Jump to content

Le pescatrici

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Le pescatrici
dramma giocosobyJoseph Haydn
Portrait of the composer byThomas Hardy,in 1791
TranslationThe Fisherwomen
LibrettistCarlo Goldoni
LanguageItalian
Premiere
16 September 1770(1770-09-16)

Le pescatrici(The Fisherwomen)Hob.28/4, is an opera (dramma giocoso) in three acts byJoseph Haydnset to alibrettobyCarlo Goldoni.Originally composed as part of the wedding celebrations of Maria Theresa Countess Lamberg, the opera was first performed on 16 September 1770 in the court theatre atEszterháza.

Background and performance history

[edit]

Le pescatriciwas the second of the three Goldoni libretti that Haydn set to music — the other two wereLo speziale(1768) andIl mondo della luna(1777). However, Haydn was not the first to use Goldoni's libretto. It had previously been used for operas byFerdinando Bertoni(Venice,1751) andNiccolò Piccinni(Rome1766) and was later used byFlorian Leopold Gassmann(Vienna,1771). Haydn composedLe pescatricias part of the lavish celebrations for the marriage ofPrince Nikolaus Esterházy's niece, Maria Theresa Countess Lamberg to Alois Count Poggi atEszterházawhere the opera was first performed on 16 September 1770. The roles of Lesbina and Frisellino were first sung by Maria Magdalena Spangler and her husband, Carl Friberth, two prominent court singers at Eszterháza. Carl Friberth may also have had a hand in adapting Goldoni's libretto for Haydn.[1]

A third of the original score was then destroyed in a fire at Esterháza in 1779. It was later reconstructed in 1965 by the Haydn scholar byH.C. Robbins Landonand the composerKarl Heinz Füssl.Since then the opera has had occasional revivals, most notably inAmsterdamon 15 June 1965; inParison 29 June 1967 when it received its first radio broadcast; inMetzon 1 February 1985;[2]and atGarsington Operain June 1997.[3]

The bicentenary of Haydn's death in 2009 saw several performances of the work. In February 2009, it was performed at theVienna Kammeroper.It was also performed byBampton Classical Operain English translation in July of that year, followed by performances in London'sWigmore Hallin September. The opera received its US premiere inNew Brunswick, New Jerseyat theRutgers UniversityNicholas Music Center on 30 October 2009.[4]

Roles

[edit]
Illustration of Act 1, Scene 1 from Carlo Goldoni's libretto forLe pescatrici
Role Voice type Premiere cast[5]
16 September 1770
Lesbina,a fisherwoman, Burlotto's sister and Frisellino's girlfriend soprano Maria Magdalena Spangler
Nerina,a fisherwoman, Frisellino's sister and Burlotto's girlfriend soprano Barbara Fux-Dichtler
Burlotto,a young fisherman tenor Leopold Dichter
Frisellino,a young fisherman tenor Carl Friberth
Eurilda,believed to be the daughter of Mastricco contralto Gertruda Cellini
Mastricco,an old fisherman bass Giacomo Lambertini
Lindoro,Prince of Sorrento bass Christian Specht

Synopsis

[edit]

The story is set inTarantoand concerns the Prince ofSorrento's search for Prince Casimiro's rightful heir who had been taken to Taranto as a baby after her father's murder. Two young fisherwomen in the village, Lesbina and Nerina, each believe they might be the missing princess. Although they are engaged to each other's brother (also fishermen), they both dream of marrying a wealthy man and set their caps for Prince Lindoro. The real princess turns out to be the dignified Eurilda, whom everyone had thought was the daughter of the elderly fisherman, Mastriccio. Upon discovering this, Lindoro asks for her hand in marriage and departs for Sorrento with Eurilda and her adopted father. The squabbling pairs of lovers, Lesbina and Frisellino and Nerina and Burlotto are eventually reunited but not before Frisellino and Burlotto embarrass Lesbina and Nerina by disguising themselves as cousins of Prince Lindoro and persuading them to elope.

Recordings

[edit]

A complete recording ofLe pescatriciusing the reconstructed score by H.C. Robbins Landon with Olga Geczy conducting the Lithuanian Opera Orchestra was released on theHungarotonlabel in July 2009.

Notes and references

[edit]
  1. ^Hunter
  2. ^Casaglia
  3. ^Kennedy (21 June 1997)
  4. ^Reich (2 November 2009)
  5. ^Premiere cast from Casaglia

Sources

[edit]
  • Bampton Classical Opera,Le Pescatrici.Accessed 4 November 2009.
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005)."Le pescatrici".L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia(in Italian).
  • Federal Chancellery of Austria,"Haydn-Jahr 09: 'Le pescatrici – The Fisher Girls' at Vienna Chamber Opera House",16 February 2009. Accessed 4 November 2009.
  • Green, Rebecca,"Representing the Aristocracy: The Operatic Haydn andLe pescatrici"in Elaine Rochelle Sisman (ed.),Haydn and his World,Princeton University Press, 1997, pp 154-200.ISBN0-691-05799-0
  • Hunter, Mary, "Friberth, Carl",Grove Music Onlineed. L. Macy (Accessed 3 November 2009), Accessed 4 November 2009 viasubscription).
  • Kennedy, Michael,"Garden guerrillas declare war",Daily Telegraph,21 June 1997. Accessed 4 November 2009.
  • Reich, Ronni,"Rutgers stages 'reconstructed' version of Haydn's 'Le Pescatrici' with Musica Raritana",New Jersey Star-Ledger,2 November 2009. Accessed 4 November 2009.
  • Webster, James, "Haydn, (Franz) Joseph",Grove Music Onlineed. L. Macy. Accessed 4 November 2009 viasubscription)