A rousing I due Foscari at the Concertgebouw

Verdi thought his 1844 opera about a fifteenth-century Venetian Doge torn
between political expediency and filial love suffered from persistent gloom.
Indeed, apart from a couple of reveler and gondolier choruses, doom and
darkness dominate. However, the main shortcoming of the libretto by Francesco
Maria Piave, who would collaborate with Verdi on those consummate dramas,
Rigoletto and La traviata, is that it introduces the
characters in the midst of their predicament and leaves them there until the
tragic ending. At the start of the opera Jacopo Foscari is in prison, awaiting
trial for the murder of Ermolao Donato, head of the Council of Ten. Donato had
had him exiled for conspiring with enemy states. Francesco Foscari, the Doge,
believes his son is innocent, but feels constrained to bend to the
patricians’ will. Jacopo’s wife, Lucrezia Contarini, fervently and
fruitlessly urges him to pardon his son. Jacopo is found guilty, but his
execution is mitigated to renewed exile. The Doge’s hope is restored when
Donato’s actual murderer confesses the crime on his deathbed, but he then
hears that Jacopo has committed suicide on the way to Crete. Having lost the
last of his children, the Doge also loses his power when the Council declares
him too broken to continue ruling. His heart succumbs and he dies.

The music has a simple but effective transparency and offers several
glimpses into Verdi’s future compositions. The Doge’s heartbreaking
aria after his son’s sentencing is a precursor of Rigoletto’s
anguish for his abducted daughter. A downcast clarinet solo representing
Jacopo, here played with silken plangency by Arjan Woudenberg, ends in a trill
that reappears in La traviata. Even removed from the context of the
composer’s maturation, however, I due Foscari has plenty of
merits. Verdi’s gift for translating psychological states into
captivating melodies is very much in evidence. The vocal writing is firmly
anchored in the first half of the nineteenth century, and conductor Giancarlo
Andretta was ever mindful of its technical demands on the singers. He gave them
expressive space while maintaining rhythmic tautness. His unfussy,
eye-on-the-ball conducting served the music exceedingly well. The Netherlands
Radio Philharmonic’s supple playing brought out the score’s ominous
melancholy and its evocation of the Venetian waterscape, not least in Ellen
Versney’s ravishing harp. Sobbing orchestral rubati intensified the
pathos of the final scenes. Equally impressive, the Netherlands Radio Choir
clearly differentiated their collective characters as they alternated between
dour statesmanly mutterings and carefree barcarolles echoing on the lagoon.

The soloists all brought valuable qualities to this roaringly applauded
performance. Verdi mostly uses the supporting cast in the concertato ensembles,
yet they all made fine appearances, however brief. Soprano Aylin Sezer
displayed a glowing timbre as Lucrezia’s confidante Pisana. Tenor Andrew
Owens and bass Giovanni Battista Parodi as, respectively, senator Barbarigo and
the Doge’s political rival Loredano, injected all the drama they could
muster in their scenes, which are mostly of the “enter a messenger”
type. In the Doge’s robes Sebastian Catana was richly sonorous and
lyrically introspective. His is not a conventionally beautiful baritone, but it
has a firm core and can envelope a concert hall. His Francesco was passive and
homogenous of hue in the first two acts. One could argue that this suited a
character hobbled by political impotence. Appropriately, Catana saved his most
heart-rending singing-acting for Act III, when the Doge crumbles.

As his son Jacopo, Roberto De Biasio had no truck with such inward subtlety.
And why should he? He was, after all, the tenor-hero in extremis. De Biasio had
reliable high notes and was on sure ground when singing forte. At lower pitch
and volume his voice was less responsive and lost power, sometimes disappearing
altogether. His instinct for style and theatre, however, compensated for the
limited flexibility. He went for broke emotionally and won the audience over,
shaking the thunder sheet when Jacopo is beset by horrific hallucinations and
singing a stirring farewell to his wife. Tamara Wilson had temperament and
voice in spades for the impassioned Lucrezia. Apart from less than ideally
defined trills and sustained high notes occasionally tapering into shrillness,
Wilson’s performance was dazzlingly secure. As malleable as her soprano
sounded in the cavatinas, she had even more control in the raging cabalettas,
skimming gracefully op and down scales and firing full-voiced high B flats and
pointed high Cs. Lucrezia is a two-mood character — she is either angry
or miserable. Working within these limits, Wilson managed to add poignant
shading to the grand gestures. Her interrogative diminuendo on the words
“mio prence” (my prince) when greeting her freshly deposed
father-in-law, for example, contained a world of compassion. It was a bravura
performance with plenty of heart.

Jenny Camilleri


Cast and other performers:

Francesco Foscari: Sebastian Catana; Jacopo Foscari: Roberto De Biasio;
Lucrezia Contarini: Tamara Wilson; Jacopo Loredano: Giovanni Battista Parodi;
Barbarigo: Andrew Owens; Pisana: Aylin Sezer; Attendant on the Council of Ten:
Mark Omvlee; Servant of the Doge: Lars Terray. Netherlands Radio Choir,
Netherlands Radio Philharmonic. Conductor: Giancarlo Andretta. Concertgebouw,
Amsterdam, Saturday, 17th September 2016.


image=http://www.operatoday.com/FrancescoFoscariBastiani.png
image_description=Francesco Foscari, by Lazzaro Bastiani [Source: Wikipedia]
product=yes
product_title=A rousing I due Foscari at the Concertgebouw
product_by=A review by Jenny Camilleri
product_id=Above: Francesco Foscari, by Lazzaro Bastiani [Source: Wikipedia]