13. Lucia di Lammermoor by Gaetano Donizetti
  Synopsis | Background Notes | Salvadore Cammarano and the Italian Romantic Libretto
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Salvadore Cammarano and the Italian Romantic Libretto

Salvadore Cammarano was a key figure of the maturing Romantic period, continuing the bridge built by his predecessors from 18 th -century opera seria to the full blown romantic melodrama of the primo ottocento (1800 ? 1850). His career ran parallel to that of Gaetano Donizetti, Saverio Mercadante and Giovanni Pacini, and ended at the height of Giuseppe Verdi's middle period. Having worked with all of these composers, he was a part of the fundamental changes being made in musical structure and dramatic conception in these works of the bel canto period.

Though the sterner side of bel canto grew out of opera seria of the previous century, the contrast between the two is pronounced. Opera seria typically involved a historical or mythical subject with its noble characters singing a rapid succession of arias, with virtually no ensembles, and nearly always with a happy ending. Castrati were featured in many of the principal roles, and most of the virtuosic music was allotted to them. As the century drew to a close, castrati were a dying breed, and economies of scale forced state-run opera companies to fuse their comic and serious troupes into one. Consequently, elements of comic opera found their way into serious works, with an emphasis on greater truth and a focus on more genuine characters through the incorporation of ensembles in introductions and finales. The restrained, carefully controlled and methodical shape of 18 th -century libretti gave way to increased theatricality, which manifested itself into greater violence both on- and offstage (death in full view of the audience was taboo during most of the 18 th century). Librettists were drawn to literature that spotlighted these conflicts, both of past eras, namely works of Shakespeare and Voltaire, as well as new trends in contemporary literature.

This focus on theatricality also required the evolution of the aria. In the 18 th century, the ?exit aria? typically was constructed in da capo form: melodic material is offered, contrasting material is then sung, followed by a reprise (and variation) of the first music. By the early 19 th century the aria had been doubled and expanded into a cavatina, preceded by a scena, declamatory recitative or arioso setting up a particular situation, followed by a slower cantabile section given to contemplation. This is interrupted by a bridge passage, consisting dramatically of external news from another character or chorus, followed by a fast moving cabaletta, showing off great virtuosity and affirming the singer's resolve. As heightened emotions became the focal point of these new trends, singers required greater and more varied expository situations in which to showcase their entire emotional palette.

Cammarano rose to the task, having theater in his blood. His grandfather Vincenzo was a successful actor of the commedia dell'arte variety ? his Pulcinella typically brought the house down. Vincenzo's son Filippo followed in his father's footsteps, also portraying Pulcinella and becoming known for his translations of Carlo Goldoni's plays and his own opera libretti. Another son and Salvadore's father, Giuseppe, was a painter, talented enough to be engaged as a scenic designer, and by royal command, charged with decorating the interior of the new Teatro San Carlo, including the tempera on the ceiling that still exists today.

Salvadore honored his artistic family's traditions, first as a painter, then as a writer. His plays won recognition in the 1820s, and by 1832 he had fallen into a fortuitous situation. His father used his influence at the San Carlo, Naples ' premiere theater, to get Salvadore hired as a concertatore, the approximate combination of the modern director and stage manager. This was a quick jump to the position of poeta concertatore, as librettists typically were required to stage the operas for which they wrote the text. At that time the theater's poet was also responsible for touching up existing libretti as well as supplying new ones and obtaining clearance from the censors, always a delicate issue in those days.

Cammarano was fortunate on two fronts. At that time Naples did not enjoy the talents of a singular quality librettist in the same manner as Milan had with Felice Romani (Bellini's chief artistic partner) and Venice with Gaetano Rossi (of Semiramide fame, among others), thus competition was minimal. His second stroke of good luck was a collaboration with Gaetano Donizetti and their first work together, Lucia di Lammermoor . They were ideally suited to one another and went on the produce further works, most notably Roberto Devereux and Maria de Rudenz . It was with Donizetti that Cammarano found his true voice, and Lucia served as a perfect vehicle for his highly demonstrative inclinations. By this point art and literature were firmly entrenched in the Romantic movement.

Romanticism is a hard concept to pin down by its very nature. Looking away from the rationality of 18 th -century Enlightenment, the Romantic age looked inward to the irrational mind through the lens of imagination and with it, laid wake to the minefield of heightened emotion, melancholy, futility and madness. It also celebrated spontaneity, cultivation of artistic creativity, political independence and manifestations of a new consciousness with the tenuous hope of creating a new world. Romanticism is obsessed with moonlight, shadows and the supernatural, with dreams and sleepwalking, and with storms and peril. Man and Woman may be depicted at the mercy of overwhelming natural forces, heroism appearing pointless, love seemingly impossible and an ideal union unrealizable this side of the grave. In this dark pale, protagonists are frustrated by their inability to act, often living on the edge of the law and society but on the right side of justice.

Sir Walter Scott landed feet first amidst these new trends, influenced by his translations of Sturm und Drang (?Storm and Stress?) predecessors Goethe and Schiller. By the 1820s his own works were in translation around Europe and his heroic, yet realistic characters made an easy transition onto the stage ? many of his novels were turned into operas over and over again. Though his plotting may be suspect, he had a knack for minutely descriptive atmospheric settings drawn deep from Scotland's violent past, clouded by mysterious and metaphysical occurrences.

Cammarano was intrigued by Scott's elaborate settings (the librettist's works were likewise detailed with intricate stage directions, a tendency that resulted from his early career as a painter), but his main attraction was the variety of strong situations the novelist presented and his penchant for the macabre. In fact Scott's flair for gothic horror only spurred the librettist's mind further. In the novel characters dissipate rather nonchalantly ? Lucy mutters only a few words in her delirium, Edgar simply vanishes into thin air, and Bucklaw, only wounded, won't utter a single word about his frightful wedding night. Cammarano chose to heighten the dramatic effect by killing off Lucia's bridegroom, and crafted a textually rich mad scene for Lucia, whose fragility gains an almost Ophelia-like spirituality. He masterfully writes a gripping suicide aria for Edgardo, turning all attention on him (rather than the heroine and title character) for the opera's closing scene. New iconography made its way into the production values ? the ruined gothic castle (Wolf's Crag), the graveyard (Edgardo's final scene), moonlight (at the well for Lucia's ghostly visitation), the obligatory storm (for Enrico and Edgardo's meeting at the top of Act III) and the presence of wild, uncontrollable natural forces (Lucia's encounter with the bull).

The complexities of Romantic melodrama often required a fair amount of information before the curtain even rose ? most of Cammarano's contemporaries wrote substantial prefaces to their works whose plots began to push the limits of credibility. Cammarano was skillful enough to weave into his works everything the audience would need to know ? his opening number for Lucia neatly relays the basic facts: the near ruin of her family, the imposed marriage, Lucia's secret lover and how he saved her. Another fine example is Cammarano's libretto for Verdi's Il trovatore (1853), in which the rather convoluted events that precede the story are relayed in a concisely delivered tale told by a subsidiary character. Still, aspects of his story ? the separation at birth of now-rival brothers and the throwing of the wrong baby into the execution bonfire ?pushed the boundaries a bit. It may have been fortunate that Cammarano died just before finishing the libretto, for seeds of change were in the air. Verdi would demand greater dramatic truth in his later works, and Realism, with its pursuit of genre scenes and common people, had taken hold in the arts and would soon be explored operatically by Italian verismo and French composers of the latter part of the 19 th century.

Courtesy of Minnesota Opera

 

1. Madama Butterfly
2. La bohème
3. La traviata
4. Carmen
5. The Barber of Seville
6. The Marriage of Figaro
7. Don Giovanni
8. Tosca
9. Rigoletto
10. The Magic Flute
11. La Cenerentola
12. Turandot
13. Lucia di Lammermoor
14. Pagliacci
15. Cosî fan tutte
16. Aida
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18. Faust
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20. The Elixir of Love