Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season September-October 2015 | Page 32

{ program notes become two operatic divas, soprano and contralto. Chromatic harmonies and bold dissonance color long-spun vocal lines and reveal a grownup Mozart who has suffered and learned how to transform pain into high art. The vivacious finale is in the rondo form Mozart favored for his concerto last movements, with a merry, infectious theme returning over and over in between contrasting episodes. Instrumentation: Two oboes, two horns and strings. Selections from DON GIOVANNI Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart In January 1787, just as Mozart’s popularity in Vienna went into a slump, the city of Prague, capital of the thenAustrian province of Bohemia, came to the rescue. His latest opera, Le nozze di Figaro, was such a tremendous success at the Prague National Theater that the entire city was gripped by Figaro-mania. Mozart was there to witness it all and described a ball given in his honor: “I looked on … with the greatest pleasure while all these people flew about in sheer delight to the music of my Figaro, arranged for contradances and German dances. For there, they talk about nothing but Figaro. Nothing is played, sung, or whistled but Figaro. No opera is drawing like Figaro. … Certainly a great honor for me!” Not surprisingly, the National Theater promptly offered a commission for a new comic opera, and it turned out to be one of his greatest masterpieces: Don Giovanni, premiered in Prague on October 29, 1787. Nevertheless, the new opera wasn’t exactly a light-weight comedy; Mozart and his librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte called it a “dramma giocoso” because, to an unprecedented degree, it combined comic elements with a very serious drama of crime and punishment. It was based on an already familiar story about a dissolute nobleman who relentlessly seduces women and is finally brought to justice by the ghost of a man he killed during one of his amorous escapades. The Spaniard Tirso 30 O v ertur e | WWW. BSOMUSIC .ORG de Molina had published the tale in 1630, and numerous playwrights and librettists, including Molière and Goldoni, had created their own versions. And in Mozart’s own day, Gluck had composed a ballet on the subject and Gazzoniga an Italian opera that had premiered a few months earlier. Knowing he could crib from these other sources, Da Ponte suggested this plot to Mozart partly because it would make his own job crafting a libretto that much easier. Also the librettist for Figaro, the colorful Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749–1838) was in such demand as a librettist that he was then working on three projects simultaneously, including an opera for Mozart’s rival, Antonio Salieri. Perhaps because he was a friend of a real-life lover of prodigious appetites, Giacomo Casanova, and, though ordained a priest, had enjoyed plenty of amorous adventures of his own, he made the seducer Don Giovanni into a more sympathetic character — someone audiences would find as irresistible as did his legions of feminine conquests. Undoubtedly the opera’s most famous aria, “Madamina, il catalogo’ è questo,” is sung by Giovanni’s servant Leporello. Nevertheless, it is the splendor of Mozart’s score and his unique ability to devise music that revealed the individual personality of each character that lofted a shopworn tale into a masterpiece. We will hear a selection of numbers that introduces us to the Don himself, his nimble servant Leporello and three of the ladies he tries in vain to seduce. We will also experience the opera’s spectacular last scene in which Giovanni finally meets his doom. In two parts, the opera’s riveting Overture encapsulates both the tragic and the comic aspects of this dramma giocoso. First, we hear a slow introduction in D Minor, full of darkness and foreboding; its whirling scales terrifyingly portray the supernatural forces that will ultimately destroy the Don; this music returns in the opera’s final scene. Then the tempo accelerates, and the key brightens to D Major for music of comic verve, its dashing fanfares a portrait of the virile Don himself. Undoubtedly the opera’s most famous aria, “Madamina, il catalogo’ è questo,” is sung by Giovanni’s servant Leporello to the distraught Donna Elvira after his boss has left her in the lurch once again. Unfurling a seemingly endless list of names — Giovanni’s thousands of conquests throughout the lands of Europe — he assures her she was not the first of his victims, nor will she be the last. This is one of Mozart’s slyest and most skillfully conceived comic arias, its breathless pace capturing the enormity of Giovanni’s career and the breadth of his appetites. Rivaling this aria in fame is the sweetly reassuring duet “Là ci darem la mano” Giovanni uses to try to sed X