast Giovanna Carlo VII Giacomo Conductor Opera House and Orchestra Label 21 1951 Renata Tebaldi Carlo Bergonzi Rolando Panerai Alfredo Simonetto RAI Milano Symphonic Orchestra and Chorus Audio CD MelodramCat 27021 1972 Montserrat Caballe Placido Domingo Sherrill Milnes James Levine London Symphony Orchestra Ambrosian Opera Chorus Audio CD EMI ClassicsCat 7 63226 2 1990 Susan Dunn Vincenzo La Scola Renato Bruson Riccardo Chailly Teatro Comunale di Bologna Orchestra and Chorus Staged and directed by German film maker Werner Herzog DVD KulturCat D4043 2008 Svetla Vassileva Evan Bowers Renato Bruson Bruno Bartoletti Teatro Regio di Parma DVD C MajorCat 721208 22 2013 Anna Netrebko Francesco Meli Placido Domingo Paolo Carignani Munchner Rundfunkorchester Philharmonia Chor Wien Audio CD Deutsche GrammophonCat 4792712 2016 Jessica Pratt Jean Francois Borras Julian Kim Riccardo Frizza Orchestra Internazionale d Italia Chorus of Teatro Petruzzelli Bari Festival della Valle d Itria Martina Franca Audio CD and DVD Dynamic Cat 8007144376765References editNotes Budden p 205 Budden p 205 ff a b c d David Kimball 2001 in Holden p 983 Budden p 206 Kimbell 1981 a b c George Martin Verdi Onstage in the United States Giovanna d Arco The Opera Quarterly 21 2 242 2005 by subscription only Prag R Giovanna d Arco Giuseppe Verdi The Opera Quarterly 14 2 164 1997 Osborne p 47 Weaver p 123 ff Orietta di Lesbo in Palermo on librettodopera it Libretti d opera Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 19 June 2013 Performances in Italy permanent dead link on librettodopera it Retrieved 19 June 2013 Schoenberg Harold C 2 March 1966 Giovanna d Arco Verdi Without a Spark New York Times Retrieved 5 April 2018 NYGO s repertoire NYGO About Us Archived from the original on 3 September 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2013 San Diego Opera s 1980 performance San Diego Opera Performance HistoryPast Seasons Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Chicago Opera Theater website Joan of Arc Archived from the original on 28 March 2013 Retrieved 8 April 2013 Retrieved 8 April 2013 Maddocks Fiona 13 December 2015 Giovanna d Arco review a first night to remember at La Scala The Observer Retrieved 26 March 2018 List of singers taken from Budden p 204 Parker p 430 Mila p 163 in Baldini p 98 Budden p 223 Recordings on operadis opera discography org uk Giovanna d Arco Naxos com Cited sources Baldini Gabriele trans Roger Parker The Story of Giuseppe Verdi Oberto to Un Ballo in Maschera Cambridge et al Cambridge University Press 1980 ISBN 0 521 29712 5 Budden Julian The Operas of Verdi Volume 1 From Oberto to Rigoletto London Cassell 1984 ISBN 0 304 31058 1 Kimbell David 2001 in Holden Amanda Ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam 2001 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Kimbell David 1981 Verdi in the Age of Italian Romanticism Cambridge et al Cambridge University Press 1981 ISBN 0 521 31678 2 ISBN 978 0 521 31678 1 Osborne Charles Verdi A Life in the Theatre New York Alfred A Knopf 1987 Parker Roger Giovanna d Arco in Stanley Sadie Ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Volume 2 London Macmillan Publishers 1998 ISBN 0 333 73432 7 ISBN 1 56159 228 5 Warrack John and West Ewan The Oxford Dictionary of Opera New York OUP 1992 ISBN 0 19 869164 5 Weaver William The Golden Century of Italian Opera from Rossini to Puccini New York Thames and Hudson 1980 ISBN 0 500 27501 7 ISBN 978 0 500 27501 6 Other sources De Van Gilles trans Gilda Roberts Verdi s Theater Creating Drama Through Music Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press 1998 ISBN 0 226 14369 4 hardback ISBN 0 226 14370 8 Gossett Philip Divas and Scholar Performing Italian Opera Chicago University of Chicago Press 2006 ISBN 0 226 30482 5 Martin George Verdi His Music Life and Times New York Dodd Mead and Company 1983 ISBN 0 396 08196 7 Osborne Charles The Complete Opera of Verdi New York Da Capo Press 1969 ISBN 0 306 80072 1 Parker Roger The New Grove Guide to Verdi and His Operas Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 531314 7 Pistone Daniele Nineteenth Century Italian Opera From Rossini to Puccini Portland OR Amadeus Press 1995 ISBN 0 931340 82 9 Phillips Matz Mary Jane Verdi A Biography London amp New York Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 313204 4 Rizzuti Alberto ed Giovanna d Arco Dramma lirico in Four Acts by Temistocle Solera in The Works of Giuseppe Verdi critical edition Series 1 Operas Chicago University Of Chicago Press 2009 ISBN 0 226 85330 6 ISBN 978 0 226 85330 7 Toye Francis Giuseppe Verdi His Life and Works New York Knopf 1931 Walker Frank The Man Verdi New York Knopf 1962 Chicago University of Chicago Press 1982 ISBN 0 226 87132 0 Werfel Franz and Stefan Paul Verdi The Man and His Letters New York Vienna House 1973 ISBN 0 8443 0088 8 External links editVerdi The story and History on giuseppeverdi it in English Giovanna d Arco Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Aria database Pronto sono on YouTube Tebaldi sings Pronto sono from Verdi s Giovanna d Arco in this 1951 live recording in Naples Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giovanna d 27Arco amp oldid 1185237812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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