Giuseppe Verdi - Il Trovatore
Royal Opera House, 2017
Richard
Farnes, David Bösch, Anita Rachvelishvili, Gregory Kunde, Lianna
Haroutounian, Vitaliy Bilyy, Francesca Chiejina, Samuel Sakker
Opus Arte - Blu-ray
The
principal challenge for a director approaching Il Trovatore must be to
find a way of making its notoriously implausible plot half-way
intelligible and work around its operatic template of mannerisms and
numbers. It's a tall order and the best you can do is just attempt to
tone things down and let Verdi's overheated orchestration provide all
the drama. The other approach is to just let fly, run with it, but you
need exceptional Verdi singers to make that convincing. David Bösch's
production for the Royal Opera House tries to do both, but the focus on
mood doesn't quite make up for the static direction and not all the
singing performances are quite good enough to carry it off either.
There are however some good points to the production and the
performances, certainly enough to ride on Verdi's music and bring this
work to its breathless conclusion.
The set designs for
David Bösch's production settle for the generic modern day setting of a
dark barb-wired landscape of wartime devastation that is now
unfortunately quite common at the Royal Opera House. As far as mood
goes, the dark gothic minimalism works well to downplay some of the more
extravagant drama, which is instead allowed to simmer in the recurring
presence and imagery of fire. A simple gesture in the opening scene for
example, where Ferrando having given his troops and himself the
heebie-jeebies over the curse of the evil wicked witch burnt at the
stake who still haunts the Count di Luna's family, tentatively kicks
over the remnant of the burning camp fire, expecting it looks to find
bone lying there.
There's a similar reliance on mood and
suggestion elsewhere. Azucena's caravan at the gypsy camp is decorated
with macabre looking dolls pinned to its outside, the scene eerily lit
by the orange flames of the camp flickering brazier. In terms of
direction however there's little thought or effort made to make the
characters or the drama feel real of convincing. It's all rather
static, the scenes remain a collection of disconnected dramas with no
flow or follow-through that aren't resolved in any way until the
conclusion. Like the ROH's controversial 2015 Guillaume Tell, it
unimaginatively relies on generic groups of soldiers/thugs threatening captives in bleak war-torn landscapes and subjecting them to brutal beatings, torture and execution.
What
counts here and ultimately determines the nature of the production is
the quality of the Verdian musical and singing performances. In terms
of the musical interpretation, the early indications were that Richard Farnes doesn't seem to have much to offer as far as arrangements and
interpretation, but in reality it seems it's more just an indication
of good pacing. The delivery matches the early setting of mood,
building on the drama, letting Verdi's score for the opera take on its
own momentum, and when those moments of thunderous impact are needed, it
proves to be a full-blooded account.
The singing however
is a mixed bag as far as the division between the male and female roles
goes. Although there are some impressive moments in the performances
of Lianna Haroutounian's Leonora and Vitaliy Bilyy's Conte di Luna, they
aren't totally convincing or always secure in their delivery. Both are
a little static and their characters lack personality and direction - a
fault as much with Verdi and Cammarano's writing as much as the
director's failure to bring them to life. Haroutounian is certainly
capable, her 'Tu vedrai che amore in terra' quite impressive in its own
right, if still not having a good flow or connection to character and
situation.
Anita Rachvelishvili and Gregory Kunde are
much better equipped to handle the technical and dramatic challenges of
Verdi's writing for the voice, and as Azucena and Manrico, their voices
and performances ultimately hold more sway over the outcome and
effectiveness of the production. Rachvelishvili comes out on top,
taking the role of Azucena with relish, matching Verdi's intensity but
not overselling it. Kunde is always a joy to hear, a dramatic rather
than a belcanto Rossinian, and that kind of dramatic lyricism serves him
well for Verdi. He brings real character and personality to Manrico in
his stage presence and singing. When these two are in alignment with
the thunderous performance of the Royal Opera Orchestra under Richard Farnes, it's enough to carry this Il Trovatore over the line. That's no mean feat.
The Opus Arte Blu-ray presents the
recording of the opera on its dark stage very well throughout to such an
extent that you can almost feel the heat of the conflagration in the
closing scene. The High Resolution audio stereo and surround mixes are
superb, giving clear presence to the voices, and if you can listen to it
loud (on headphones maybe) the impact of the Anvil Chorus and the more
thunderous parts of the score is just amazing. The extra features are
not plentiful, just a snappy 3-minute introduction with soundbites from
cast and the creatives and a 3-minute look at the set designs. The
booklet however contains a very interesting essay by Flora Willson on
the history of the writing of the opera and the working relationship
between Verdi and Cammarano revealed in their correspondence.
Links: Royal Opera House