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- From: velde2@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu (Francois Velde)
- Subject: in praise of Monteverdi (was Re: in praise of Harnoncourt
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.171215.25134@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>
- Organization: HAC - Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
- References: <Dec18.182047.62365@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU> <1992Dec20.224012.1475@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 17:12:15 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- My posting on Harnoncourt prompted me to listen again to parts of
- l'Incoronazione di Poppea, Monteverdi's opera, as performed by Harnoncourt
- and his Concentus Musicus on Teldec. Allow me to rave about this recording,
- in particular the final duet.
-
- The story, roughly, is that of the emperor Nero who wants to divorce his
- wife Octavia to marry the (ambitious and dissolute, but so bewitching) Poppea.
- He eventually succeeds, after a lot of intrigue on the part of many characters.
- In the final scene, in front of the whole Imperial Court, Poppea is
- crowned Empress of the World. the final number is a love duet between Nero
- and Poppea. It is stunning, to me, to see the two lovers unabashedly
- engaging in near-foreplay, in front of the whole court. Not only is the
- ending of the opera immoral (the wicked triumph over the innocent), but
- said wicked have to belabor the point with this incredible duet. The text
- follows, from memory (pardon the inaccuracies and errors in translation):
-
- Pur ti miro, pur ti godo, I behold you, I rejoice in you,
- pur ti stringo, pur t'annodo, I embrace you, I chain you,
- piu non peno, non moro, I suffer no more, I die no more,
- o mia vita, o mio tesoro. O my life, o my treasure.
- Io son tua, tuo son io, I am yours, yours I am,
- speme mia, dillo di, O my hope, say it, say
- pur ti sei l'idol mio, Truly you are my idol,
- o mio ben, o mio caro, O my sweet, o my dear,
- o mia vita, si, si, si, si. O my life, yes, yes, yes.
-
- This is not a pompous love declaration: those are the murmured words of two
- lovers, exaggerated, repetitive, obsessive. Both voices, in the Harnoncourt
- recording, are sopranos (Nero was a castrato role). As a result, they are
- perfectly symmetric, as the text is between the two characters, and very
- disturbingly erotic: the two voices mirror each other, dance around each
- other, grope for each other, like two hands searching each other in the dark.
- They are accompanied by the orchestra, but in particular two recorders who
- insinuate themselves among the lovers and caress their intertwined voices,
- egging them on, hovering around them like little impish Cupids in some Mars
- and Venus painting by Veronese. (Harnoncourt, in the notes, says explicitly
- that he used the recorders for the more "erotic" parts of the opera). The
- two singers, BTW, are Helen Donath and Elisabeth Soderstrom.
-
- (there is a version of this duet by Rene Jacobs and Helga Molinari-Muller
- on a Harmonia Mundi recording: while beautiful, I think it lacks the sensuality
- of Harnoncourt's orchestration).
-
- Here's the data on the Harnoncourt recording:
-
- Author: Monteverdi, Claudio, 1567-1643.
- Title: L'incoronazione di Poppea / Claudio Monteverdi. Hamburg :
- Teldec, [1985], p1974.
- 4 sound discs (3 hr., 35 min.) : digital, stereo. Analog recording.
- Series: Das Alte Werk.
- Publisher No.: 8.35247 ZC Teldec
- Notes: Opera in one prologue and three acts.
- Analog recording.
- Performers: Helen Donath, Elisabeth Soderstrom, Cathy
- Berberian, sopranos ; Paul Esswood, counter-tenor ; Kurt
- Equiluz, Philip Langridge, tenors ; supporting soloists ;
- Concentus Musicus Wien ; Nikolaus Harnoncourt, conductor.
-
- --
-
- Francois Velde
-
-