Luca Pisaroni sings Handel at Glyndebourne

“I really look forward to embodying Argante at Glyndebourne”, he says,
“because the music that Handel wrote for Argante is incredibly
challenging.” His first aria “Sibillar gl’angui d’Aletto” is not only
one of the best-known arias for bass-baritone but also one of the most
difficult arias in the entire baroque repertoire.

Argante is a powerful but complex character. Why is Pisaroni drawn to such
dark personalities? “When I first performed Tiridate in Handel’s
Radamisto at Santa Fe Opera I discovered how exciting it is to portray
a ‘bad guy’ on stage. Tiridate is an abusive and violent person and in
order to follow David Alden’s vision I really had to push myself. It was
really rewarding to explore such a dark personality and to get a great response
from the audience. In life you never get away with being the bad guy! On an
opera stage you do and everyone loves it.”

After Glyndebourne, Pisaroni will be singing Argante again at the Chicago
Lyric Opera. He’s singing Caliban in The Enchanted Island ,a baroque
pastiche specially created by William Christie and Jeremy Sams. “I have five
great arias in it”, says Pisaroni, “It will be fun to be the monster in
this fantasy”. In 2012 in Santa Fe, he’s singing Maometto in Rossini’s
Maometto Secondo. “It’ll be the world premiere of the new critical
edition by Philip Gossett. There aren’t many operas where the bass is the
title role, so I can’t wait to sing it”.

Mozart is one of the cornerstones of Pisaroni’s career. In 2010, he sang
Leporello in the acclaimed
new production
at Glyndebourne of Don Giovanni. “ Portraying
Leporello there was incredibly rewarding for me. I love to play Don
Giovanni’s servant and I believe the audience can identify with him because
he is an ordinary guy who witnesses something truly extraordinary”. He’s
also created Leporello at Teatro Real Madrid, OpÈra Bastille, and Tanglewood.
He’s singing it at Baden-Baden under Yannick NÈzet-SÈguin. That performance
will be recorded by Deutsche Grammophon.

“I adore Mozart”, says Pisaroni. “From a musical and dramatic point of
view, he is simply fantastic. For a singer Mozart’s music is the best way to
grow as a musician and as an actor without damaging your instrument. I
especially love the three Mozart/Da Ponte operas. I love the characters they
created and the different emotions they explore. The real challenge in these
pieces is to sing them as naturally as possible. I believe Da Ponte and Mozart
operas are all about humanity and truth”. Figaro is one of Pisaroni’s
signature roles, which performed at the Metropolitan Opera, OpÈra National de
Paris, in San Francisco, with Franz Welser-Mˆst at the Wiener Staatsoper, and
memorably at the Salzburg Festival.

“My ‘real’ initiation in Mozart was when I sang Masetto at the
Salzburg Festival in 2002. I thought I knew the role well and, being Italian, I
felt pretty confident about the way I sang the recitatives. And then, I worked
with Nikolaus Harnoncourt who made me realize very quickly how little I knew
about this composer and making music in general. His incredible sense of drama
and his musical choices stunned me. What he did was beyond anything I had heard
before or could even imagine. I vividly remember my surprise and excitement
when we worked on the finale of Act I. I had never heard anything like it.
Harnoncourt definitely changed my perception of the opera forever”.

Pisaroni was born in Ciudad Bolivar (Venezuela) on June 8th 1975. “I am
Italian. My parents are both Italian. I was born in Venezuela because my
parents lived there for almost 10 years. We moved back to Italy when I was 4
years old and I spent my childhood and adolescence in Busseto (Parma), Giuseppe
Verdi’s hometown”.

“The first experiences with opera I can recall are tied to memories I have
of my grandfather. He always listened to opera and the earliest musical memory
I have is listening to Boris Christoff singing ‘Ella giammai m’amÚ’ from
Verdi’s Don Carlo. It was love at first sight. I started listening
to a collection of tapes of Verdi arias that my grandfather owned. I played
them so many times that I ultimately wore them out. Later on my father bought
me my first Luciano Pavarotti record and took me to a live performance (Aida at
the Arena di Verona), which ignited my passion for opera”.

“Two tenors influenced my path, but in very different ways: Luciano
Pavarotti and Carlo Bergonzi. It is because of Pavarotti that I decided to
become an opera singer. When I was 11, I watched a commercial of the 1986 World
Soccer Championship featuring Luciano Pavarotti singing ‘Nessun Dorma’. I recall watching the commercial in complete ecstasy and telling my mother that I
could only imagine myself doing exactly the same thing.? At the beginning my
mother was unsure whether I referred to a career as a football player or a
singer. Later on it was evident to everybody that I had decided to become an
opera singer since I was not very good at football”.

“When I was 13 or 14 years old I preferred spending my afternoons
listening to master classes given by Carlo Bergonzi for the ‘Accademia
Verdiana’ in my hometown Busseto. Even though I wasn’t singing but only
listening to other singers I learned a lot about phrasing, clear diction and
how to use words to convey musical ideas. Watching other singers work with him
made me realize that the only thing I wanted to do in my life was to be a
singer”.

Living in Busseto, with so much Verdi around him, Pisaroni could easily have
slipped into a niche. “I love Verdi!, he says. “I could probably sing most
of his tenor roles by heart. I love his music and the dramatic journey of the
characters he created. I just believe you should sing his operas only when you
feel ready — especially for my voice type. Verdi bass-baritone roles like
Attila, Filippo II, Procida and Fiesco require, in my opinion, not only a
technical maturity but also a ‘personal’ maturity that only age can give
you”. Since Pisaroni is still well under 40, there’s much to look forward
to.

Pisaroni’s range is wide, nonetheless, ranging from Bach to Handel and
Haydn, Mozart and Rossini and includes Schumann and Stravinsky. He’s also a
good recitalist, singing at the Wigmore
Hall, London
and in Amsterdam earlier this year. “I love all classical
music – opera, baroque, symphonic, sacred or Lieder. I believe that knowing the
tradition and past interpretations helps you to go forward and to push yourself
to the limit. It’s not about copying or stealing someone else’s ideas: for
me it’s about ultimately finding your inner voice”. He adds “I think
every song is like a painting that you need to bring to life through your voice
— like Mussorgsky’s ‘Pictures at an exhibition’. Hence the care with
which he assembles programmes, “to create a wide spectrum of emotions”.

Perhaps it is Pisaroni’s very genuine enthusiasm for music that drives his
performances. “I am always excited by roles and repertoire that I can explore
dramatically. First and foremost these roles need to be suited for my voice.
Then I need to be sure that I can give my very personal interpretation. There
is nothing more interesting to me than being able to show the journey that a
character makes throughout the opera to the audience”.

For more information, please see the Glyndebourne
Festival site
, and Mr. Pisaroni’s website at www.lucapisaroni.com.

Anne Ozorio


image=http://www.operatoday.com/LucaPisaroni_Borggreve.gif
image_description=Luca Pisaroni [Photo by Marco Borggreve]
product=yes
product_title=Luca Pisaroni sings Handel at Glyndebourne
product_by=By Anne Ozorio
product_id=Above: Luca Pisaroni [Photo by Marco Borggreve]