VERDI: Songs
Total playing time: 00:57:23
$8.99
(CD)
In Stock - Usually ships within 24 hours.
Just copy this code and paste it where you want the link on your website:
Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) Songs It may seem odd that Italy's greatest opera composer should have first come before the Milanese public with a set of salon...
Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901)
Songs
It may seem odd that Italy's greatest opera composer
should have first come before the Milanese public with a
set of salon pieces, but in fact the 'liriche da camera'
which punctuate his long career would often serve as a
forging ground for his treatment of dramatic verse. He
was 25 and pursuing the humble calling of municipal
music master in Busseto when, doubtless as a result of
useful contacts made during his student years at Milan,
the firm of Canti brought out his Sei Romanze for voice
and piano. Within their modest scope fingerprints of the
mature master can already be discerned. The heavily
charged harmonies that introduce Non t'accostare
all'urna 5 set a mood of high tragedy, while at midpoint
the lyrical flow gives way to forceful declamatory
gestures and a convulsive urgency as the singer inveighs
against his faithless beloved. Simpler and more tranquil,
More, Elisa, lo stanco poeta 4 is notable for its almost
Bellinian phrase-lengths and its epigrammatic approach
to the final cadence of each verse. The melody of In
solitaria stanza 2 is encrusted with weary chromatic
inflections amid which there surfaces a phrase that will
recur at a crucial point of Leonora's 'Tacea la notte' (I1
trovatore). Nell'orror di notte oscura 3 returns to the
subject of the jilted lover with a piano accompaniment
of, at times, almost Schubertian intimacy, but at the
words 'Maledetta la memoria di colei che lo trad́' the
dramatic claws are once more unsheathed.
Two songs belong to 1839, the year of Verdi's first
opera, Oberto, conte di San Bonifacio. L'esule 15, to
words by its librettist, opens with a long, pianistic
introduction, but soon reveals its true colours as a
miniature operatic aria in two contrasted movements
linked by a 'tempo di mezzo' and preceded by a
recitative. The concluding cabaletta 'Oh, che allor le
patrie sponde' foretells the energetic style of Ernani. In
La seduzione 12 a design of plain, lilting melody is
worked out so as to reflect every detail of the text,
whether by unexpected harmonic shifts or by variety of
accentuation.
Chi i bei d́ m'adduce ancora 14, a setting in
translation of Goethe's 'Erster Verlust' dating from
1842, was clearly an outcome of the triumph of
Nabucco, which won Verdi a number of admirers among
the Milanese aristocracy. Written for the album of the
Marchesa Sophie de Medici, it too is stalked by the
ghost of opera with pre-echoes of Azucena's 'Giorni
poveri vivea' (Il trovatore) and Alfredo's 'Di
quell'amor' (La traviata).
Another set of six romances followed in 1845, often
lighter and generally more sophisticated in style than
those of 1838. Il tramonto 7, to words by Verdi's friend
Andrea Maffei, has an almost classical regularity of
design embellished by a rich-textured piano
accompaniment; and, as so often in Verdi's arias, the
main melodic weight falls on the final phrase, a trait
developed still further in Ad una stella 8, another
Maffei setting, in which Verdi for the first, but by no
means the last time foreshortens his melodic period by
running the last two lines of a quatrain into a single
climactic strain (but for an operatic example we shall
have to wait until 'Parmi veder le lagrime' from
Rigoletto). Nor is the anticipation of Alvaro's 'Or muoio
tranquillo' (La forza del destino) likely to go unnoticed.
Lo spazzacamino 10 is of course, universally familiar as
an encore piece at song recitals, for which it might seem
to have been designed. So much more cheerful than
Britten's, Verdi's Little Sweep can be guaranteed to send
the audience away in a good mood. A subtlety of wordpainting
marks Il mistero 9, from the ambivalent chord
with which it opens to the illustration of Romani's
simile of a lake unruffled on the surface but turbid in its
depths (a plagiarism here of a motif from Les Preludes
can be safely ruled out, since Liszt's tone-poem had yet
to be composed). The concluding Brindisi exists in two
versions: the autograph score 13 brasher and more
exuberant, and the published edition 16, narrower in its
compass and harmonically more varied.
The year 1847 found Verdi in London for the
production of I masnadieri. Among the dependants of
Her Majesty's Theatre was the librettist Manfredo
Maggioni (probably not the author of Lo spazzacamino),
who supplied him with the poem of Il poveretto 11, a
long-breathed essay in musical pathos, which with an
altered text ('Prends pitie de sa jeunesse') would serve
as an insert-aria for Maddalena, in a French performance
of Rigoletto at Brussels in 1851 (she is, of course,
pleading with her brother to spare the Duke's life).
In 1868 Verdi's librettist of long standing,
Francesco Maria Plave, was laid low with a stroke. To
help his family, Verdi proposed a song-album to which
leading composers of the day would be invited to
contribute (including Wagner, who, needless to say,
would have been horrified at the suggestion). His own
offering, entitled Stornello 6 (though Rispetto would be
the more technically correct term) takes us straight to the
world of Hugo Wolf's Italienisches Liederbuch. The
faithless beloved is mockingly reminded that infidelity
is a game at which two can play. The setting is witty and
pointed; while the long, eleven-syllable verse, normally
confined with rare exceptions to recitative, will
henceforth inspire some of the finest lyrical gems of
Aida, Othello and Falstaff. The same metre underlies the
Ave Maria 1, published in 1880 but, according to the
composer, written several years before, probably as a
by-product of his Requiem. The design is an elaboration
of the operatic minor-to-major romanza, but one that is
wholly devotional in spirit, the singer moving from
subdued declamation to broad cantilena. Towards the
end the clouds descend once more; and it is left to the
piano (originally a string orchestra) to shed the final ray
of light. Nothing shows more clearly how even in his
smaller compositions Verdi's invention kept pace with
that of his large-scale masterworks.
© 1997 Julian Budden
Ave Maria (more info)
-
Ave Maria - 6:49
6 romanze (1838) (excerpts) (more info)
-
No. 3. In solitaria stanza - 3:47
-
No. 4. Nell’orror di notte oscura - 3:47
-
No. 2. More, Elisa, lo stanco poeta - 2:53
-
No. 1. Non t'accostare all'urna - 4:09
Stornello (more info)
-
Stornello - 1:51
6 Romanze (1845) (excerpts) (more info)
-
No. 1. Il tramonto - 3:25
-
No. 3. Ad una stella - 2:58
-
No. 5. Il mistero - 4:25
-
No. 4. Lo spazzacamino - 2:31
Il poveretto (more info)
-
Il poveretto - 2:34
La seduzione (more info)
-
La seduzione - 2:48
Brindisi (1st version) (more info)
-
Brindisi (1st version) - 2:11
Chi i bei di m'adduce ancora (more info)
-
Chi i bei di m'adduce ancora - 2:44
L'esule (more info)
-
L'esule - 8:18
6 romanze (1845): No. 6. Brindisi (2nd version) (more info)
-
6 romanze (1845): No. 6. Brindisi (2nd version) - 2:13