Il Ritorno D'Ulisse In Patria (Leppard)
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''Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria'' ("The return of Ulysses to his homeland") is a 166-minute studio album of
Claudio Monteverdi Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi (baptized 15 May 1567 – 29 November 1643) was an Italian composer, choirmaster and string player. A composer of both secular and sacred music, and a pioneer in the development of opera, he is considered ...
's opera, performed by a cast of singers headed by
Ann Murray Ann Murray, (born 27 August 1949) is an Irish mezzo-soprano. Life and career Murray was born in Dublin. Having won a number of prizes at the Feis Ceoil, she studied singing at the College of Music (now the DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama, ...
, Patrick Power, Frederica von Stade and Richard Stilwell with the
Glyndebourne Chorus Glyndebourne Festival Opera is an annual opera festival held at Glyndebourne, an English country house near Lewes, in East Sussex, England. History Under the supervision of the Christie family, the festival has been held annually since 1934, ...
and the
London Philharmonic Orchestra The London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) is one of five permanent symphony orchestras based in London. It was founded by the conductors Sir Thomas Beecham and Malcolm Sargent in 1932 as a rival to the existing London Symphony and BBC Symphony ...
under the direction of Raymond Leppard. It was released in 1980.Monteverdi, Claudio: ''Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria'', conducted by Raymond Leppard, Sony CD, 88985345922, 2016


Background and recording

During 1–26 June 1979, the album's soloists, chorus, orchestra and conductor gave ten performances of the opera at Glyndebourne. (Glyndebourne's staging was produced by Peter Hall and revived by Patrick Libby, with sets and costumes designed by John Bury and lighting designed by Robert Bryan.) The album was recorded using analogue technology on 4–22 June 1979 in the
Henry Wood Hall, London The Henry Wood Hall is a redundant church and orchestral rehearsal and recording studio in Trinity Church Square, Southwark, London, named after the conductor Sir Henry Wood. Formerly the Holy Trinity Church, it was designed in 1823–24 by Fr ...
. The performing score used in the making of the album was Leppard's own edition of 1972, in which some of Monteverdi's music is discarded, music of Leppard's own composition interpolated and Monteverdi's orchestration greatly enriched.


Cover art

The cover of the album shows von Stade and Stilwell on stage at Glyndebourne during the opera's concluding scene, in which Penelope acknowledges that the apparent stranger who has come to Ithaca claiming to be Ulysses is indeed her husband.


Critical reception


Reviews

The musicologist Denis Arnold reviewed the album on LP in ''
Gramophone A phonograph, in its later forms also called a gramophone (as a trademark since 1887, as a generic name in the UK since 1910) or since the 1940s called a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogu ...
'' in December 1980, comparing it with earlier versions of the opera conducted by Rudolf Ewerhart and
Nikolaus Harnoncourt Johann Nikolaus Harnoncourt or historically Johann Nikolaus Graf de la Fontaine und d'Harnoncourt-Unverzagt; () (6 December 1929 – 5 March 2016) was an Austrian conductor, particularly known for his historically informed performances of music ...
. Ann Murray and Patricia Parker were deft in their minor roles, he thought, but their starrier colleagues were less satisfactory. Frederica von Stade, he conceded, "does sing uncommonly well, with some delicious veiled tone to convey Penelope's anguish". But some of her music had had to be transposed into the wrong key, and she was too young to play Penelope plausibly. "Penelope need not be portrayed as an old woman, but at least her face has been lined by the troubles of her life; Miss von Stade is far too attractive for us not to suspect that the suitors are after her body as well as the throne". Ewerhart's
Maureen Lehane Maureen Theresa Lehane Wishart (18 September 1932 – 27 December 2010) was an English mezzo-soprano singer, university lecturer and founder of the Great Elm Music Festival, Jackdaws Music Education Trust and an annual Vocal Award for young ...
was much more ''au fait'' with Monteverdi's phrasing and accentuation than von Stade, and more successful too at expressing Penelope's "pathos and dignity". Penelope's husband was also better sung on Ewerhart's LPs than on Leppard's. Ewerhart's
Gerald English Gerald English (6 November 1925 – 6 February 2019) was an English tenor. He performed operatic and concert repertoire, was a recording artist, and was a sometime academic. He gave many premiere performances of works by composers such as Igo ...
had a much better grasp of Monteverdi's idiom than Leppard's Richard Stilwell, and presented a Ulisse who was convincing in sounding as though his return to his homeland had refreshed his weary soul. Orchestrally, Leppard's London Philharmonic sounded heavy-handed after one had heard Ewerhart's smaller Santini Chamber band. The score that Leppard used on his album was the edition that he had assembled himself, and it had both good points and bad. He had addressed the lacunae in the opera's Vienna urtext with great skill, composing a missing ballet, for instance, that could easily be mistaken for one of Monteverdi's ''Scherzi Musicali''. But he had written an aria for Penelope that sounded incongruous, and he had been unwise to recompose the scene in which Penelope's suitors take turns to try to bend Ulisse's bow. His use of a large orchestra was justifiable in principle - the earliest extant score of the opera had been found in Vienna, and Viennese court productions if the early 1600s were believed to have deployed a wide assortment of instruments. However, the way in which he used his resources was ill-judged. Much music for which Monteverdi had wanted only a simple bass continuo had been augmented with strings and brass. The result was that "the expressive movement between recitative, arioso and aria is obscured ... and the music becomes monotonous". Moreover, the richness of Leppard's orchestration diverted listeners' attention away from his singers and their words. Leppard's album was exciting, and would be welcomed by devotees of Glyndebourne, but Ewerhart's was definitely preferable.Arnold, Dennis: ''
Gramophone A phonograph, in its later forms also called a gramophone (as a trademark since 1887, as a generic name in the UK since 1910) or since the 1940s called a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogu ...
'', December 1980, p. 878
J. B. Steane John Barry Steane (12 April 1928 – 17 March 2011) was an English music critic, musicologist, literary scholar and teacher, with a particular interest in singing and the human voice. His 36-year career as a schoolmaster overlapped with his caree ...
reviewed the album on LP in ''Gramophone'' in January 1981. After failing to get to Glyndebourne's staging of the opera in 1979, he wrote, he had consoled himself with imagining that the festival's grapes had been sour. The production could not have been as good as had been claimed. But now that Raymond Leppard's album had appeared, "gloriously vivid in humanity and splendour", there was no doubting that the grapes had been sweet indeed. Richard Stilwell and Frederica von Stade performed Monteverdi's eloquent music with "noble restraint and sincerity". "Von Stade", he wrote, "has probably never had a role that draws so fully upon her special character as an artist". At the emotional zenith of her performance, the moment when Penelope at last permitted herself to have faith that her long years of separation from her husband were about to end, "the beauty of voice and character are exactly matched - as with some other great operatic performances of the past, the identity is complete". A debt of gratitude was owed to Leppard for his realization's "great scrolls and flourishes of harp and harpsichords nd itsmajesty of organs and solemn brass". Leppard's dramatic interpretation was complemented by a sound quality that was equally, unapologetically bold. Stoddard Lincoln reviewed the album on LP in '' Stereo Review'' in April 1981. Frederica von Stade, he thought, was excellent as Penelope. Longing for her husband to come back to her; blending flirtatiousness with "sinister charm" in her management of her loathsome suitors; glowing with hope that her ordeal might eventually end; stricken with fear that the man who seemed to be Ulysses might not be; rhapsodic in her recognition that her prayers had finally been answered: in every chapter of Penelope's narrative arc, she was totally convincing. Richard Stilwell was just as impressive as a Ulysses of unwavering determination, and the secondary roles were all well taken too, with Richard Lewis a notably idiomatic old shepherd and Alexander Oliver both pathetic and absurd as a gourmandizing halfwit. Raymond Leppard's reworking of Monteverdi's score was so radical as to amount to a metamorphosis. Monteverdi's sparsely accompanied declamation was enveloped in a constricting quasi-symphonic structure that was at times reminiscent of Richard Strauss. But even though Leppard's treatment of his source material was undeniably anachronistic, it was also "extremely effective", indeed "stunning" - what Monteverdi has left as a skeleton of a piece had been changed into an opera "full of drama and lyricism". We were "fortunate to have such a superb performance committed to records".Lincoln, Stoddard: '' Stereo Review'', April 1981, p. 104 David Shengold mentioned the album in ''
Opera News ''Opera News'' is an American classical music magazine. It has been published since 1936 by the Metropolitan Opera Guild, a non-profit organization located at Lincoln Center which was founded to engender the appreciation of opera and also support ...
'' in December 2016 while reviewing an anthology of von Stade's recordings which included several excerpts from it. "The magnificent ''Ritorno d'Ulisse'', he wrote, "... is subjected to Raymond Leppard's syrupy, swooning 'realization', which now sounds risible, but - however lavishly transposed and ornamented - it's inspiring to hear von Stade's bereft Penelope".


Accolades

The album was nominated for a
Grammy The Grammy Awards (stylized as GRAMMY), or simply known as the Grammys, are awards presented by the Recording Academy of the United States to recognize "outstanding" achievements in the music industry. They are regarded by many as the most pre ...
award for the best operatic recording of 1981. It was also included in ''Stereo Reviews 1981 list of the best records of the year.''Stereo Review'', February 1982, p. 62


Track listing, CD 1

Claudio Monteverdi Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi (baptized 15 May 1567 – 29 November 1643) was an Italian composer, choirmaster and string player. A composer of both secular and sacred music, and a pioneer in the development of opera, he is considered ...
(1567-1643) ''
Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria ''Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria'' (Stattkus-Verzeichnis, SV 325, ''The Return of Ulysses to his Homeland'') is an List of operas by Claudio Monteverdi, opera consisting of a prologue and five acts (later revised to three), set by Claudio Montever ...
'', SV 325 (Venice, 1639-1640 carnival season), with a libretto by
Giacomo Badoaro Giacomo Badoaro (1602–1654) was a Venetian nobleman and amateur poet. He is most famous for writing the libretto for Claudio Monteverdi's opera ''Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria'' (1640). He also provided librettos for the operas ''Ulisse errante ...
(1602-1654) after The Odyssey by Homer; abridged and realized by Raymond Leppard * 1 (8:43) Prologo (L'Umana Fragilità, Il Tempo, La Fortuna, Amore) Act One Scene 1 * 2 (11:53) "Di misera regina non terminate mai dolente affanni!" (Penelope, Ericlea) Scene 2 * 3 (7:18) "Duri e penosi son gli amorosi fieri desir" (Melanto, Eurimaco) * 4 (2:03) Sinfonia Scene 5 * 5 (7:35) "Superbo è l'uom" (Nettuno, Giove) Scene 6 * 6 (2:30) "In questo basso mondo" (Coro di Feaci, Nettuno) Scene 7 * 7 (4:44) "Dormo ancora o son desto?" (Ulisse) Scene 8 * 8 (11:46) "Cara e lieta gioventù che disprezza empio desir" (Minerva, Ulisse) Scene 9 * 9 (2:40) "Tu d'Aretusa a fonte in tanto vanne" (Minerva, Ulisse)


Track listing, CD 2

Act One, continued Scene 10 * 1 (6:24) "Donate un giorno, o Dei, content a' desir miei" (Penelope, Melanto) Scene 11 * 2 (1:49) "Come, oh come mal si salva un Regio amante" (Eumete) Scene 12 * 3 (1:23) "Pastor d'armenti può prati e boschi lodar" (Eumete, Ulisse) Scene 13 * 4 (3:12) "Ulisse generoso! Fu nobile intrapresa" (Eumete, Ulisse) Act Two Scene 1 * 5 (2:34) "Lieto cammino, dolce viaggio" (Telemaco, Minerva) Scene 2 * 6 (4:57) "Oh gran figlio d'Ulisse! È pur ver che tu torni" (Eumete, Ulisse, Telemaco) Scene 3 * 7 (5:45) "Che veggio, ohimè, che miro?" (Telemaco, Ulisse) * 8 (0:42) Sinfonia Scene 5 * 9 (9:17) "Sono l'altre regine coronate di servi e tu d'amanti" (Antinoo, Pisandro, Anfinomo, Penelope) Scene 7 *10 (1:38) "Apportater d'altre novella vengo!" (Eumete, Penelope) Scene 8 *11 (6:52) "Compagni, udiste? Il nostro vicin rischio mortale" (Antinoo, Anfinomo, Pisandro, Eurimaco) Scene 9 *12 (3:32) "Perir non può chi tien per scorta il Cielo" (Ulisse, Minerva) Scene 10 *13 (2:04) "Io vidi, o pellegrin, de' proci amanti l'ardir infermarsi" (Eumete, Ulisse) Scene 11 *14 (3:33) "Del mio lungo viaggio i torti errori già vi narrari" (Telemaco, Penelope) *15 (3:05) "Voglia il ciel" (Penelope)


Track listing, CD 3

Act Two, continued Scene 12 * 1 (4:28) "Sempre villano Eumete" (Antinoo, Eumete, Iro, Ulisse, Telemaco, Penelope) * 2 (14:09) "Generosa regina!" (Anfinomo, Penelope, Pisandro, Telemaco, Antinoo, Ulisse) Act Three Scene 1 * 3 (5:14) "O dolor, o martir che l'alma attrista!" (Iro) Scene 3 * 4 (1:13) "È quai nuovi rumori, è che insolite stragi" (Melanto, Penelope) Scene 4 * 5 (1:31) "Forza d'occulto affetto raddolcisce il tuo petto" (Eumete, Penelope) Scene 5 * 6 (1:15) "E saggio Eumete, e saggio!" (Telemaco, Penelope, Eumete) Scene 6 * 7 (1:59) "Fiamma e l'ira, o gran Dea, foco è lo sdegno" (Minerva, Giunone) Scene 7 * 8 (6:00) "Gran Giove, alma de' Dei, Dio delle menti" (Giunone, Giove, Nettuno, coro in Cielo, coro marittimo, Minerva) Scene 8 * 9 (4:00) "Ericlea, che vuoi far, vuoi tacer o parlar?" (Ericlea) Scene 9 *10 (0:22) "Troppo incredula!" (Eumete, Telemaco) Scene 10 *11 (10:26) "O delle mie fatiche meta dolce e soave" (Ulisse, Penelope, Ericlea)


Personnel


Musical

*
Diana Montague Diana Montague (born 8 April 1953) is an English mezzo-soprano, known for her performances in opera and as a concert singer.Sleeman, Elizabeth (ed.)"Montague, Diana" ''The International Who's Who 2004'', Routledge, 2003, p. 1161. Biography En ...
(mezzo-soprano) as L'Umana Fragilità (Human frailty) * Ugo Trama (bass) as Il Tempo (Time) and Antinoo (Antinous), suitor to Penelope * Lynda Russell (soprano) as La Fortuna (Fortune) * Kate Flowers (soprano) as Amore (Cupid) * Keith Lewis (tenor) as Giove (Jupiter) * Roger Bryson (bass) as Nettuno (Neptune) *
Ann Murray Ann Murray, (born 27 August 1949) is an Irish mezzo-soprano. Life and career Murray was born in Dublin. Having won a number of prizes at the Feis Ceoil, she studied singing at the College of Music (now the DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama, ...
(mezzo-soprano) as Minerva * Claire Powell (mezzo-soprano) as Giunone (Juno) * Richard Stilwell (baritone) as Ulisse (Ulysses), King of Ithaca * Frederica von Stade (mezzo-soprano) as Penelope, Ulysses's wife * Alexander Oliver (tenor) as Iro (Irus), a foolish glutton * Patrick Power (tenor) as Telemaco (Telemachus), Ulysses's son *
John Fryatt John James Fryatt (7 July 1927 – 7 January 2011) was an English actor and opera singer best known for his performance in comic character roles. Fryatt began his career with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in 1952 in Gilbert and Sullivan roles ...
(1927-2011, tenor) as Pisandro (Pisandrus), suitor to Penelope * Bernard Dickerson (tenor) as Anfinomo (Anfinomus), suitor to Penelope *
Richard Lewis Richard, Rich, Richie, Rick, Ricky or Dick Lewis may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Richard Field Lewis Jr. (1907–1957), American radio network owner * Dick "Rocko" Lewis (Richard Henry Lewis III, 1908–1966), American entertainer * Rich ...
(1914-1990, tenor) as Eumete (Eumaeus), a shepherd * Nucci Condò (mezzo-soprano) as Ericlea (Euryclea), Ulysses's nurse * Max Rene Cossotti (tenor) as Eurimaco (Eurymachus), Melantho's lover * Patricia Parker (mezzo-soprano) as Melanto (Melantho), Penelope's maid * Glyndebourne Chorus as Chorus of Phaeacians, Naiads, Chorus in Heaven, Chorus of the waters *
London Philharmonic Orchestra The London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) is one of five permanent symphony orchestras based in London. It was founded by the conductors Sir Thomas Beecham and Malcolm Sargent in 1932 as a rival to the existing London Symphony and BBC Symphony ...
* Raymond Leppard (1927-2019), abridger, realizer and conductor


Other

* David Mottley, producer''Frederica von Stade: The Complete Columbia Recital Albums'', Sony CD, 88875183412, 2016


Release history

In November 1980, CBS Masterworks released the album as a triple LP (catalogue number M3 35910), with a libretto containing texts, translations, notes and photographs from the stage production of the opera that was mounted at Glyndebourne in 1979 in conjunction with the making of the recording.Monteverdi, Claudio: ''Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria'', conducted by Raymond Leppard, CBS Masterworks LP, M3 35910, 1980 The album was never issued on cassette. In 2016, Sony issued the album as a triple CD (catalogue number 88985345922), with a 16-page booklet offering a synopsis of the drama.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ritorno d'Ulisse in patria, Il 1980s classical albums 1980 albums Baroque music albums Opera recordings Operas based on the Odyssey Music based on works by Homer