Arrigo Boito, Giving the Devil His Due

Arrigo Boito, Giving the Devil His Due

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Richard Strauss’ final opera, “Capriccio,” is an extended, if lighthearted debate on the relative merits of words and music. But for Arrigo Boito, the two never really came into conflict.

As one of the great librettists, Boito provided the texts for Verdi’s late masterpieces, “Otello” and “Falstaff.” He also worked up a revision of “Simon Boccanegra” and – under the anagram Tobia Gorrio – provided the libretto for Ponchielli’s “La Gioconda.” That should be enough to guarantee his place in music history, right?

But Boito himself was also a composer of merit, if not a prolific one. Although he destroyed his first opera, “Ero e Leandro,” and his last, “Nerone,” was left incomplete at the time of his death (to be finished by Arturo Toscanini and Vincenzo Tommasini), he totally nailed it with “Mefistofele.”

There may be those who look down their noses at Boito’s take on Goethe’s “Faust,” yet the work stubbornly clings to the outskirts of the standard repertoire. Audiences love it. For me it is much more entertaining than anything in Verdi (I know, them’s fightin’ words), and I personally find the melodic invention much richer than that in the more popular version by master melodist Charles Gounod.

Sure, as narrative it’s a little clunky – it’s as if Boito presents the story as a series of tableaux that are just kind of stitched together – and the most hair-raising set piece, the prologue in Heaven, comes right at the beginning. How could it not be all downhill from there? But the composer has the good sense to bring it all back at the end.

What the opera really demands is a strong personality at its core, someone who, through his magnetic stage presence and sheer force of will, can tow the circus parade of wonders, wagon after wagon, before our astonished eyes and ears.

Feodor Chaliapin, by all accounts, was just such a force. He gained wide notoriety in the title role, for his earthy interpretation and his insistence on playing it half-naked.

In the recent past, Samuel Ramey owned the piece. He too preferred to show a fair amount of skin (though less than Chaliapin) – but really, couldn’t that be said for just about any of Ramey’s roles?

Here’s the stunning – and cheeky – Robert Carson production first presented by San Francisco Opera in 1989, which I belatedly caught up with in New York, unfortunately after Ramey retired. The first 26 minutes will knock your socks off.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSSbn9y-js0

Chaliapin in 1927

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVfjMHOeOVA

Happy birthday, Arrigo Boito (1842-1918). Whether in words or in music, you gave the devil his due!


Comments

6 responses to “Arrigo Boito, Giving the Devil His Due”

  1. Classic Ross Amico

    I’m at work on a newspaper article, so I hope you’ll enjoy this rerun from 2023!

  2. Anonymous

    I got to see Ramey in this twice. He was incredible.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Michael Kownacky Rub it in! I forget, did you catch him at City Opera? I had a bootleg of part of one of those performances on cassette, and it put his commercial recordings in the shade. The video I link is great, though.

      1. Anonymous

        Yes. We had subscriptions to City Opera back then and saw him in this, ATTILA, and DON QUIXOTE. The ATTILA was particularly fun because Linda Roark-Strummer was making her debut as Odabella, and Ramey had been on stage for awhile being, well, Ramey, and when Roark-Strummer made her entrance and nailed her incredibly difficult first aria, Ramey accepted the challenge, and the rest of the performance was sheer fireworks. Such a glorious evening.

      2. Classic Ross Amico

        Michael Kownacky I would have loved to have been there for that, too! I have a DVD of, I think, Ramey singing it at La Scala, and he’s great. He’s the whole show, really, as it’s not really the most interesting opera. But he himself is riveting!

  3. Anonymous

    Tableaus may seem out of fashion, but not where they are annual events. It’s a legitimate kind of form. Maybe better than an awkward through-line story. As for Ramey, I found his voice rather high to be called a bass. I’m a bass-baritone and he sings out of my range.

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