The Life of Rossini
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The Life of Rossini - H. Sutherland Edwards
H. Sutherland Edwards
The Life of Rossini
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4064066185091
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION.
PART I. ROSSINI AND HIS EARLY WORKS.
CHAPTER I. ROSSINI’S YOUTH.
CHAPTER II. ITALIAN OPERA UNTIL TANCREDI.
CHAPTER III. FOUR HISTORICAL OPERAS.
CHAPTER IV. MOZART AND ROSSINI.
CHAPTER V. ROSSINI’S REFORMS IN SERIOUS OPERA.
CHAPTER VI. ROSSINI’S REFORMS IN COMIC OPERA.
CHAPTER VII. ROSSINI’S REFORMS IN WRITING FOR THE VOICE.
CHAPTER VIII. FROM MILAN TO NAPLES.
PART II. ROSSINI AT NAPLES.
CHAPTER I. ROSSINI, BARBAJA, AND MDLLE. COLBRAN.
CHAPTER II. ELISABETTA—ROSSINI’S DÉBUT AT NAPLES.
CHAPTER III. ROSSINI VISITS ROME—TORVALDO E DORLISKA.
CHAPTER IV. BEAUMARCHAIS, PAISIELLO, AND ROSSINI.
CHAPTER V. THE BARBER OF SEVILLE.
CHAPTER VI. THE BARBER OF SEVILLE.
—FIRST REPRESENTATION.
CHAPTER VII. OTELLO: FURTHER REFORMS IN OPERA SERIA.
CHAPTER VIII. ROSSINI’S REPRODUCTIONS FROM HIMSELF.
CHAPTER IX. LA GAZZA LADRA
: THE CONTRALTO VOICE.
CHAPTER X. ARMIDA, ADELAIDA, AND ADINA.
CHAPTER XI. MOSÈ IN EGITTO:
REFORMS IN OPERA SERIA.
CHAPTER XII. THREE UNFAMILIAR WORKS.
CHAPTER XIII. SACRED AND SECULAR SUBJECTS.
CHAPTER XIV. LA DONNA DEL LAGO.
CHAPTER XV. END OF ROSSINI’S ITALIAN CAREER.
PART III. ROSSINI’S FRENCH CAREER.
CHAPTER I. A VISIT TO LONDON—ROSSINI AND GEORGE IV.
CHAPTER II. ROSSINI’S OPERA FOR THE KING’S THEATRE.
CHAPTER III. ROSSINI IN PARIS.
CHAPTER IV. ROSSINI AND HIS CRITICS.
CHAPTER V. ROSSINI AT THE ITALIAN OPERA OF PARIS.
CHAPTER VI. ROSSINI AT THE ACADÉMIE.
CHAPTER VII. GUILLAUME TELL.
CHAPTER VIII. ROSSINI AFTER WILLIAM TELL.
CHAPTER IX. THE STABAT MATER.
LIST OF ROSSINI’S WORKS, WITH THE DATE OF THEIR PRODUCTION IN PUBLIC.
INTRODUCTION.
Table of Contents
ROSSINI was a very celebrated man fifty years ago. Forty-seven years ago he had already finished his Italian career. Semiramide,
the last opera he composed for Italy, was produced in 1823; and that same year the Abbé Carpani wrote the letters on which Stendhal founded, if not the best, at least the best known life of Rossini that has appeared.
Stendhal’s Life of Rossini was given to the world, and found a ready acceptance, nearly half a century before Rossini’s death. But it so happened, what his biographer could not have known at the time, that, in the year 1823, the composer of Semiramide
had really completed an important, probably the most important, period of his artistic life. He began to write in the year 1808; and it was between the years 1813 (Tancredi
) and 1823 (Semiramide
) that he made his immense reputation.
During the next six years, from his visit to London in 1823 until the production of William Tell
in 1829, he made his fortune, while continually adding to his reputation.
Finally he passed the third and comparatively inactive period of his life, from the year of William Tell
until his death, in the tranquil enjoyment of his fortune and reputation, reminding the world from time to time, by the Stabat Mater,
by the three choruses, Faith,
Hope,
and Charity,
and by some charming compositions for voice and piano, that he was still the Rossini of former days; and proving by his last production that, even in extreme old age, he retained his glorious powers in all their fulness.
He composed a cantata when he was sixteen, and a mass when he was seventy-two. He began to write ten years before Donizetti, and nearly twenty years before Bellini; and he continued to write when these, his immediate and most illustrious followers, were no more. It is clear, then, that in Rossini the Italian music of the nineteenth century is represented, and, as it were, comprised. Consider, in addition to this, the vast popularity of his best works, and the influence of his style on that of Herold, Auber, and Meyerbeer, and what can be more evident than that Rossini was the chief operatic composer of his time, not only as regards Italy but as regards all Europe?
The main incidents of Rossini’s life are all connected directly or indirectly with music. As a youth, when Prince Eugene was Viceroy of Italy, he would have fallen a victim to the conscription but for the proofs he had already given of rare musical genius. When, at the age of 30, he took a wife, he married a singer for whom he had written some of his greatest parts. As a young man he was constantly travelling from one Italian city to another to superintend the production of his works. For the same reason he went to Vienna, just as his Italian career was coming to an end, and there met Beethoven. He never crossed the sea but once, and then only the Straits of Dover, to pay an artistic visit to England; and he passed the latter portion of his life in the country to which he had given William Tell,
and which he had almost adopted as his own.
Rossini had no ambition apart from music, and was quite satisfied with being the first operatic composer of his epoch. He was observant, well informed, talked well on a great variety of subjects, and possessed the sort of cultivation which might have been expected from his long habit of association with eminent persons in all branches of art and of the highest social distinction.
With regard to his temperament, everyone has heard that when, writing in bed, he let fall the piece he was just finishing, he did not rise to pick it up, as a man of sluggish imagination would have done, but at once, with true musical activity, wrote another. He did not like the half-material bother of setting to work; but he was full of ideas, and, when he did begin, melody flowed from him as from an eternal spring. Some of his most beautiful thoughts came to him suddenly as if by inspiration. He conceived the preghiera in Mosè
on seeing the words, and wrote Di tanti palpiti
while his dinner was being served. He was too delicately organised and had too much sense to love labour for the sake of labour; but he produced five operas in 1812 when he was preparing for Tancredi;
he composed the Barber of Seville
in thirteen days, and the Barber of Seville,
Otello,
La Cenerentola,
and La Gazza Ladra
(not to speak of some minor works) in little more than a year. He wrote nothing operatic after the age of 37, but how he worked for the theatre until he was 30!
As to money, he had a just regard for it. But he was neither extravagant nor penurious; and when by working a few years in France he had secured a fortune which he never could have gained in any other country by the mere pursuit of his art, he gratefully abandoned his author’s rights
to the Société des Compositeurs de Musique.
There was nothing dramatic in Rossini’s life. From an obscure origin he rose in a very few years to be one of the most celebrated men in Europe; but this gave him no trouble. His success was immediate, like that of a beautiful woman, whose beauty every one can appreciate. He never met with an obstacle of any importance, and his brilliant genius was never seriously or persistently denied.
Nevertheless, he made no undue concessions to the public taste, and he was a great innovator. In the course of ten years’ very hard work he completely changed the system of Italian opera. Into opera seria he introduced the most valuable reforms; while for the farce of the old opera buffa he substituted the comedy style in which Il Barbiere
and La Cenerentola
are written.
It is a pity no musician has thought it worth while to write the artistic life of Rossini, showing fully and explicitly what modifications, developments, and new combinations in opera are due to him. Without venturing too far into technicalities, I have attempted something of the kind in this volume, which aims, however, at the character of a complete biography.
PART I.
ROSSINI AND HIS EARLY WORKS.
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I.
ROSSINI’S YOUTH.
Table of Contents
ALTHOUGH Rossini’s artistic life did not number precisely the three score and ten years
allotted to man, we must go back a full seventy years from the date of his last work to the first incident in his musical career. When, in 1799, Paer’s Camilla,
written a few years before for Vienna, was brought out at Bologna, Rossini, then little more than an infant, took the part of the child. Nothing,
says Madame Giorgi-Righetti,[1] the original Rosina in the future composer’s Barber of Seville,
could be imagined more tender, more touching than the voice and action of this extraordinary child in the beautiful canon of the third act, ‘Senti in si fiero istante.’ The Bolognese of that time declared that he would some day be one of the greatest musicians known. I need not say whether the prophecy has been verified.
Gioachino Antonio Rossini, born on the 29th of February, 1792, two months after the death of Mozart, was only seven years of age when he sustained a part in the work of a composer whose fame he was destined before long to eclipse. The child came of musical parentage, for his father held the office of trumpeter to the town of Pesaro, in the Romagna; while his mother, who possessed a very beautiful voice, was able, when the father fell into trouble, to support the family by singing on the stage.
It has been said that Rossini was of obscure origin, but this only applies to his immediate progenitors. In the year 1861, too late to be of much service to him, the Album di Roma
published Rossini’s pedigree, from which it appears that the great composer is a descendant of Giovanni, head of the family of Russini (or Rossini),[2] who flourished
about the middle of the sixteenth century. Giovanni had two sons—Giovanno Francesco, direct ancestor of the composer, and Fabrizio, who was Governor of Ravenna, and died at Lugo in 1570. Next in the line comes Bastiano; then Antonio, born 9th of March, 1600; then Antonio, born the 16th February, 1637; then Antonio, born 7th September, 1667; then Giuseppe Antonio, born 1708; then Gioachino Sante, born 1739; and, finally, Giuseppe Antonio, the composer’s father, born in 1764.
The arms of the Rossini family have also been published. They consist of three stars in the upper part of the escutcheon, and a hand holding a rose, surmounted by a nightingale in the lower part. Giovanni Russini, who flourished
in the sixteenth century, must have adopted them in a prophetic spirit.
Giuseppe Rossini, the trumpeter, that is, herald and town crier to the sound of the trumpet, was a man of advanced political views, and seems to have entertained the same sympathy for the French which was afterwards manifested for that gallant and polite nation by his illustrious son. When the French army entered Pesaro in 1796, after the Italian campaign, the enthusiasm of old Rossini, in spite of his official position, was so marked that on the withdrawal of the Republican troops he was first deprived of his place, and afterwards thrown into prison.
Then it was (1798) that Signora Rossini, who had been in the habit of accompanying her husband to fairs and other musical gatherings, and singing small parts on the stage, while he played the horn in the orchestra, obtained a regular engagement; and it was probably under her auspices that the child Rossini made his first appearance in public.
This much, however, is certain, that Rossini, while still very young, joined his parents in their musical excursions, and took the second horn in the orchestras where the part of first horn was assigned to his father. No wonder that in after life he had an affection for wind instruments!
When young Rossini was twelve years old, he was taken to Bologna to see Professor Tesei of that city, who was much pleased with the little boy, gave him lessons in singing and pianoforte playing, and put him in the way of earning money by singing solos in the churches. At the end of two years he could execute the most difficult music at first sight, and was able to act as musical director to a travelling company, which gave performances at Lugo, Ferrari, Forli, Sinigaglia, and other little towns in the Romagna. In 1807 he returned to Bologna, and was admitted to the Lyceum, where he studied composition under Father Mattei with so much success, that in the following year he was chosen to write the cantata which was expected annually from the Lyceum’s best pupil.
Pianto d’Armonia per la Morte d’Orfeo
was the subject of this, Rossini’s first work, written when he was sixteen years of age, and executed at Bologna in August, 1808.
The success of the cantata was such that it procured for its composer the appointment of director of the Philharmonic concerts, in which capacity he superintended the production of Haydn’s Seasons.
He had previously got up a performance of the Creation
in the Lyceum itself; and it is interesting to know that at this period Rossini devoted himself ardently to the study of Haydn’s symphonies and quartets.
While on the subject of Rossini’s early studies it would be wrong to forget his eccentric pianoforte professor, Prinetti, who had two remarkable peculiarities: he never went to bed, and he taught his pupils to play the scales with two fingers, the first finger and the thumb. Pianoforte music for four hands
is common enough; but pianoforte music for two fingers was probably never heard of except in connexion with Prinetti and his scales.
In 1809 Rossini produced a symphony and a quartet, and in the year following made his début as a composer for the stage. The Marquis Cavalli, impresario of the theatre of Sinigaglia, where Rossini had officiated as musical conductor, was also director of the San Mosè[3] theatre at Venice, and invited the young composer to write an opera for the latter establishment. This, the first work addressed by Rossini to the general public, was a trifle in one act, called La Cambiale di Matrimonio.
It was produced in 1810, and Rossini received about eight pounds for it.
The opera or operetta of La Cambiale di Matrimonio
was followed by the cantata of Didone Abbandonata,
which Rossini composed for a relation, the afterwards celebrated Esther Mombelli, in 1811.
He produced the same year, also at Bologna, an opera buffa in two acts, called L’Equivoco Stravagante.
This work, of which not even fragments have been preserved, seems nevertheless to have been thoroughly successful. One of Rossini’s very earliest productions, it was probably written, less in what we now consider his own particular style, than in that of his immediate predecessors. The concerted pieces, however, were much remarked, as was also a final rondo for the prima donna, Madame Marcolini. The rondo is especially noticeable as the first of those final airs for which Rossini seemed to have a particular liking, until he produced the most brilliant specimen of the style in the Non piu Mesta
of Cenerentola
—and then abandoned it to the after-cultivation of other composers.
L’Inganno Felice,
written in 1812 for Venice, is the first of Rossini’s operas which, many years after its production, was thought worthy of revival. It was played at Paris in 1819, and some years later at Vienna, where the illustrious Barbaja, for whom Rossini wrote so many fine works, at Naples, between the years 1814 and 1823, brought it out.
After the success of L’Inganno Felice
at Venice, Rossini was invited to write an oratorio for the Teatro Communale of Ferrara. The result was Ciro in Babilonia,
produced at the beginning of Lent, 1812. Madame Marcolini, the prima donna of the Equivoco Stravagante,
played a principal part in this work, which, as a whole, was not very successful. Rossini saved from the remains of Ciro,
a chorus which he introduced into Aureliano in Palmira
(and from which he afterwards borrowed the beautiful theme of Almaviva’s air, Ecco ridente il Cielo,
in Il Barbiere
), and a concerted finale which re-appeared, in the year 1827, in the French version of Mosè in Egitto.
One would like, as a curiosity, to hear the air Rossini wrote in this opera of Ciro
for the seconda donna. The poor woman, as Rossini himself told Ferdinand Hiller, had only one good note in her voice, and he accordingly made her repeat that note and no other, while the melody of her solo was played by the orchestra.
In addition to the two works just mentioned, Rossini wrote La Pietra del Paragone,
for Milan, and two one act operettas, La Scala di Seta
and L’occasione fa il ladro,
for Venice, in this fertile year of 1812.
La Pietra del Paragone
contained leading parts for Galli, the afterwards celebrated basso, and Madame Marcolini, who, as in the Equivoco Stravagante,
was furnished with a brilliant and very successful final rondo.
The libretto of La Pietra
is based on an idea not absolutely new, and which, for that very reason perhaps, is generally successful on the stage. Count Asdrubal, a rich and inquisitive man, wishes to know whether his friends and a certain young lady, the heroine of the piece, are attracted to him by his wealth or really esteem and love him for his own sake. To decide the question he causes a bill for an immense sum drawn in favour of a Turk (the Turk was a great operatic character in those days) to be presented at his house. He himself, in Turkish costume, appears to receive the money, which the steward, having been instructed to recognise the signature as that of the Count’s father, duly pays.
Some of the friends bear the test, others prove