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Il trovatore

Il trovatore ('The Troubadour') is an opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto largely written by Salvadore Cammarano, based on the play El trovador (1836) by Antonio García Gutiérrez. It was García Gutiérrez's most successful play, one which Verdi scholar Julian Budden describes as "a high flown, sprawling melodrama flamboyantly defiant of the Aristotelian unities, packed with all manner of fantastic and bizarre incident."[1]

Il trovatore
Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Poster by Luigi Morgari
LibrettistSalvadore Cammarano with additions by Leone Emanuele Bardare
LanguageItalian
Based onAntonio García Gutiérrez's play El trovador
Premiere
19 January 1853 (1853-01-19)

The premiere took place at the Teatro Apollo in Rome on 19 January 1853, where it "began a victorious march throughout the operatic world",[2] a success due to Verdi's work over the previous three years. It began with his January 1850 approach to Cammarano with the idea of Il trovatore. There followed, slowly and with interruptions, the preparation of the libretto, first by Cammarano until his death in mid-1852 and then with the young librettist Leone Emanuele Bardare, which gave the composer the opportunity to propose significant revisions, which were accomplished under his direction.[3] These revisions are seen largely in the expansion of the role of Leonora.

For Verdi, the three years were filled with musical activity; work on this opera did not proceed while the composer wrote and premiered Rigoletto in Venice in March 1851. His personal affairs also limited his professional work. In May 1851, an additional commission was offered by the Venice company after Rigoletto's success there. Another commission came from Paris while he was visiting that city from late 1851 to March 1852. Before the libretto for Il trovatore was completed, before it was scored, and before it premiered, Verdi had four operatic projects in various stages of development.

Today, Il trovatore is performed frequently and is a staple of the standard operatic repertoire.

Composition history

 
Verdi around 1850

How and when Verdi acquired a copy of the García Gutiérrez play is uncertain, but Budden notes that it appears that Giuseppina Strepponi, with whom Verdi had been living in Busseto since September 1849, had translated the play, as evidenced in a letter from her two weeks before the premiere urging him to "hurry up and give OUR Trovatore".[4]

When considering setting García Gutiérrez's play, Verdi turned to work with Cammarano, "the born operatic poet" (according to Budden).[5] Their correspondence began as early as January 1850, well before Verdi had done anything to develop a libretto with Piave for what later became Rigoletto in Venice. At this time, it was also the first since Oberto that the composer was beginning to prepare an opera with a librettist but without a commission of any kind from an opera house. In his first letter to Cammarano, Verdi proposed El Trovador as the subject with "two feminine roles. The first, the gypsy, a woman of unusual character after whom I want to name the opera."[6]

With regard to the chosen librettist's strength as a poet in preparing verse for opera, Budden also comments that his approach was very traditional,[7] something which began to become clear during the preparation of the libretto and which appears in the correspondence between the two men.

Relationship with Cammarano

 
Librettist Salvadore Cammarano

Verdi's time and energy were spent mostly on finishing Rigoletto, which premiered at La Fenice in Venice in March 1851. Within a matter of weeks, Verdi was expressing his frustration to a mutual friend, de Sanctis, at having no communication from Cammarano.[8] His letter emphasized that "the bolder he is, the happier it will make me,"[8] although it appears that Cammarano's reply contained several objections, which Verdi answered on 4 April and, in his response, he emphasized certain aspects of the plot which were important to him. These included Leonora taking the veil and also the importance of the Azucena/Manrico relationship. He continued by asking whether the librettist liked the drama and emphasized that "the more unusual and bizarre the better".

Verdi also writes that if there were no standard forms – "cavatinas, duets, trios, choruses, finales, etc. [....] and if you could avoid beginning with an opening chorus...."[9] he would be quite happy. Correspondence continued between the two men for the following two months or so, including another letter from the composer of 9 April which included three pages of suggestions. But he also made concessions and expresses his happiness in what he is receiving in the way of verse.[10]

During the period to follow, in spite of his preoccupations but especially after he had begun to overcome them, Verdi had kept in touch with the librettist. In a letter around the time of his intended departure for France, he wrote encouragingly to Cammarano: "I beg you with all my soul to finish this Trovatore as quickly as you possibly can."[11]

Preoccupations and delays in 1851–1852

There then arose the question of where the opera would eventually be presented. Verdi had turned down an offer from Naples, but became concerned about the availability of his preferred Azucena, Rita Gabussi-De Bassini. She turned out not to be on the Naples roster, but expressed an interest in the possibility of Rome.

Things were put on hold for several months as Verdi became preoccupied with family matters, which included the illnesses of both his mother (who died in July) and father, the estrangement from his parents with communications conducted only between lawyers, and the administration of his newly acquired property at Sant'Agata (now the Villa Verdi near his hometown of Busseto), where he had established his parents.[12] But his relationship with his parents, albeit legally severed, as well as Strepponi's situation living with the composer in an unmarried state, continued to preoccupy him, as did the deterioration of his relationship with his father-in-law, Antonio Barezzi.[13] Finally, in April 1851, agreement was reached with the elder Verdis on the payment of debts mutually owed and the couple were given time to resettle, leaving Sant'Agata for Verdi and Strepponi to occupy for the next fifty years.

May 1851 brought an offer for a new opera from the Venice authorities, and it was followed by an agreement with the Rome Opera company to present Trovatore during the 1852/1853 Carnival season, specifically in January 1853.[7]

By November Verdi and Strepponi left Italy to spend the winter of 1851/52 in Paris, where he concluded an agreement with the Paris Opéra to write what became Les vêpres siciliennes, his first grand opera, although he had adapted his earlier I Lombardi into Jérusalem for the stage. Including work on Trovatore, other projects consumed him, but a significant event occurred in February, when the couple attended a performance of The Lady of the Camellias by Alexandre Dumas fils. What followed is reported by Verdi's biographer Mary Jane Phillips-Matz who states that the composer revealed that, after seeing the play, he immediately began to compose music for what would later become La traviata.[14]

The couple returned to Sant'Agata by mid-March 1852 and Verdi immediately began work on Trovatore after a year's delay.

Death of Cammarano and work with Bardare

Then, in July 1852, by way of an announcement in a theatrical journal, Verdi received news of Cammarano's death earlier that month. This was both a professional and a personal blow. The composer learned that Cammarano had completed Manrico's third-act aria, "Di quella pira" just eight days before his death, but now he turned to De Sanctis to find him another librettist. Leone Emanuele Bardare was a young poet from Naples who was beginning his career; eventually he wrote more than 15 librettos before 1880.[15] Composer and librettist met in Rome around 20 December 1852 and Verdi began work on both Trovatore and La traviata.

His main aim, having changed his mind about the distribution of characters in the opera, was to enhance the role of Leonora, thus making it "a two-women opera"[16] and he communicated many of these ideas ahead of time via letters to De Sanctis over several months. Leonora now was to have a cantabile for the Miserere as well as retaining "Tacea la Notte" in act 1 with its cabaletta. Changes were also made to Azucena's "Stride la vampa" and to the Count's lines. Taking into account the last-minute requirements of the censor and the consequent changes, overall, the revisions and changes enhanced the opera, and the result was that it was a critical and a popular success.

Performance history

In Italian as Il trovatore

 
Tenor Carlo Baucardé sang Manrico
 
Soprano Rosina Penco sang Leonora
 
Mezzo Emilia Goggi sang Azucena
 
Baritone Giovanni Guicciardi sang di Luna

The opera's immense popularity – albeit a popular success rather than a critical one – came from some 229 productions worldwide in the three years following its premiere on 19 January 1853,[17] and is illustrated by the fact that "in Naples, for example, where the opera in its first three years had eleven stagings in six theaters, the performances totalled 190".[17]

First given in Paris in Italian on 23 December 1854 by the Théâtre-Italien at the Salle Ventadour,[18] the cast included Lodovico Graziani as Manrico and Adelaide Borghi-Mamo as Azucena.[19][20]

Il trovatore was first performed in the US by the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company on 2 May 1855 at the then-recently opened Academy of Music in New York. The cast included Balbina Steffenone as Leonora, Pasquale Brignoli as Manrico, Felicita Vestvali as Azucena, and Alessandro Amodio as the Count di Luna.[21] The work's UK premiere took place on 10 May 1855 at Covent Garden in London, with Jenny Bürde-Ney as Leonora, Enrico Tamberlik as Manrico, Pauline Viardot as Azucena and Francesco Graziani as the Conte di Luna.[22][23]

As the 19th century proceeded there was a decline in interest, but Il trovatore saw a revival of interest after Toscanini's 1902 revivals. From its performance at the Met on 26 October 1883 the opera has been a staple of its repertoire.[24]

Today, almost all performances use the Italian version and it is one of the world's most frequently performed operas.[25]

In French as Le trouvère

After the successful presentation of the opera in Italian in Paris, François-Louis Crosnier, director of l'Opéra de Paris, proposed that Verdi revise his opera for the Paris audience as a grand opera, which would include a ballet, to be presented on the stage of the major Paris house. While Verdi was in Paris with Giuseppina Strepponi from late July 1855, working on the completion of Aroldo and beginning to prepare a libretto with Piave for what would become Simon Boccanegra, he encountered some legal difficulties in dealing with Toribio Calzado, the impresario of the Théâtre des Italiens, and, with his contacts with the Opėra, agreed to prepare a French version of Trovatore on 22 September 1855.

A translation of Cammarano's libretto was made by librettist Émilien Pacini under the title of Le trouvère and it was first performed at La Monnaie in Brussels on 20 May 1856.[26] There followed the production at the Paris Opera's Salle Le Peletier on 12 January 1857 after which Verdi returned to Italy. Emperor Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie attended the latter performance.[18]

For the French premiere, Verdi made some changes to the score of Le trouvère including the addition of music for the ballet in act 3 which followed the soldiers' chorus, where gypsies danced to entertain them. The quality of Verdi's ballet music has been noted by scholar Charles Osborne: "He could have been the Tchaikovsky of Italian ballet" he states, continuing to praise it as "perfect ballet music". In addition, he describes the unusual practice of Verdi having woven in themes from the gypsy chorus of act 2, ballet music for opera rarely connecting with the themes of the work.[27] Several other revisions focused on Azucena's music, including an extended version of the finale of act 4, to accommodate the role's singer Adelaide Borghi-Mamo. Some of these changes have even been used in modern performances in Italian.[28][29]

In 1990 Tulsa Opera presented the first staging of Le trouvère in the United States using a new critical edition by musicologist, conductor, and Verdi scholar David Lawton.[30] Recorded live for broadcast on NPR, Lawton conducted the premiere with Margaret Jane Wray as Leonore, Craig Sirianni as Manrique, Greer Grimsley as Le Comte de Luna, Barbara Conrad as Azucena, and the Tulsa Philharmonic.[30][31] This version was published by Ricordi and the University of Chicago Press in 2001.[32] An updated version of this critical edition by Lawton was published by Ricordi in 2018, and given its premiere at the Festival Verdi in Parma that same year.[33]

Rarely given in French, it was presented as part of the 1998 Festival della Valle d'Itria[34] and in 2002 Le trouvère appeared as part of the Sarasota Opera's "Verdi Cycle" of all the composer's work.[35]

Roles

Roles, voice types, premiere casts
Role Voice type Original Italian version,
Premiere cast, 19 January 1853[36]
Conductor: Emilio Angelini
Revised French version,
as Le trouvère, 12 January 1857[37]
Conductor: Narcisse Girard
Conte di Luna, a nobleman in the service of the Prince of Aragon baritone Giovanni Guicciardi Marc Bonnehée
Manrico, a troubadour and officer in the army of the Prince of Urgel tenor Carlo Baucardé Louis Guéymard
Azucena, a gypsy, supposedly Manrico's mother mezzo-soprano Emilia Goggi Adelaide Borghi-Mamo
Leonora, noble lady, in love with Manrico and courted by Di Luna soprano Rosina Penco Pauline Guéymard-Lauters
Ferrando, Luna's officer bass Arcangelo Balderi Prosper Dérivis
Ines, Leonora's confidante soprano Francesca Quadri Mme Dameron
Ruiz, Manrico's henchman tenor Giuseppe Bazzoli [[Étienne Sapin
An old gypsy bass Raffaele Marconi Medori
A messenger tenor Luigi Fani Cléophas
Leonora's friends, nuns, the Count's lackeys, warriors, Gypsies

Synopsis

Place: Biscay and Aragon (Spain)
Time: Fifteenth century.[38]

Act 1: The Duel

Scene 1: The guard room in the castle of Luna (The Palace of Aljafería, Zaragoza, Spain)

Ferrando, the captain of the guards, orders his men to keep watch while Count di Luna wanders restlessly beneath the windows of Leonora, lady-in-waiting to the Princess. Di Luna loves Leonora and is jealous of his successful rival, a troubadour whose identity he does not know. In order to keep the guards awake, Ferrando narrates the history of the count (Racconto: Di due figli vivea padre beato / "The good Count di Luna lived happily, the father of two sons"): many years ago, a gypsy was wrongfully accused of having bewitched the youngest of the di Luna children; the child had fallen sick, and for this the gypsy had been burnt alive as a witch, her protests of innocence ignored. Dying, she had commanded her daughter Azucena to avenge her, which she did by abducting the baby. Although the burnt bones of a child were found in the ashes of the pyre, the father refused to believe his son's death. Dying, the father commanded his firstborn, the new Count di Luna, to seek Azucena.

Scene 2: Garden in the palace of the princess

 
Alfredo Edel Colorno's sketch of Manrico's costume for a production at La Scala in 1883

Leonora confesses her love for the Troubadour to her confidante, Ines (Cavatina: Tacea la notte placida / "The peaceful night lay silent"... Di tale amor / "A love that words can scarcely describe"), in which she tells how she fell in love with a mystery knight, victor at a tournament: lost track of him when a civil war broke out: then encountered him again, in disguise as a wandering troubadour who sang beneath her window. When they have gone, Count di Luna enters, intending to pay court to Leonora himself, but hears the voice of his rival, in the distance: (Deserto sulla terra / "Alone upon this earth"). Leonora in the darkness briefly mistakes the count for her lover, until the Troubadour himself enters the garden, and she rushes to his arms. The Count challenges his rival to reveal his true identity, which he does: Manrico, a knight now outlawed and under death sentence for his allegiance to a rival prince. Manrico in turn challenges him to call the guards, but the Count regards this encounter as a personal rather than political matter, and challenges Manrico instead to a duel over their common love. Leonora tries to intervene, but cannot stop them from fighting (Trio: Di geloso amor sprezzato / "The fire of jealous love" ).

Act 2: The Gypsy Woman

Scene 1: The gypsies' camp

The gypsies sing the Anvil Chorus: Vedi le fosche notturne / "See! The endless sky casts off her sombre nightly garb...". Azucena, the daughter of the Gypsy burnt by the count, is still haunted by her duty to avenge her mother (Canzone: Stride la vampa / "The flames are roaring!"). The Gypsies break camp while Azucena confesses to Manrico that after stealing the di Luna baby she had intended to burn the count's little son along with her mother, but overwhelmed by the screams and the gruesome scene of her mother's execution, she became confused and threw her own child into the flames instead (Racconto: Condotta ell'era in ceppi / "They dragged her in bonds").

 
Plácido Domingo (di Luna), Anna Netrebko (Leonora), Francesco Meli (Manrico), Salzburg Festival 2014, act 2, scene 2

Manrico realises that he is not the son of Azucena, but loves her as if she were indeed his mother, as she has always been faithful and loving to him – and, indeed, saved his life only recently, discovering him left for dead on a battlefield after being caught in ambush. Manrico tells Azucena that he defeated di Luna in their earlier duel, but was held back from killing him by a mysterious power (Duet: Mal reggendo / "He was helpless under my savage attack"): and Azucena reproaches him for having stayed his hand then, especially since it was the Count's forces that defeated him in the subsequent battle of Pelilla. A messenger arrives and reports that Manrico's allies have taken Castle Castellor, which Manrico is ordered to hold in the name of his prince: and also that Leonora, who believes Manrico dead, is about to enter a convent and take the veil that night. Although Azucena tries to prevent him from leaving in his weak state (Ferma! Son io che parlo a te! / "I must talk to you"), Manrico rushes away to prevent her from carrying out this intent.

Scene 2: In front of the convent

Di Luna and his attendants intend to abduct Leonora and the Count sings of his love for her (Aria: Il balen del suo sorriso / "The light of her smile" ... Per me ora fatale / "Fatal hour of my life"). Leonora and the nuns appear in procession, but Manrico prevents di Luna from carrying out his plans and takes Leonora away with him, although once again leaving the Count behind unharmed, as the soldiers on both sides back down from bloodshed, the Count being held back by his own men.

Act 3: The Son of the Gypsy Woman

 
Today's ruin of the castle Castellar near Zaragoza

Scene 1: Di Luna's camp

Di Luna and his army are attacking the fortress Castellor where Manrico has taken refuge with Leonora (Chorus: Or co' dadi ma fra poco / "Now we play at dice"). Ferrando drags in Azucena, who has been captured wandering near the camp. When she hears di Luna's name, Azucena's reactions arouse suspicion and Ferrando recognizes her as the supposed murderer of the count's brother. Azucena cries out to her son Manrico to rescue her and the count realizes that he has the means to flush his enemy out of the fortress. He orders his men to build a pyre and burn Azucena before the walls.

Scene 2: A chamber in the castle

Inside the castle, Manrico and Leonora are preparing to be married. She is frightened; the battle with di Luna is imminent and Manrico's forces are outnumbered. He assures her of his love (Aria: Ah sì, ben mio, coll'essere / "Ah, yes, my love, in being yours"), even in the face of death. When news of Azucena's capture reaches him, he summons his men and desperately prepares to attack (Cabaletta: Di quella pira l'orrendo foco / "The horrid flames of that pyre"). Leonora faints.

Act 4: The Punishment

Scene 1: Before the dungeon keep

Manrico has failed to free Azucena and has been imprisoned himself. Leonora attempts to free him (Aria: D'amor sull'ali rosee / "On the rosy wings of love"; Chorus & Duet: Miserere / "Lord, thy mercy on this soul") by begging di Luna for mercy and offers herself in place of her lover. She promises to give herself to the count, but secretly swallows poison from her ring in order to die before di Luna can possess her (Duet: Mira, d'acerbe lagrime / "See the bitter tears I shed").

Scene 2: In the dungeon

Manrico and Azucena are awaiting their execution. Manrico attempts to soothe Azucena, whose mind wanders to happier days in the mountains (Duet: Ai nostri monti ritorneremo / "Again to our mountains we shall return"). At last the gypsy slumbers. Leonora comes to Manrico and tells him that he is saved, begging him to escape. When he discovers she cannot accompany him, he refuses to leave his prison. He believes Leonora has betrayed him until he realizes that she has taken poison to remain true to him. As she dies in agony in Manrico's arms she confesses that she prefers to die with him than to marry another (Trio: Prima che d'altri vivere / "Rather than live as another's"). The count has heard Leonora's last words and orders Manrico's execution. Azucena awakens and tries to stop di Luna. Once she finds out Manrico is dead, she cries: Egli era tuo fratello! Sei vendicata, o madre. / "He was your brother ... You are avenged, oh mother!"

Instrumentation

Music

 
Drawing for Il trovatore (1956)

Today, most opera scholars recognize the expressive musical qualities of Verdi's writing. However, musicologist Roger Parker notes that "the extreme formalism of the musical language has been seen as serving to concentrate and define the various stages of the drama, above all channeling them into those key confrontations that mark its inexorable progress".[39]

Here he, like many other writers, notes the elements of musical form (then often described as "closed forms") which characterize the opera and make it appear to be something of a return to the language of earlier times, "the veritable apotheosis of bel canto with its demands for vocal beauty, agility and range," notes Charles Osborne.[40] Thus, the cantabile-cabaletta two-part arias, the use of the chorus, etc., which Verdi had originally asked Cammarano to ignore, are evident. But Verdi wanted something else: "the freer the forms he presents me with, the better I shall do," he wrote to the librettist's friend in March 1851.[41] It was not what he received from his librettist, but he certainly demonstrated his total mastery over this style. Osborne's take on 'Il trovatore is that "it is as though Verdi had decided to do something which he had been perfecting over the years, and to do it so beautifully that he need never to do it again. Formally, it is a step backward after Rigoletto".[40]

Budden describes one of the musical qualities as the relationship between the "consistent dramatic impetus" of the action being caused by the "propulsive quality" of the music which produces a "sense of continuous forward motion".[42] Parker describes it as "sheer musical energy apparent in all the numbers".[39] And Budden gives many examples which show Verdi as "the equal of Bellini" as a melodist.[42]

Verdi also clearly recognizes the importance of the role of Azucena. Remembering that the composer's initial suggestion to Cammarano was that he wanted to name the opera after her, Budden notes that this character "is the first of a glorious line"[42] and he names Ulrica (from Ballo), Eboli (from Don Carlos), and Amneris (from Aida) as followers in the same vocal range and with the same expressive and distinct qualities which separate them from the other female role in the opera in which they feature. He quotes from a letter which Verdi wrote to Marianna Barbieri-Nini, the soprano who was due to sing the Leonora in Venice after the premiere, and who expressed reservations about her music. Here, Verdi emphasizes the importance of the role of Azucena:

..it's a principal, the principal role; finer and more dramatic and more original than the other. If I were a prima donna (a fine thing that would be!), I would always rather sing the part of the Gypsy in Il trovatore.[8]

From this position, Budden comments on the distinct differences in an era where vocal registers were less defined and which extend into Leonora's and Azucena's music "where greater verbal projection of the lower voice [can be] turned to advantage" and where "the polarity between the two female roles [extends] into every field of comparison."[42] He then sums up the musical relationship which exists between the two female characters, the men having simply been defined as being representative of their own voice types, something evident and very striking in Verdi's significant use of voice types in Ernani of 1844. Regarding Leonora, Budden describes her music as "mov[ing] in long phrases most characterized by a soaring 'aspiring' quality" whereas "Azucena's melodies evolve in short, often commonplace phrases based on the repetition of short rhythmic patterns".[42]

Cultural references

Enrico Caruso once said that all it takes for a successful performance of Il trovatore is the four greatest singers in the world.[43] On many occasions, this opera and its music have been featured in various forms of popular culture and entertainment. Scenes of comic chaos play out over a performance of Il trovatore in the Marx Brothers film A Night at the Opera (including a quotation, in the middle of the act 1 overture, of Take Me Out to the Ball Game).[44] Luchino Visconti used a performance of Il trovatore at La Fenice opera house for the opening sequence of his 1954 film Senso. As Manrico sings his battle cry in "Di quella pira", the performance is interrupted by the answering cries of Italian nationalists on the upper balcony who shower the stalls area below with patriotic leaflets. In Italian Film in the Light of Neorealism, Millicent Marcus proposes that Visconti used this operatic paradigm throughout Senso, with parallels between the opera's protagonists, Manrico and Leonora, and the film's protagonists, Ussoni and Livia.[45] A staging of act 1, scene 2, of Il trovatore is featured in Bernardo Bertolucci's 1979 film La Luna. Music from the opera was featured on Kijiji in Canada for commercials.[46]

Historical references

While the story and most of the characters are fictitious, it is set towards the end of a real civil war in Aragon. Following the death of King Martin of Aragon in 1410, no fewer than six candidates staked a claim for the throne. A political meeting, the Compromise of Caspe, found in favour of Martin's sororal nephew Ferdinand. Count James II of Urgell, King Martin's brother-in-law and the closest relative through purely patrilineal line of descent, refused to accept the decision of the Compromise, believing (with some justification) that Martin had intended to adopt him as the heir by appointing him Governor-General after the death of his own son Martin the Younger, and rebelled.[47] A third candidate was Frederic, Count of Luna, bastard son of Martin the Younger, whose legitimization had been sought from the Pope unsuccessfully. As part of the compromise for withdrawing his own claim in favour of Ferdinand, Frederic was granted the County of Luna, one of the lesser titles that his father had held.[48]

While neither of the two princes who actually took part in the war appears in the opera – neither is even referred to by name, and only Urgell is referred to by his title – the fortunes of their followers mirror those of their princes. Thus, with his military success, Ferdinand's side has the upper hand in the war and is effectively the Royalist party, with the backing of much of the nobility and the Dowager Queen, and he also has Di Luna as his chief henchman (Luna's own connection to the royal family is not mentioned, being not necessary to the drama): while Urgel, losing the war and on the back foot, is forced to recruit among outlaws and the dispossessed, effectively taking the part of a rebel despite having some legal right to his case. Thus the fact that the forces of Urgel, in the opera as in real life, lose every pitched battle: and on the single occasion that they capture a castle (named in the opera as "Castellor", a fairly generic name for a castle, there being many Castellars in the region), it proves a handicap to them because their only hope in battle lies in speed, mobility, surprise and ambush, all of which are lost when defending a fortress.

Thus it is that the fictitious troubadour Manrico can gain his rags-to-riches background, having risen from the obscurity of a Biscayan gypsy camp to become Urgel's chief general, a knight and a master swordsman in his own right, good enough to defeat Di Luna himself in a personal duel, or win a knightly tournament: only to lose it again on the military battlefield, where the odds are perpetually against him, and he is damned as an outlaw even before the opera begins, for no deed of his own but because his master is the rebel. And yet he gets to be a heroic, popular outlaw, who might just escape with his life in return for a vow of future loyalty, if put on trial in front of the Prince himself: a chance that Luna does not want to risk, given that his rivalry with Manrico is personal as well as political. Hence the challenge to the duel over the personal rivalry, instead of calling the guards and making the arrest political, in act 1: and hence also the decision to execute without trial in act 4 even though Luna knows he is abusing his position. Leonora and Azucena are, of course, as fictitious as Manrico, as is the story's conceit that the former Count of Luna had not one but two sons.

Recordings

References

Notes

  1. ^ Budden 1984, p. 59.
  2. ^ Budden 1984, p. 66.
  3. ^ Budden 1984, p. 65.
  4. ^ Strepponi to Verdi, 3 January 1853, in Budden 1984, p. 59. Her emphasis on the "OUR".
  5. ^ Budden 1984, p. 60: Budden notes that it is with this librettist that the composer hoped to work on his project for adapting King Lear
  6. ^ Verdi to Cammarano, 2 January 1850, in Werfel and Stefan, pp. 149–150. [The implication here is that the opera would be named Azucena.]
  7. ^ a b Budden 1984, pp. 61–64
  8. ^ a b c Verdi to de Sanctis (their mutual friend), 29 March 1851, in Budden 1984, p. 61
  9. ^ Verdi to Cammarano, 4 April 1851, in Budden 1984, p. 61
  10. ^ Verdi to Cammarano, 26 June 1851, in Budden 1984, p. 62
  11. ^ Verdi to Cammarano, 1 October 1851, in Philips-Matz, p. 306
  12. ^ Phillips-Matz, p. 287
  13. ^ Phillips-Matz, pp. 293–294
  14. ^ Phillips-Matz, p. 303
  15. ^ Phillips-Matz, p. 307
  16. ^ Budden 1984, pp. 65–66.
  17. ^ a b Martin, George Whitney (Spring 2005). "Verdi Onstage in the United States: Le trouvère". The Opera Quarterly. 21 (2): 282–302. doi:10.1093/oq/kbi018. S2CID 192135165.
  18. ^ a b Pitou, p. 1333.
  19. ^ Budden 1984, p. 107.
  20. ^ Forbes, Elizabeth, "Borghi-Mamo [née Borghi], Adelaide" in Sadie, vol. 1, p. 549.
  21. ^ Martin Chusid (January 1, 1987). "The First Three Years of 'Trovatore'". Verdi Forum. New York University Press (15): 44.
  22. ^ Kimbell 2001, p. 993.
  23. ^ George Whitney Martin (2011). Verdi in America: Oberto Through Rigoletto. University Rochester Press. p. 81. ISBN 9781580463881.
  24. ^ "Il trovatore". Met Opera Archives. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  25. ^ "Opera Statistics". Operabase. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  26. ^ Pitou, p. 1333
  27. ^ Osborne, C. (1977), p. 259
  28. ^ Budden 1984, pp. 107–111.
  29. ^ Pitou, pp. 158–159.
  30. ^ a b Ellis Widner (November 5, 1990). Le Trouvere' dazzles, despite the plot.
  31. ^ Jack A. Williams and Laven Sowell (1992). Tulsa Opera Chronicles. Tulsa Historical Society. p. 82.
  32. ^ Gregory W. Harwood (1998). Giuseppe Verdi: A Guide to Research. p. 327-328. ISBN 9780824041175.
  33. ^ "Verdi: Le trouvère". www.ricordi.com. October 2, 2018.
  34. ^ List of recordings in all languages on operadis-opera-discography.org Retrieved 28 March 2013
  35. ^ Sarasota Opera repertoire of Verdi operas presented
  36. ^ List of singers taken from Budden 1984, p. 58
  37. ^ List of singers taken from Pitou, p. 1335.
  38. ^ The synopsis is adapted from Melitz (1921), pp. 363–363, and Osborne (1977), pp. 251–255.
  39. ^ a b Parker, p. 827
  40. ^ a b Osborne, C., p. 255
  41. ^ Verdi to de Sanctis, 29 April 1851
  42. ^ a b c d e Budden 1984, pp. 67–70
  43. ^ Osborne (2007) p. 502.
  44. ^ Grover-Friedlander 2005, p. 33.
  45. ^ Marcus 1986, p. 182.
  46. ^ Tambling, pp. 62–63
  47. ^ Hillgarth, Jocelyn Nigel (1978) The Spanish Kingdoms 1250-1516 volume 2 1410-1516: Castilian hegemony p 229 ISBN 0-19-822531-8
  48. ^ Earenfight, Theresa (2005). Queenship And Political Power In Medieval And Early Modern Spain. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 075465074X.

Cited sources

Other sources

  • Baldini, Gabriele (1970), (trans. Roger Parker, 1980), The Story of Giuseppe Verdi: Oberto to Un Ballo in Maschera. Cambridge, et al: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-29712-5
  • Chusid, Martin, (ed.) (1997), Verdi’s Middle Period, 1849 to 1859, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-10658-6 ISBN 0-226-10659-4
  • De Van, Gilles (trans. Gilda Roberts) (1998), Verdi’s Theater: Creating Drama Through Music. Chicago & London: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-14369-4 (hardback), ISBN 0-226-14370-8
  • Gossett, Philip (2006), Divas and Scholar: Performing Italian Opera, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-30482-5
  • Martin, George, Verdi: His Music, Life and Times (1983), New York: Dodd, Mead and Company. ISBN 0-396-08196-7
  • Parker, Roger (2007), The New Grove Guide to Verdi and His Operas, Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531314-7
  • Pistone, Danièle (1995), Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera: From Rossini to Puccini, Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press. ISBN 0-931340-82-9
  • Toye, Francis (1931), Giuseppe Verdi: His Life and Works, New York: Knopf
  • Walker, Frank, The Man Verdi (1982), New York: Knopf, 1962, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-87132-0
  • Warrack, John and West, Ewan, The Oxford Dictionary of Opera New York: Oxford University Press: 1992 ISBN 0-19-869164-5

External links

trovatore, troubadour, opera, four, acts, giuseppe, verdi, italian, libretto, largely, written, salvadore, cammarano, based, play, trovador, 1836, antonio, garcía, gutiérrez, garcía, gutiérrez, most, successful, play, which, verdi, scholar, julian, budden, des. Il trovatore The Troubadour is an opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto largely written by Salvadore Cammarano based on the play El trovador 1836 by Antonio Garcia Gutierrez It was Garcia Gutierrez s most successful play one which Verdi scholar Julian Budden describes as a high flown sprawling melodrama flamboyantly defiant of the Aristotelian unities packed with all manner of fantastic and bizarre incident 1 Il trovatoreOpera by Giuseppe VerdiPoster by Luigi MorgariLibrettistSalvadore Cammarano with additions by Leone Emanuele BardareLanguageItalianBased onAntonio Garcia Gutierrez s play El trovadorPremiere19 January 1853 1853 01 19 Teatro Apollo RomeThe premiere took place at the Teatro Apollo in Rome on 19 January 1853 where it began a victorious march throughout the operatic world 2 a success due to Verdi s work over the previous three years It began with his January 1850 approach to Cammarano with the idea of Il trovatore There followed slowly and with interruptions the preparation of the libretto first by Cammarano until his death in mid 1852 and then with the young librettist Leone Emanuele Bardare which gave the composer the opportunity to propose significant revisions which were accomplished under his direction 3 These revisions are seen largely in the expansion of the role of Leonora For Verdi the three years were filled with musical activity work on this opera did not proceed while the composer wrote and premiered Rigoletto in Venice in March 1851 His personal affairs also limited his professional work In May 1851 an additional commission was offered by the Venice company after Rigoletto s success there Another commission came from Paris while he was visiting that city from late 1851 to March 1852 Before the libretto for Il trovatore was completed before it was scored and before it premiered Verdi had four operatic projects in various stages of development Today Il trovatore is performed frequently and is a staple of the standard operatic repertoire Contents 1 Composition history 1 1 Relationship with Cammarano 1 2 Preoccupations and delays in 1851 1852 1 3 Death of Cammarano and work with Bardare 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 The Duel 4 2 Act 2 The Gypsy Woman 4 3 Act 3 The Son of the Gypsy Woman 4 4 Act 4 The Punishment 5 Instrumentation 6 Music 7 Cultural references 8 Historical references 9 Recordings 10 References 11 External linksComposition history Edit Verdi around 1850 How and when Verdi acquired a copy of the Garcia Gutierrez play is uncertain but Budden notes that it appears that Giuseppina Strepponi with whom Verdi had been living in Busseto since September 1849 had translated the play as evidenced in a letter from her two weeks before the premiere urging him to hurry up and give OUR Trovatore 4 When considering setting Garcia Gutierrez s play Verdi turned to work with Cammarano the born operatic poet according to Budden 5 Their correspondence began as early as January 1850 well before Verdi had done anything to develop a libretto with Piave for what later became Rigoletto in Venice At this time it was also the first since Oberto that the composer was beginning to prepare an opera with a librettist but without a commission of any kind from an opera house In his first letter to Cammarano Verdi proposed El Trovador as the subject with two feminine roles The first the gypsy a woman of unusual character after whom I want to name the opera 6 With regard to the chosen librettist s strength as a poet in preparing verse for opera Budden also comments that his approach was very traditional 7 something which began to become clear during the preparation of the libretto and which appears in the correspondence between the two men Relationship with Cammarano Edit Librettist Salvadore Cammarano Verdi s time and energy were spent mostly on finishing Rigoletto which premiered at La Fenice in Venice in March 1851 Within a matter of weeks Verdi was expressing his frustration to a mutual friend de Sanctis at having no communication from Cammarano 8 His letter emphasized that the bolder he is the happier it will make me 8 although it appears that Cammarano s reply contained several objections which Verdi answered on 4 April and in his response he emphasized certain aspects of the plot which were important to him These included Leonora taking the veil and also the importance of the Azucena Manrico relationship He continued by asking whether the librettist liked the drama and emphasized that the more unusual and bizarre the better Verdi also writes that if there were no standard forms cavatinas duets trios choruses finales etc and if you could avoid beginning with an opening chorus 9 he would be quite happy Correspondence continued between the two men for the following two months or so including another letter from the composer of 9 April which included three pages of suggestions But he also made concessions and expresses his happiness in what he is receiving in the way of verse 10 During the period to follow in spite of his preoccupations but especially after he had begun to overcome them Verdi had kept in touch with the librettist In a letter around the time of his intended departure for France he wrote encouragingly to Cammarano I beg you with all my soul to finish this Trovatore as quickly as you possibly can 11 Preoccupations and delays in 1851 1852 Edit There then arose the question of where the opera would eventually be presented Verdi had turned down an offer from Naples but became concerned about the availability of his preferred Azucena Rita Gabussi De Bassini She turned out not to be on the Naples roster but expressed an interest in the possibility of Rome Things were put on hold for several months as Verdi became preoccupied with family matters which included the illnesses of both his mother who died in July and father the estrangement from his parents with communications conducted only between lawyers and the administration of his newly acquired property at Sant Agata now the Villa Verdi near his hometown of Busseto where he had established his parents 12 But his relationship with his parents albeit legally severed as well as Strepponi s situation living with the composer in an unmarried state continued to preoccupy him as did the deterioration of his relationship with his father in law Antonio Barezzi 13 Finally in April 1851 agreement was reached with the elder Verdis on the payment of debts mutually owed and the couple were given time to resettle leaving Sant Agata for Verdi and Strepponi to occupy for the next fifty years May 1851 brought an offer for a new opera from the Venice authorities and it was followed by an agreement with the Rome Opera company to present Trovatore during the 1852 1853 Carnival season specifically in January 1853 7 By November Verdi and Strepponi left Italy to spend the winter of 1851 52 in Paris where he concluded an agreement with the Paris Opera to write what became Les vepres siciliennes his first grand opera although he had adapted his earlier I Lombardi into Jerusalem for the stage Including work on Trovatore other projects consumed him but a significant event occurred in February when the couple attended a performance of The Lady of the Camellias by Alexandre Dumas fils What followed is reported by Verdi s biographer Mary Jane Phillips Matz who states that the composer revealed that after seeing the play he immediately began to compose music for what would later become La traviata 14 The couple returned to Sant Agata by mid March 1852 and Verdi immediately began work on Trovatore after a year s delay Death of Cammarano and work with Bardare Edit Then in July 1852 by way of an announcement in a theatrical journal Verdi received news of Cammarano s death earlier that month This was both a professional and a personal blow The composer learned that Cammarano had completed Manrico s third act aria Di quella pira just eight days before his death but now he turned to De Sanctis to find him another librettist Leone Emanuele Bardare was a young poet from Naples who was beginning his career eventually he wrote more than 15 librettos before 1880 15 Composer and librettist met in Rome around 20 December 1852 and Verdi began work on both Trovatore and La traviata His main aim having changed his mind about the distribution of characters in the opera was to enhance the role of Leonora thus making it a two women opera 16 and he communicated many of these ideas ahead of time via letters to De Sanctis over several months Leonora now was to have a cantabile for the Miserere as well as retaining Tacea la Notte in act 1 with its cabaletta Changes were also made to Azucena s Stride la vampa and to the Count s lines Taking into account the last minute requirements of the censor and the consequent changes overall the revisions and changes enhanced the opera and the result was that it was a critical and a popular success Performance history EditIn Italian as Il trovatore Tenor Carlo Baucarde sang Manrico Soprano Rosina Penco sang Leonora Mezzo Emilia Goggi sang Azucena Baritone Giovanni Guicciardi sang di Luna The opera s immense popularity albeit a popular success rather than a critical one came from some 229 productions worldwide in the three years following its premiere on 19 January 1853 17 and is illustrated by the fact that in Naples for example where the opera in its first three years had eleven stagings in six theaters the performances totalled 190 17 First given in Paris in Italian on 23 December 1854 by the Theatre Italien at the Salle Ventadour 18 the cast included Lodovico Graziani as Manrico and Adelaide Borghi Mamo as Azucena 19 20 Il trovatore was first performed in the US by the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company on 2 May 1855 at the then recently opened Academy of Music in New York The cast included Balbina Steffenone as Leonora Pasquale Brignoli as Manrico Felicita Vestvali as Azucena and Alessandro Amodio as the Count di Luna 21 The work s UK premiere took place on 10 May 1855 at Covent Garden in London with Jenny Burde Ney as Leonora Enrico Tamberlik as Manrico Pauline Viardot as Azucena and Francesco Graziani as the Conte di Luna 22 23 As the 19th century proceeded there was a decline in interest but Il trovatore saw a revival of interest after Toscanini s 1902 revivals From its performance at the Met on 26 October 1883 the opera has been a staple of its repertoire 24 Today almost all performances use the Italian version and it is one of the world s most frequently performed operas 25 In French as Le trouvereAfter the successful presentation of the opera in Italian in Paris Francois Louis Crosnier director of l Opera de Paris proposed that Verdi revise his opera for the Paris audience as a grand opera which would include a ballet to be presented on the stage of the major Paris house While Verdi was in Paris with Giuseppina Strepponi from late July 1855 working on the completion of Aroldo and beginning to prepare a libretto with Piave for what would become Simon Boccanegra he encountered some legal difficulties in dealing with Toribio Calzado the impresario of the Theatre des Italiens and with his contacts with the Opera agreed to prepare a French version of Trovatore on 22 September 1855 A translation of Cammarano s libretto was made by librettist Emilien Pacini under the title of Le trouvere and it was first performed at La Monnaie in Brussels on 20 May 1856 26 There followed the production at the Paris Opera s Salle Le Peletier on 12 January 1857 after which Verdi returned to Italy Emperor Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie attended the latter performance 18 For the French premiere Verdi made some changes to the score of Le trouvere including the addition of music for the ballet in act 3 which followed the soldiers chorus where gypsies danced to entertain them The quality of Verdi s ballet music has been noted by scholar Charles Osborne He could have been the Tchaikovsky of Italian ballet he states continuing to praise it as perfect ballet music In addition he describes the unusual practice of Verdi having woven in themes from the gypsy chorus of act 2 ballet music for opera rarely connecting with the themes of the work 27 Several other revisions focused on Azucena s music including an extended version of the finale of act 4 to accommodate the role s singer Adelaide Borghi Mamo Some of these changes have even been used in modern performances in Italian 28 29 In 1990 Tulsa Opera presented the first staging of Le trouvere in the United States using a new critical edition by musicologist conductor and Verdi scholar David Lawton 30 Recorded live for broadcast on NPR Lawton conducted the premiere with Margaret Jane Wray as Leonore Craig Sirianni as Manrique Greer Grimsley as Le Comte de Luna Barbara Conrad as Azucena and the Tulsa Philharmonic 30 31 This version was published by Ricordi and the University of Chicago Press in 2001 32 An updated version of this critical edition by Lawton was published by Ricordi in 2018 and given its premiere at the Festival Verdi in Parma that same year 33 Rarely given in French it was presented as part of the 1998 Festival della Valle d Itria 34 and in 2002 Le trouvere appeared as part of the Sarasota Opera s Verdi Cycle of all the composer s work 35 Roles EditRoles voice types premiere casts Role Voice type Original Italian version Premiere cast 19 January 1853 36 Conductor Emilio Angelini Revised French version as Le trouvere 12 January 1857 37 Conductor Narcisse GirardConte di Luna a nobleman in the service of the Prince of Aragon baritone Giovanni Guicciardi Marc BonneheeManrico a troubadour and officer in the army of the Prince of Urgel tenor Carlo Baucarde Louis GueymardAzucena a gypsy supposedly Manrico s mother mezzo soprano Emilia Goggi Adelaide Borghi MamoLeonora noble lady in love with Manrico and courted by Di Luna soprano Rosina Penco Pauline Gueymard LautersFerrando Luna s officer bass Arcangelo Balderi Prosper DerivisInes Leonora s confidante soprano Francesca Quadri Mme DameronRuiz Manrico s henchman tenor Giuseppe Bazzoli Etienne SapinAn old gypsy bass Raffaele Marconi MedoriA messenger tenor Luigi Fani CleophasLeonora s friends nuns the Count s lackeys warriors GypsiesSynopsis EditPlace Biscay and Aragon Spain Time Fifteenth century 38 Act 1 The Duel Edit Scene 1 The guard room in the castle of Luna The Palace of Aljaferia Zaragoza Spain Ferrando the captain of the guards orders his men to keep watch while Count di Luna wanders restlessly beneath the windows of Leonora lady in waiting to the Princess Di Luna loves Leonora and is jealous of his successful rival a troubadour whose identity he does not know In order to keep the guards awake Ferrando narrates the history of the count Racconto Di due figli vivea padre beato The good Count di Luna lived happily the father of two sons many years ago a gypsy was wrongfully accused of having bewitched the youngest of the di Luna children the child had fallen sick and for this the gypsy had been burnt alive as a witch her protests of innocence ignored Dying she had commanded her daughter Azucena to avenge her which she did by abducting the baby Although the burnt bones of a child were found in the ashes of the pyre the father refused to believe his son s death Dying the father commanded his firstborn the new Count di Luna to seek Azucena Scene 2 Garden in the palace of the princess Alfredo Edel Colorno s sketch of Manrico s costume for a production at La Scala in 1883 Leonora confesses her love for the Troubadour to her confidante Ines Cavatina Tacea la notte placida The peaceful night lay silent Di tale amor A love that words can scarcely describe in which she tells how she fell in love with a mystery knight victor at a tournament lost track of him when a civil war broke out then encountered him again in disguise as a wandering troubadour who sang beneath her window When they have gone Count di Luna enters intending to pay court to Leonora himself but hears the voice of his rival in the distance Deserto sulla terra Alone upon this earth Leonora in the darkness briefly mistakes the count for her lover until the Troubadour himself enters the garden and she rushes to his arms The Count challenges his rival to reveal his true identity which he does Manrico a knight now outlawed and under death sentence for his allegiance to a rival prince Manrico in turn challenges him to call the guards but the Count regards this encounter as a personal rather than political matter and challenges Manrico instead to a duel over their common love Leonora tries to intervene but cannot stop them from fighting Trio Di geloso amor sprezzato The fire of jealous love Act 2 The Gypsy Woman Edit Scene 1 The gypsies camp Stride la vampa source source From act 2 Sung by Gabriella Besanzoni in 1920 Problems playing this file See media help The gypsies sing the Anvil Chorus Vedi le fosche notturne See The endless sky casts off her sombre nightly garb Azucena the daughter of the Gypsy burnt by the count is still haunted by her duty to avenge her mother Canzone Stride la vampa The flames are roaring The Gypsies break camp while Azucena confesses to Manrico that after stealing the di Luna baby she had intended to burn the count s little son along with her mother but overwhelmed by the screams and the gruesome scene of her mother s execution she became confused and threw her own child into the flames instead Racconto Condotta ell era in ceppi They dragged her in bonds Placido Domingo di Luna Anna Netrebko Leonora Francesco Meli Manrico Salzburg Festival 2014 act 2 scene 2 Manrico realises that he is not the son of Azucena but loves her as if she were indeed his mother as she has always been faithful and loving to him and indeed saved his life only recently discovering him left for dead on a battlefield after being caught in ambush Manrico tells Azucena that he defeated di Luna in their earlier duel but was held back from killing him by a mysterious power Duet Mal reggendo He was helpless under my savage attack and Azucena reproaches him for having stayed his hand then especially since it was the Count s forces that defeated him in the subsequent battle of Pelilla A messenger arrives and reports that Manrico s allies have taken Castle Castellor which Manrico is ordered to hold in the name of his prince and also that Leonora who believes Manrico dead is about to enter a convent and take the veil that night Although Azucena tries to prevent him from leaving in his weak state Ferma Son io che parlo a te I must talk to you Manrico rushes away to prevent her from carrying out this intent Scene 2 In front of the conventDi Luna and his attendants intend to abduct Leonora and the Count sings of his love for her Aria Il balen del suo sorriso The light of her smile Per me ora fatale Fatal hour of my life Leonora and the nuns appear in procession but Manrico prevents di Luna from carrying out his plans and takes Leonora away with him although once again leaving the Count behind unharmed as the soldiers on both sides back down from bloodshed the Count being held back by his own men Act 3 The Son of the Gypsy Woman Edit Today s ruin of the castle Castellar near Zaragoza Scene 1 Di Luna s campDi Luna and his army are attacking the fortress Castellor where Manrico has taken refuge with Leonora Chorus Or co dadi ma fra poco Now we play at dice Ferrando drags in Azucena who has been captured wandering near the camp When she hears di Luna s name Azucena s reactions arouse suspicion and Ferrando recognizes her as the supposed murderer of the count s brother Azucena cries out to her son Manrico to rescue her and the count realizes that he has the means to flush his enemy out of the fortress He orders his men to build a pyre and burn Azucena before the walls Scene 2 A chamber in the castleInside the castle Manrico and Leonora are preparing to be married She is frightened the battle with di Luna is imminent and Manrico s forces are outnumbered He assures her of his love Aria Ah si ben mio coll essere Ah yes my love in being yours even in the face of death When news of Azucena s capture reaches him he summons his men and desperately prepares to attack Cabaletta Di quella pira l orrendo foco The horrid flames of that pyre Leonora faints Act 4 The Punishment Edit Scene 1 Before the dungeon keepManrico has failed to free Azucena and has been imprisoned himself Leonora attempts to free him Aria D amor sull ali rosee On the rosy wings of love Chorus amp Duet Miserere Lord thy mercy on this soul by begging di Luna for mercy and offers herself in place of her lover She promises to give herself to the count but secretly swallows poison from her ring in order to die before di Luna can possess her Duet Mira d acerbe lagrime See the bitter tears I shed Scene 2 In the dungeon Se m ami ancor Ai nostri monti ritorneremo source source Enrico Caruso and Ernestine Schumann Heink 1913 Problems playing this file See media help Manrico and Azucena are awaiting their execution Manrico attempts to soothe Azucena whose mind wanders to happier days in the mountains Duet Ai nostri monti ritorneremo Again to our mountains we shall return At last the gypsy slumbers Leonora comes to Manrico and tells him that he is saved begging him to escape When he discovers she cannot accompany him he refuses to leave his prison He believes Leonora has betrayed him until he realizes that she has taken poison to remain true to him As she dies in agony in Manrico s arms she confesses that she prefers to die with him than to marry another Trio Prima che d altri vivere Rather than live as another s The count has heard Leonora s last words and orders Manrico s execution Azucena awakens and tries to stop di Luna Once she finds out Manrico is dead she cries Egli era tuo fratello Sei vendicata o madre He was your brother You are avenged oh mother Instrumentation EditWoodwinds piccolo flute 2 oboes 2 clarinets 2 bassoons Brass 4 horns 2 trumpets 3 trombones tuba Percussion timpani triangle tambourine castanets cymbals anvils bass drum String harp stringsMusic Edit Drawing for Il trovatore 1956 Today most opera scholars recognize the expressive musical qualities of Verdi s writing However musicologist Roger Parker notes that the extreme formalism of the musical language has been seen as serving to concentrate and define the various stages of the drama above all channeling them into those key confrontations that mark its inexorable progress 39 Here he like many other writers notes the elements of musical form then often described as closed forms which characterize the opera and make it appear to be something of a return to the language of earlier times the veritable apotheosis of bel canto with its demands for vocal beauty agility and range notes Charles Osborne 40 Thus the cantabile cabaletta two part arias the use of the chorus etc which Verdi had originally asked Cammarano to ignore are evident But Verdi wanted something else the freer the forms he presents me with the better I shall do he wrote to the librettist s friend in March 1851 41 It was not what he received from his librettist but he certainly demonstrated his total mastery over this style Osborne s take on Il trovatore is that it is as though Verdi had decided to do something which he had been perfecting over the years and to do it so beautifully that he need never to do it again Formally it is a step backward after Rigoletto 40 Budden describes one of the musical qualities as the relationship between the consistent dramatic impetus of the action being caused by the propulsive quality of the music which produces a sense of continuous forward motion 42 Parker describes it as sheer musical energy apparent in all the numbers 39 And Budden gives many examples which show Verdi as the equal of Bellini as a melodist 42 Verdi also clearly recognizes the importance of the role of Azucena Remembering that the composer s initial suggestion to Cammarano was that he wanted to name the opera after her Budden notes that this character is the first of a glorious line 42 and he names Ulrica from Ballo Eboli from Don Carlos and Amneris from Aida as followers in the same vocal range and with the same expressive and distinct qualities which separate them from the other female role in the opera in which they feature He quotes from a letter which Verdi wrote to Marianna Barbieri Nini the soprano who was due to sing the Leonora in Venice after the premiere and who expressed reservations about her music Here Verdi emphasizes the importance of the role of Azucena it s a principal the principal role finer and more dramatic and more original than the other If I were a prima donna a fine thing that would be I would always rather sing the part of the Gypsy in Il trovatore 8 From this position Budden comments on the distinct differences in an era where vocal registers were less defined and which extend into Leonora s and Azucena s music where greater verbal projection of the lower voice can be turned to advantage and where the polarity between the two female roles extends into every field of comparison 42 He then sums up the musical relationship which exists between the two female characters the men having simply been defined as being representative of their own voice types something evident and very striking in Verdi s significant use of voice types in Ernani of 1844 Regarding Leonora Budden describes her music as mov ing in long phrases most characterized by a soaring aspiring quality whereas Azucena s melodies evolve in short often commonplace phrases based on the repetition of short rhythmic patterns 42 Cultural references EditEnrico Caruso once said that all it takes for a successful performance of Il trovatore is the four greatest singers in the world 43 On many occasions this opera and its music have been featured in various forms of popular culture and entertainment Scenes of comic chaos play out over a performance of Il trovatore in the Marx Brothers film A Night at the Opera including a quotation in the middle of the act 1 overture of Take Me Out to the Ball Game 44 Luchino Visconti used a performance of Il trovatore at La Fenice opera house for the opening sequence of his 1954 film Senso As Manrico sings his battle cry in Di quella pira the performance is interrupted by the answering cries of Italian nationalists on the upper balcony who shower the stalls area below with patriotic leaflets In Italian Film in the Light of Neorealism Millicent Marcus proposes that Visconti used this operatic paradigm throughout Senso with parallels between the opera s protagonists Manrico and Leonora and the film s protagonists Ussoni and Livia 45 A staging of act 1 scene 2 of Il trovatore is featured in Bernardo Bertolucci s 1979 film La Luna Music from the opera was featured on Kijiji in Canada for commercials 46 Historical references EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message While the story and most of the characters are fictitious it is set towards the end of a real civil war in Aragon Following the death of King Martin of Aragon in 1410 no fewer than six candidates staked a claim for the throne A political meeting the Compromise of Caspe found in favour of Martin s sororal nephew Ferdinand Count James II of Urgell King Martin s brother in law and the closest relative through purely patrilineal line of descent refused to accept the decision of the Compromise believing with some justification that Martin had intended to adopt him as the heir by appointing him Governor General after the death of his own son Martin the Younger and rebelled 47 A third candidate was Frederic Count of Luna bastard son of Martin the Younger whose legitimization had been sought from the Pope unsuccessfully As part of the compromise for withdrawing his own claim in favour of Ferdinand Frederic was granted the County of Luna one of the lesser titles that his father had held 48 While neither of the two princes who actually took part in the war appears in the opera neither is even referred to by name and only Urgell is referred to by his title the fortunes of their followers mirror those of their princes Thus with his military success Ferdinand s side has the upper hand in the war and is effectively the Royalist party with the backing of much of the nobility and the Dowager Queen and he also has Di Luna as his chief henchman Luna s own connection to the royal family is not mentioned being not necessary to the drama while Urgel losing the war and on the back foot is forced to recruit among outlaws and the dispossessed effectively taking the part of a rebel despite having some legal right to his case Thus the fact that the forces of Urgel in the opera as in real life lose every pitched battle and on the single occasion that they capture a castle named in the opera as Castellor a fairly generic name for a castle there being many Castellars in the region it proves a handicap to them because their only hope in battle lies in speed mobility surprise and ambush all of which are lost when defending a fortress Thus it is that the fictitious troubadour Manrico can gain his rags to riches background having risen from the obscurity of a Biscayan gypsy camp to become Urgel s chief general a knight and a master swordsman in his own right good enough to defeat Di Luna himself in a personal duel or win a knightly tournament only to lose it again on the military battlefield where the odds are perpetually against him and he is damned as an outlaw even before the opera begins for no deed of his own but because his master is the rebel And yet he gets to be a heroic popular outlaw who might just escape with his life in return for a vow of future loyalty if put on trial in front of the Prince himself a chance that Luna does not want to risk given that his rivalry with Manrico is personal as well as political Hence the challenge to the duel over the personal rivalry instead of calling the guards and making the arrest political in act 1 and hence also the decision to execute without trial in act 4 even though Luna knows he is abusing his position Leonora and Azucena are of course as fictitious as Manrico as is the story s conceit that the former Count of Luna had not one but two sons Recordings EditMain article Il trovatore discographyReferences EditNotes Budden 1984 p 59 Budden 1984 p 66 Budden 1984 p 65 Strepponi to Verdi 3 January 1853 in Budden 1984 p 59 Her emphasis on the OUR Budden 1984 p 60 Budden notes that it is with this librettist that the composer hoped to work on his project for adapting King Lear Verdi to Cammarano 2 January 1850 in Werfel and Stefan pp 149 150 The implication here is that the opera would be named Azucena a b Budden 1984 pp 61 64 a b c Verdi to de Sanctis their mutual friend 29 March 1851 in Budden 1984 p 61 Verdi to Cammarano 4 April 1851 in Budden 1984 p 61 Verdi to Cammarano 26 June 1851 in Budden 1984 p 62 Verdi to Cammarano 1 October 1851 in Philips Matz p 306 Phillips Matz p 287 Phillips Matz pp 293 294 Phillips Matz p 303 Phillips Matz p 307 Budden 1984 pp 65 66 a b Martin George Whitney Spring 2005 Verdi Onstage in the United States Le trouvere The Opera Quarterly 21 2 282 302 doi 10 1093 oq kbi018 S2CID 192135165 a b Pitou p 1333 Budden 1984 p 107 Forbes Elizabeth Borghi Mamo nee Borghi Adelaide in Sadie vol 1 p 549 Martin Chusid January 1 1987 The First Three Years of Trovatore Verdi Forum New York University Press 15 44 Kimbell 2001 p 993 George Whitney Martin 2011 Verdi in America Oberto Through Rigoletto University Rochester Press p 81 ISBN 9781580463881 Il trovatore Met Opera Archives Retrieved 26 March 2018 Opera Statistics Operabase Retrieved 30 July 2013 Pitou p 1333 Osborne C 1977 p 259 Budden 1984 pp 107 111 Pitou pp 158 159 a b Ellis Widner November 5 1990 Le Trouvere dazzles despite the plot Jack A Williams and Laven Sowell 1992 Tulsa Opera Chronicles Tulsa Historical Society p 82 Gregory W Harwood 1998 Giuseppe Verdi A Guide to Research p 327 328 ISBN 9780824041175 Verdi Le trouvere www ricordi com October 2 2018 List of recordings in all languages on operadis opera discography org Retrieved 28 March 2013 Sarasota Opera repertoire of Verdi operas presented List of singers taken from Budden 1984 p 58 List of singers taken from Pitou p 1335 The synopsis is adapted from Melitz 1921 pp 363 363 and Osborne 1977 pp 251 255 a b Parker p 827 a b Osborne C p 255 Verdi to de Sanctis 29 April 1851 a b c d e Budden 1984 pp 67 70 Osborne 2007 p 502 Grover Friedlander 2005 p 33 Marcus 1986 p 182 Tambling pp 62 63 Hillgarth Jocelyn Nigel 1978 The Spanish Kingdoms 1250 1516 volume 2 1410 1516 Castilian hegemony p 229 ISBN 0 19 822531 8 Earenfight Theresa 2005 Queenship And Political Power In Medieval And Early Modern Spain Ashgate Publishing ISBN 075465074X Cited sources Budden Julian 1984 The Operas of Verdi From Il trovatore to La forza del destino London Cassell ISBN 978 0 19 520068 3 hardcover ISBN 978 0 19 520450 6 paperback Grover Friedlander Michal 2005 Vocal Apparitions The Attraction of Cinema to Opera Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12008 9 Kimbell David 2001 Holden Amanda ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 978 0 14 029312 8 Marcus Millicent Joy 1986 Italian Film in the Light of Neorealism Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 10208 5 Melitz Leo de 1921 The Opera Goer s Complete Guide OCLC 5128391 1102264 View at Google Books Osborne Charles 1977 The Complete Operas of Verdi New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80072 6 Osborne Charles 2007 The Opera Lover s Companion Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12373 9 Preview at Google Books Phillips Matz Mary Jane 1993 Verdi A Biography London amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 313204 4 Parker Roger Il trovatore in Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol Four London Macmillan Publishers Inc 1998 ISBN 0 333 73432 7 ISBN 1 56159 228 5 Pitou Spire 1990 The Paris Opera An Encyclopedia of Operas Ballets Composers and Performers Growth and Grandeur 1815 1914 New York Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 26218 0 Tambling Jeremy 1987 Opera Ideology and Film Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 2238 X Werfel Franz and Stefan Paul 1973 Verdi The Man and His Letters New York Vienna House ISBN 0 8443 0088 8Other sources Baldini Gabriele 1970 trans Roger Parker 1980 The Story of Giuseppe Verdi Oberto to Un Ballo in Maschera Cambridge et al Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29712 5 Chusid Martin ed 1997 Verdi s Middle Period 1849 to 1859 Chicago and London University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 10658 6 ISBN 0 226 10659 4 De Van Gilles trans Gilda Roberts 1998 Verdi s Theater Creating Drama Through Music Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 14369 4 hardback ISBN 0 226 14370 8 Gossett Philip 2006 Divas and Scholar Performing Italian Opera Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 30482 5 Martin George Verdi His Music Life and Times 1983 New York Dodd Mead and Company ISBN 0 396 08196 7 Parker Roger 2007 The New Grove Guide to Verdi and His Operas Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531314 7 Pistone Daniele 1995 Nineteenth Century Italian Opera From Rossini to Puccini Portland Oregon Amadeus Press ISBN 0 931340 82 9 Toye Francis 1931 Giuseppe Verdi His Life and Works New York Knopf Walker Frank The Man Verdi 1982 New York Knopf 1962 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 87132 0 Warrack John and West Ewan The Oxford Dictionary of Opera New York Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 869164 5External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Il trovatore Il trovatore Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Synopsis libretto giuseppeverdi it Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Il trovatore amp oldid 1147556614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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