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L'elisir d'amore

L'elisir d'amore (The Elixir of Love, pronounced [leliˈzir daˈmoːre]) is a melodramma giocoso (comic melodrama, opera buffa) in two acts by the Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti. Felice Romani wrote the Italian libretto, after Eugène Scribe's libretto for Daniel Auber's Le philtre (1831). The opera premiered on 12 May 1832 at the Teatro della Canobbiana in Milan.

L'elisir d'amore
Melodramma giocoso by Gaetano Donizetti
Giuseppe Frezzolini as Dulcamara in the premiere of the opera
LibrettistFelice Romani
LanguageItalian
Based onEugène Scribe's libretto for Auber's Le philtre
Premiere
12 May 1832 (1832-05-12)

Background

Written in haste in a six-week period,[1] L'elisir d'amore was the most often performed opera in Italy between 1838 and 1848[1] and has remained continually in the international opera repertory. Today it is one of the most frequently performed of all Donizetti's operas: it appears as number 13 on the Operabase list of the most-performed operas worldwide in the five seasons between 2008 and 2013.[2] There are a large number of recordings. It contains the popular tenor aria "Una furtiva lagrima", a romanza that has a considerable performance history in the concert hall.

Donizetti insisted on a number of changes from the original libretto by Scribe. The best known of these was the insertion of "Una furtiva lagrima" and the duet between Adina and Nemorino in the first act, "Chiedi all'aura lusinghiera". The melody to the duet "Io son ricco e tu sei bella" in act 2, scene 1 recurs in the final scene of the opera sung by Dulcamara as a solo aria with new scabrous lyrics.

The central narrative theme, the triumph of sincerity, is essential to the Romantic outlook; musically, in Donizetti's hands, the treatment became more romantic than in the Auber version: L'elisir d'amore features three big duets between the tenor and soprano. There is also personal history in this opera. Donizetti's military service was bought by a rich woman, so that, unlike his brother Giuseppe (also a well known composer), he did not have to serve in the Austrian army.

Performance history

The premiere of L'elisir d'amore took place at the Teatro della Canobbiana, Milan, on 12 May 1832. Today, the opera is part of the standard repertory. Enrico Caruso played in the role of Nemorino for the first time in February 1901 at La Scala with the conductor Arturo Toscanini. The audience reception caused Caruso and the orchestra to repeat "Una furtiva lagrima" three times. Toscanini stated after the performance that: "Per dio! Se questo Napoletano continua a cantare così, farà parlare di sè il mondo intero" (Heavens! If this Neapolitan continues to sing like this, he will be talked about all over the world).[3]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast,
12 May 1832
(Conductor: Alessandro Rolla)
Nemorino, a simple peasant, in love with Adina tenor Gianbattista Genero
Adina, a wealthy landowner soprano Sabine Heinefetter
Belcore, a sergeant baritone Henri-Bernard Dabadie
Dr. Dulcamara, an itinerant medicine man bass Giuseppe Frezzolini
Giannetta, Adina's friend soprano Marietta Sacchi
Peasants, soldiers of Belcore's platoon

Synopsis

 
Title page of the libretto published by Ricordi
Place: A small village in the Basque Country, Spain[4]
Time: The end of the 18th century

Act 1

Nemorino, a poor peasant, is in love with Adina, a beautiful landowner, who torments him with her indifference. When Nemorino hears Adina reading to her workers the story of Tristan and Isolde, he is convinced that a magic potion will help him to gain Adina's love. The self-important Sergeant Belcore appears with his regiment and immediately sets about courting Adina in front of everyone. Nemorino becomes anxious (although Adina meanwhile secretly derides Belcore's complacency) and, alone with Adina, reveals his love for her. Adina rebuffs him, saying that she wants a different lover every day and that Nemorino would do well to follow her example. Nemorino declares that his feelings will never change. The traveling quack doctor, Dulcamara (the self-proclaimed Dr. Encyclopedia), arrives, selling his bottled cure-all to the townspeople. Nemorino innocently asks Dulcamara if he has any of Isolde's love potion. Despite failing to recognize the name "Isolde", Dulcamara's commercial talents nevertheless enable him to sell a bottle of the "elixir" – in reality only cheap red wine – to Nemorino, who pays for it with all the cash at his disposal.

 
"Dr. Dulcamara" (Andrew Foldi), an itinerant quack and purveyor of "elixirs" and other tonics, gestures to "Cochise" (Bruce Cooper), his sly trumpet-playing assistant, to call together the townspeople as he sings his act 1 (scene 2) aria "Udite, udite, o rustici" (Hear me, hear me, o peasants) in a performance of the Cincinnati Opera's 1968 "Wild West" production of L'elisir d'amore, in which the 1832 opera's setting was moved from a village in the Basque country to 1870s Texas.

To make a safe escape, Dulcamara tells Nemorino the potion needs 24 hours to take effect – by which time, the doctor will be long gone. Nemorino drinks the potion in haste in order to watch the effect the following day. Emboldened by the "elixir" (in fact, drunk), Nemorino feigns indifference when he encounters Adina, as he expects that the elixir will facilitate his conquest of Adina the next day. She becomes increasingly annoyed; perhaps she has feelings for Nemorino after all? Belcore returns and proposes marriage to Adina. Still riled by Nemorino and wishing to give him a lesson, Adina falsely promises to marry Belcore in six days' time. Yet, Nemorino only laughs in response: such confidence is sustained in the belief in the magic potion. However, when Belcore learns that his regiment must leave the next morning, Adina promises to marry him before his departure. This panics Nemorino, who cries out for Dr. Dulcamara to come to his aid. Adina, meanwhile, invites everyone to the wedding.

Act 2

Adina and Belcore's wedding party is in full swing. Dr. Dulcamara encourages Adina to sing a duet with him to entertain the guests. The notary arrives to make the marriage official. Adina is annoyed to see that Nemorino has not appeared, for the whole deal has been intended only to punish him. While everyone goes to witness the signing of the wedding contract, Dulcamara stays behind, helping himself to food and drink. Having seen the notary, Nemorino appears, depressed, as he believes that he has lost Adina. He sees Dulcamara and frantically begs him for a more powerful, faster-acting elixir. Although Dulcamara is proud to boast of his philanthropy, upon discovering that Nemorino now has no money he changes his tune and marches off, refusing to supply him anything. Belcore emerges, musing about why Adina has suddenly put off the wedding and signing of the contract. He spots Nemorino and asks his rival why he is depressed. When Nemorino says he needs cash, Belcore suggests joining the army, as he'll receive funds on the spot. Belcore tries to excite Nemorino with tales of military life, while Nemorino only thinks of getting the potion and thus winning Adina, if only for a day before departure. Belcore produces a contract, which Nemorino signs in return for the money. Nemorino privately vows to rush and buy more potion, while Belcore muses about how sending Nemorino off to war has so easily dispatched his rival.

After the two men have left, Giannetta gossips with the women of the village. Swearing them all to secrecy, she reveals that Nemorino's uncle has just died and left his nephew a large fortune. However, neither Nemorino nor Adina is yet aware of this. Nemorino enters, having spent his military signing bonus on – and consumed – a large amount of the fake elixir from Dr. Dulcamara. Hoping to share his fortune, the women approach Nemorino with overly friendly greetings. So out of character is this that Nemorino takes it as proof of the elixir's efficacy. Adina sees Nemorino with the women, is rattled by his newfound popularity, and asks Dr. Dulcamara for an explanation. Unaware that Adina is the object of Nemorino's affection, Dulcamara explains that Nemorino spent his last penny on the elixir and joined the army for money to get more, so desperate was he to win the love of some unnamed cruel beauty. Adina immediately recognises Nemorino's sincerity, regrets her behaviour and realises that she has loved Nemorino all along. Although Dulcamara seizes the opportunity to try to sell her some of his potion to win back Nemorino, Adina declares that she has full confidence in her own powers of attraction.

Nemorino appears alone, pensive, reflecting on a tear he saw in Adina's eye when he was ignoring her earlier. Solely based on that, he convinces himself that Adina loves him. She enters and asks why he has chosen to join the army and leave the village. When Nemorino explains that he was seeking a better life, Adina responds that he is loved and that she has purchased back his military contract from Sergeant Belcore. She offers the cancelled contract to Nemorino and reassures him that, if he stays, he will be happy. As he takes the contract, Adina turns to leave. Nemorino believes she is abandoning him and flies into a desperate fit, vowing that if he is not loved he might as well go off and die a soldier. Deeply moved by his fidelity, Adina finally declares that she will love Nemorino forever. Nemorino is ecstatic. Adina begs him to forgive her, which he does with a kiss. Belcore returns to see Nemorino and Adina in an embrace. When Adina explains that she loves Nemorino, the Sergeant takes the news in stride, noting that there are plenty of other women in the world. Adina and Nemorino learn about the inheritance from his uncle. Dulcamara returns and boasts of the success of his elixir: Nemorino is now not only loved but also rich. Dulcamara exults in the boost this will bring to the sales of his product. As Dulcamara prepares to leave, everyone queues up to buy the elixir and to hail Dulcamara as a great physician.

Noted arias

 
Disegno per copertina di libretto, drawing for L'elisir d'amore (undated).

Act 1

  • "Quanto è bella, quanto è cara" (How beautiful she is) – Nemorino, scene 1
  • "Della crudele Isotta" (Of the cruel Isolda) – Adina, scene 1
  • "Come Paride vezzoso" (Just as the charming Paris) – Belcore, scene 1
  • "Udite, udite, o rustici" (Listen, listen, o peasants) – Doctor Dulcamara, scene 2

Act 2

  • Barcarolle for two voices "Io son ricco e tu sei bella" (I am rich, and you are beautiful) – Dulcamara, Adina, scene 1
  • "Una furtiva lagrima" (A furtive tear) – Nemorino, scene 2
  • "Prendi, per me sei libero" (Take it, I have freed you) – Adina, scene 2

Arrangements and adaptations

In 1840, Richard Wagner arranged the work for solo piano.[5] W. S. Gilbert wrote a burlesque adaptation of the opera, Dulcamara, or the Little Duck and the Great Quack, in 1866.[6]

Recordings

Year Cast
(Adina, Nemorino, Belcore, Dulcamara, Gianetta)
Conductor,
opera house and orchestra
Label[7][8]
1953 Margherita Carosio,
Nicola Monti,
Melchiorre Luise,
Tito Gobbi
Gabriele Santini,
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma
CD: Testament
Cat: SBT 2150
1955 Hilde Gueden,
Giuseppe Di Stefano,
Renato Capecchi
Fernando Corena
Francesco Molinari-Pradelli,
Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Decca
Cat: 443542
1966 Roberta Peters,
Carlo Bergonzi,
Frank Guarrera,
Fernando Corena
Thomas Schippers,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus
(Met Opera broadcast of 5 March 1966)
CD: Sony Classical Cat: 90991-2
1967 Mirella Freni,
Nicolai Gedda,
Mario Sereni,
Renato Capecchi
Francesco Molinari-Pradelli,
Rome Opera Orchestra and Chorus
CD: EMI
Cat: CMS 7 69897 2
1967 Renata Scotto,
Carlo Bergonzi,
Giuseppe Taddei,
Carlo Cava,
Renza Jotti
Gianandrea Gavazzeni,

Maggio Musicale FiorentinoOrchestra and Chorus

CD: Myto Records
Cat: 984194
1970 Joan Sutherland,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Dominic Cossa
Spiro Malas
Richard Bonynge,
English Chamber Orchestra
Ambrosian Opera Chorus
CD: Decca
Cat: 424912-2
1977 Ileana Cotrubaș,
Plácido Domingo,
Ingvar Wixell,
Geraint Evans
John Pritchard,
Royal Opera House
Covent Garden Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Sony Masterworks
Cat: 2796-96458-2
1981 Judith Blegen,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Brent Ellis,
Sesto Bruscantini
Nicola Rescigno,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Decca
Cat: 074 3226
1982 Lucia Popp,
Peter Dvorský,
Bernd Weikl,
Yevgeny Nesterenko
Heinz Wallberg,
Bavarian Radio Chorus,
Munich Radio Orchestra
CD: RCA
Cat:
1986 Barbara Bonney,
Gösta Winbergh,
Bernd Weikl,
Rolando Panerai
Gabriele Ferro,
Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: B000458002
1990 Kathleen Battle,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Leo Nucci,
Enzo Dara
James Levine,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 429744
1996 Alessandra Ruffini,
Vincenzo La Scola,
Roberto Frontiali,
Simone Alaimo
Piergiorgio Morandi,
Hungarian State Opera Orchestra and Chorus
CD:Naxos
Cat: 8660045-46
1997 Angela Gheorghiu,
Roberto Alagna,
Roberto Scaltriti,
Simone Alaimo
Evelino Pidò,
Lyon Opera Orchestra and Chorus
CD:Decca
Cat: 455691
2006 Anna Netrebko,
Rolando Villazón,
Leo Nucci,
Ildebrando D'Arcangelo
Alfred Eschwé [de],
Vienna State Opera Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Virgin Classics/EMI
Cat: 00946 363352 9
2007 Silvia Dalla Benetta,
Raùl Hernández,
Alex Esposito,
Damiano Salerno
Alessandro De Marchi,
Teatro Donizetti, Bergamo Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Dynamic
Cat. 33577
2009 Ekaterina Siurina,
Peter Auty,
Alfredo Daza,
Luciano di Pasquale,
Eliana Pretorian
Maurizio Benini,
Glyndebourne Chorus, London Philharmonic Orchestra
DVD: Opus Arte
Cat. OABD7057D

Annabel Arden (stage director)

2018 Pretty Yende,
Matthew Polenzani,
Davide Luciano,
Ildebrando D'Arcangelo
Domingo Hindoyan,
Metropolitan Opera (performance of 10 February)
HD streaming video: Met Opera on Demand[9]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Ashbrook 1998, pp. 37–38.
  2. ^ "Opera Statistics". Operabase. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
  3. ^ Toscanini: Musician of Conscience. Harvey Sachs. Liveright (2017). Pp. 142-143.
  4. ^ But "in a small Italian Village" is noted in the Schirmer English edition of the score
  5. ^ Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th ed., 1954
  6. ^ "St. James's Theatre", The Era, 30 December 1866, p. 15
  7. ^ L'elisir d'amore discography from Stanford website.
  8. ^ Recordings of Elixir on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk.
  9. ^ L'Elisir d'Amore, 10 February 2018, Met Opera on Demand.

Sources

External links

  • Donizetti Society (London) website
  • L'elisir d'amore: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Vocal score with English translation
  • Stanford.edu | Libretto (Italian)
  • Essay by Thomas May for San Francisco Opera
  • (in English and French) & (Occitan) Cross-over between L'Elisir d'amore and the traditional music from County of Nice, France
  • Animation on YouTube, by Rolando Villazón
  • Online opera guide on Donizetti’s ELISIR D’AMORE, An opera portrait with synopsis, commentary, music analysis, anecdotes

elisir, amore, elixir, love, pronounced, leliˈzir, daˈmoːre, melodramma, giocoso, comic, melodrama, opera, buffa, acts, italian, composer, gaetano, donizetti, felice, romani, wrote, italian, libretto, after, eugène, scribe, libretto, daniel, auber, philtre, 18. L elisir d amore The Elixir of Love pronounced leliˈzir daˈmoːre is a melodramma giocoso comic melodrama opera buffa in two acts by the Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti Felice Romani wrote the Italian libretto after Eugene Scribe s libretto for Daniel Auber s Le philtre 1831 The opera premiered on 12 May 1832 at the Teatro della Canobbiana in Milan L elisir d amoreMelodramma giocoso by Gaetano DonizettiGiuseppe Frezzolini as Dulcamara in the premiere of the operaLibrettistFelice RomaniLanguageItalianBased onEugene Scribe s libretto for Auber s Le philtrePremiere12 May 1832 1832 05 12 Teatro della Canobbiana Milan Contents 1 Background 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 5 Noted arias 6 Arrangements and adaptations 7 Recordings 8 References 9 External linksBackground EditWritten in haste in a six week period 1 L elisir d amore was the most often performed opera in Italy between 1838 and 1848 1 and has remained continually in the international opera repertory Today it is one of the most frequently performed of all Donizetti s operas it appears as number 13 on the Operabase list of the most performed operas worldwide in the five seasons between 2008 and 2013 2 There are a large number of recordings It contains the popular tenor aria Una furtiva lagrima a romanza that has a considerable performance history in the concert hall Donizetti insisted on a number of changes from the original libretto by Scribe The best known of these was the insertion of Una furtiva lagrima and the duet between Adina and Nemorino in the first act Chiedi all aura lusinghiera The melody to the duet Io son ricco e tu sei bella in act 2 scene 1 recurs in the final scene of the opera sung by Dulcamara as a solo aria with new scabrous lyrics The central narrative theme the triumph of sincerity is essential to the Romantic outlook musically in Donizetti s hands the treatment became more romantic than in the Auber version L elisir d amore features three big duets between the tenor and soprano There is also personal history in this opera Donizetti s military service was bought by a rich woman so that unlike his brother Giuseppe also a well known composer he did not have to serve in the Austrian army Performance history EditThe premiere of L elisir d amore took place at the Teatro della Canobbiana Milan on 12 May 1832 Today the opera is part of the standard repertory Enrico Caruso played in the role of Nemorino for the first time in February 1901 at La Scala with the conductor Arturo Toscanini The audience reception caused Caruso and the orchestra to repeat Una furtiva lagrima three times Toscanini stated after the performance that Per dio Se questo Napoletano continua a cantare cosi fara parlare di se il mondo intero Heavens If this Neapolitan continues to sing like this he will be talked about all over the world 3 Roles EditRole Voice type Premiere cast 12 May 1832 Conductor Alessandro Rolla Nemorino a simple peasant in love with Adina tenor Gianbattista GeneroAdina a wealthy landowner soprano Sabine HeinefetterBelcore a sergeant baritone Henri Bernard DabadieDr Dulcamara an itinerant medicine man bass Giuseppe FrezzoliniGiannetta Adina s friend soprano Marietta SacchiPeasants soldiers of Belcore s platoonSynopsis Edit Title page of the libretto published by Ricordi Place A small village in the Basque Country Spain 4 Time The end of the 18th centuryAct 1 Edit Nemorino a poor peasant is in love with Adina a beautiful landowner who torments him with her indifference When Nemorino hears Adina reading to her workers the story of Tristan and Isolde he is convinced that a magic potion will help him to gain Adina s love The self important Sergeant Belcore appears with his regiment and immediately sets about courting Adina in front of everyone Nemorino becomes anxious although Adina meanwhile secretly derides Belcore s complacency and alone with Adina reveals his love for her Adina rebuffs him saying that she wants a different lover every day and that Nemorino would do well to follow her example Nemorino declares that his feelings will never change The traveling quack doctor Dulcamara the self proclaimed Dr Encyclopedia arrives selling his bottled cure all to the townspeople Nemorino innocently asks Dulcamara if he has any of Isolde s love potion Despite failing to recognize the name Isolde Dulcamara s commercial talents nevertheless enable him to sell a bottle of the elixir in reality only cheap red wine to Nemorino who pays for it with all the cash at his disposal Dr Dulcamara Andrew Foldi an itinerant quack and purveyor of elixirs and other tonics gestures to Cochise Bruce Cooper his sly trumpet playing assistant to call together the townspeople as he sings his act 1 scene 2 aria Udite udite o rustici Hear me hear me o peasants in a performance of the Cincinnati Opera s 1968 Wild West production of L elisir d amore in which the 1832 opera s setting was moved from a village in the Basque country to 1870s Texas To make a safe escape Dulcamara tells Nemorino the potion needs 24 hours to take effect by which time the doctor will be long gone Nemorino drinks the potion in haste in order to watch the effect the following day Emboldened by the elixir in fact drunk Nemorino feigns indifference when he encounters Adina as he expects that the elixir will facilitate his conquest of Adina the next day She becomes increasingly annoyed perhaps she has feelings for Nemorino after all Belcore returns and proposes marriage to Adina Still riled by Nemorino and wishing to give him a lesson Adina falsely promises to marry Belcore in six days time Yet Nemorino only laughs in response such confidence is sustained in the belief in the magic potion However when Belcore learns that his regiment must leave the next morning Adina promises to marry him before his departure This panics Nemorino who cries out for Dr Dulcamara to come to his aid Adina meanwhile invites everyone to the wedding Act 2 Edit Adina and Belcore s wedding party is in full swing Dr Dulcamara encourages Adina to sing a duet with him to entertain the guests The notary arrives to make the marriage official Adina is annoyed to see that Nemorino has not appeared for the whole deal has been intended only to punish him While everyone goes to witness the signing of the wedding contract Dulcamara stays behind helping himself to food and drink Having seen the notary Nemorino appears depressed as he believes that he has lost Adina He sees Dulcamara and frantically begs him for a more powerful faster acting elixir Although Dulcamara is proud to boast of his philanthropy upon discovering that Nemorino now has no money he changes his tune and marches off refusing to supply him anything Belcore emerges musing about why Adina has suddenly put off the wedding and signing of the contract He spots Nemorino and asks his rival why he is depressed When Nemorino says he needs cash Belcore suggests joining the army as he ll receive funds on the spot Belcore tries to excite Nemorino with tales of military life while Nemorino only thinks of getting the potion and thus winning Adina if only for a day before departure Belcore produces a contract which Nemorino signs in return for the money Nemorino privately vows to rush and buy more potion while Belcore muses about how sending Nemorino off to war has so easily dispatched his rival After the two men have left Giannetta gossips with the women of the village Swearing them all to secrecy she reveals that Nemorino s uncle has just died and left his nephew a large fortune However neither Nemorino nor Adina is yet aware of this Nemorino enters having spent his military signing bonus on and consumed a large amount of the fake elixir from Dr Dulcamara Hoping to share his fortune the women approach Nemorino with overly friendly greetings So out of character is this that Nemorino takes it as proof of the elixir s efficacy Adina sees Nemorino with the women is rattled by his newfound popularity and asks Dr Dulcamara for an explanation Unaware that Adina is the object of Nemorino s affection Dulcamara explains that Nemorino spent his last penny on the elixir and joined the army for money to get more so desperate was he to win the love of some unnamed cruel beauty Adina immediately recognises Nemorino s sincerity regrets her behaviour and realises that she has loved Nemorino all along Although Dulcamara seizes the opportunity to try to sell her some of his potion to win back Nemorino Adina declares that she has full confidence in her own powers of attraction Una furtiva lagrima source source Sung by Enrico Caruso in 1911 for the Victor Talking Machine Company Problems playing this file See media help Nemorino appears alone pensive reflecting on a tear he saw in Adina s eye when he was ignoring her earlier Solely based on that he convinces himself that Adina loves him She enters and asks why he has chosen to join the army and leave the village When Nemorino explains that he was seeking a better life Adina responds that he is loved and that she has purchased back his military contract from Sergeant Belcore She offers the cancelled contract to Nemorino and reassures him that if he stays he will be happy As he takes the contract Adina turns to leave Nemorino believes she is abandoning him and flies into a desperate fit vowing that if he is not loved he might as well go off and die a soldier Deeply moved by his fidelity Adina finally declares that she will love Nemorino forever Nemorino is ecstatic Adina begs him to forgive her which he does with a kiss Belcore returns to see Nemorino and Adina in an embrace When Adina explains that she loves Nemorino the Sergeant takes the news in stride noting that there are plenty of other women in the world Adina and Nemorino learn about the inheritance from his uncle Dulcamara returns and boasts of the success of his elixir Nemorino is now not only loved but also rich Dulcamara exults in the boost this will bring to the sales of his product As Dulcamara prepares to leave everyone queues up to buy the elixir and to hail Dulcamara as a great physician Noted arias Edit Disegno per copertina di libretto drawing for L elisir d amore undated Act 1 Quanto e bella quanto e cara How beautiful she is Nemorino scene 1 Della crudele Isotta Of the cruel Isolda Adina scene 1 Come Paride vezzoso Just as the charming Paris Belcore scene 1 Udite udite o rustici Listen listen o peasants Doctor Dulcamara scene 2Act 2 Barcarolle for two voices Io son ricco e tu sei bella I am rich and you are beautiful Dulcamara Adina scene 1 Una furtiva lagrima A furtive tear Nemorino scene 2 Prendi per me sei libero Take it I have freed you Adina scene 2Arrangements and adaptations EditIn 1840 Richard Wagner arranged the work for solo piano 5 W S Gilbert wrote a burlesque adaptation of the opera Dulcamara or the Little Duck and the Great Quack in 1866 6 Recordings EditYear Cast Adina Nemorino Belcore Dulcamara Gianetta Conductor opera house and orchestra Label 7 8 1953 Margherita Carosio Nicola Monti Melchiorre Luise Tito Gobbi Gabriele Santini Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro dell Opera di Roma CD TestamentCat SBT 21501955 Hilde Gueden Giuseppe Di Stefano Renato CapecchiFernando Corena Francesco Molinari Pradelli Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus CD DeccaCat 4435421966 Roberta Peters Carlo Bergonzi Frank Guarrera Fernando Corena Thomas Schippers Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus Met Opera broadcast of 5 March 1966 CD Sony Classical Cat 90991 21967 Mirella Freni Nicolai Gedda Mario Sereni Renato Capecchi Francesco Molinari Pradelli Rome Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD EMICat CMS 7 69897 21967 Renata Scotto Carlo Bergonzi Giuseppe Taddei Carlo Cava Renza Jotti Gianandrea Gavazzeni Maggio Musicale FiorentinoOrchestra and Chorus CD Myto RecordsCat 9841941970 Joan Sutherland Luciano Pavarotti Dominic CossaSpiro Malas Richard Bonynge English Chamber OrchestraAmbrosian Opera Chorus CD DeccaCat 424912 21977 Ileana Cotrubaș Placido Domingo Ingvar Wixell Geraint Evans John Pritchard Royal Opera HouseCovent Garden Orchestra and Chorus CD Sony MasterworksCat 2796 96458 21981 Judith Blegen Luciano Pavarotti Brent Ellis Sesto Bruscantini Nicola Rescigno Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus DVD DeccaCat 074 32261982 Lucia Popp Peter Dvorsky Bernd Weikl Yevgeny Nesterenko Heinz Wallberg Bavarian Radio Chorus Munich Radio Orchestra CD RCACat 1986 Barbara Bonney Gosta Winbergh Bernd Weikl Rolando Panerai Gabriele Ferro Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus CD Deutsche GrammophonCat B0004580021990 Kathleen Battle Luciano Pavarotti Leo Nucci Enzo Dara James Levine Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD Deutsche GrammophonCat 4297441996 Alessandra Ruffini Vincenzo La Scola Roberto Frontiali Simone Alaimo Piergiorgio Morandi Hungarian State Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD NaxosCat 8660045 461997 Angela Gheorghiu Roberto Alagna Roberto Scaltriti Simone Alaimo Evelino Pido Lyon Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD DeccaCat 4556912006 Anna Netrebko Rolando Villazon Leo Nucci Ildebrando D Arcangelo Alfred Eschwe de Vienna State Opera Orchestra and Chorus DVD Virgin Classics EMICat 00946 363352 92007 Silvia Dalla Benetta Raul Hernandez Alex Esposito Damiano Salerno Alessandro De Marchi Teatro Donizetti Bergamo Orchestra and Chorus DVD Dynamic Cat 335772009 Ekaterina Siurina Peter Auty Alfredo Daza Luciano di Pasquale Eliana Pretorian Maurizio Benini Glyndebourne Chorus London Philharmonic Orchestra DVD Opus Arte Cat OABD7057DAnnabel Arden stage director 2018 Pretty Yende Matthew Polenzani Davide Luciano Ildebrando D Arcangelo Domingo Hindoyan Metropolitan Opera performance of 10 February HD streaming video Met Opera on Demand 9 References EditNotes a b Ashbrook 1998 pp 37 38 Opera Statistics Operabase Retrieved 14 September 2013 Toscanini Musician of Conscience Harvey Sachs Liveright 2017 Pp 142 143 But in a small Italian Village is noted in the Schirmer English edition of the score Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians 5th ed 1954 St James s Theatre The Era 30 December 1866 p 15 L elisir d amore discography from Stanford website Recordings of Elixir on operadis opera discography org uk L Elisir d Amore 10 February 2018 Met Opera on Demand Sources Allitt John Stewart 1991 Donizetti in the light of Romanticism and the teaching of Johann Simon Mayr Shaftesbury Element Books Ltd UK Rockport MA Element Inc Ashbrook William 1982 Donizetti and His Operas Cambridge University Press ISBN 052123526X Ashbrook William 1998 L elisir d amore In Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol 2 London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 73432 7 ISBN 1561592285 Ashbrook William Sarah Hibberd 2001 in Holden Amanda Ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 0140293124 Black John 1982 Donizetti s Operas in Naples 1822 1848 London The Donizetti Society Loewenberg Alfred 1970 Annals of Opera 1597 1940 2nd edition Rowman and Littlefield Osborne Charles 1994 The Bel Canto Operas of Rossini Donizetti and Bellini Portland Oregon Amadeus Press ISBN 0931340713 Sadie Stanley Ed John Tyrell Exec Ed 2004 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd edition London Macmillan ISBN 978 0195170672 hardcover ISBN 0195170679 OCLC 419285866 eBook Schirmer G 1990 91 L elisir d amore in Collection of Opera Librettos Weinstock Herbert 1963 Donizetti and the World of Opera in Italy Paris and Vienna in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century New York Octagon 1963 and 1979 ISBN 978 0374983376 OCLC 5219645External links EditDonizetti Society London website L elisir d amore Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Vocal score with English translation Stanford edu Libretto Italian Essay by Thomas May for San Francisco Opera in English and French amp Occitan Cross over between L Elisir d amore and the traditional music from County of Nice France Animation on YouTube by Rolando Villazon Online opera guide on Donizetti s ELISIR D AMORE An opera portrait with synopsis commentary music analysis anecdotes Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title L 27elisir d 27amore amp oldid 1134972816, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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