Bertrand de Billy Dirigent
Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra
Wiener Singakademie · Heinz Ferlesch Choreinstudierung
Marta | | Lisa Gasteen Sopran |
Pedro | | Johan Botha Tenor |
Sebastiano | | Falk Struckmann Bariton |
Tommaso | | Kwangchul Youn Bass |
Nuri | | Adriane Queiroz Sopran |
Nando | | Raymond Very Tenor |
Moruccio | | Jochen Schmeckenbecher Bariton |
Pepa | | Anna Maria Pammer Sopran |
Antonia | | Béatrice Petitet-Kircher Mezzosopran |
Rosalia | | Ulrike Pichler-Steffen Alt |
Tiefland - The Action
Prelude
Pedro is living completely cut off in the mountains,
looking after the animals belonging to
the landowner Sebastiano. Only now and then
does he encounter the shepherd Nando, to
whom he who he speaks of his desire for a
woman. Quite unexpectedly Sebastianio appears,
accompanied by the village elder Tommaso
and the beautiful Marta. Overwhelmed by her
beauty, Sebastiano had earlier taken in Marta
as a beggar-girl and made her his lover. He
handed over responsibilty for the mill to her
foster-father, after whose death Sebastiano
intends to marry Marta to Pedro. Secretly he
intends not to relinquish his customary rights
over the girl. Pedro is overjoyed to acquire a
beautiful wife and the mill in the lowlands (the
“Tiefland” of the title).
Act 1
In the village, gossip is mounting over Marta‘s
imminent wedding. Little Nuri reveals to the other
girls the identity of the bridegroom. Marta places
her trust only in the innocent Nuri and confesses
to her the connnection with Sebastiano and
her bitterness over the forced marriage.
In the meantime old Tommaso has learned
Sebastiano‘s real motives from the scheming
but very well-informed Morruccio: the former
can only be relieved of major debt by marrying
a rich wife and so is seeking to escape the
tittle-tattle over his relationship with Marta.
Tommaso, horrified, seeks to make Sebastiano
justify himself, but receives only scorn and
derision.
Marta, however, consents to the wedding,
but shows her freshly-engaged fiancé the cold
shoulder. Pedro gives her a Taler which he
has received from Sebastiano after having risked
his life by killing a wolf. When Marta realises
that Pedro has no inkling of her past, she falls
into deep despair. A light appears in Marta‘s
room: Sebastiano takes it to mean that he is to
possess her even on her wedding night.
Act 2
Pedro admits his confusion to Nuri. The
strange behaviour of all the villagers has led
him to sense that something is being hidden
from him. Marta confesses to old Tommaso
her guilt and her burgeoning love for Pedro.
Tommaso convinces her to tell her husband
the truth. Pedro, who loves her, forgives her
and wants them to flee together into the
mountains. Then Sebastiano appears, blocking
their path. As lord and master he orders Marta
to dance. Pedro, who launches himself at him,
is thrown out by Sebastiano‘s servants. Only
when he tells Tommaso that he might be able
to put a stop to Sebastiano‘s plan to marry for
money by telling the bride‘s father the truth
about Sebastiano are the tables turned. Pedro
hears Marta‘s cries for help and forces the
lord to single combat. Just as he had killed the
wolf with his bare hands, now he strangles
Sebastiano. The couple‘s path into the mountains
lies open.
Eugen d’Albert: Tiefland
Eugen d‘Albert‘s Tiefland represents the unique
example of a verismo opera from Germany.
The evolution of the verismo style (from the
Italian “vero” – “true”) was established under
the influence of naturalism in drama, literature
and the fine arts in Italy from the middle of the
19th century and, in the land of its origin, brought
with it musical consequences.
Artists wanted to portray reality as pitiless
and extreme. Starting out from their models
Ponchielli and Catalani, the members of the socalled
“young school” (Mascagni, Leoncavallo,
Giordano and Cilèa) created a thoroughly individual
musico-dramatic tone which reached
its high point in the frequently-performed operatic
“twins” Cavalleria rusticana and I Pagliacci.
At that time, when even Puccini was turning
to verismo means in at least some scenes of
his operas, Eugen d‘Albert, brought up in the
Wagner tradition, also made use of them.
Born on 10th April 1864 in Glasgow, d‘Albert
nevertheless had Italian roots. The family was
orignally called Alberti. His grandfather François
Bénédicte d‘Albert was adjutant to Napoleon
I (hence the French nomenclature), was very
much on the German side in the then Frenchoccuped
town of Altona and usually called
himself Franz d‘Albert. His son Charles Louis
Napoléon was musically talented and trained
as a pianist by Friedrich Wilhelm Michael Kalkbrenner.
He was later a ballet repetiteur and
also wrote ballet music for the Covent Garden
theatre in London. Eugen, the result of his
marriage with the Englishwoman Annie Rowell,
spoke English badly throughout his life and
always felt himself to be a German. In Paris
they called him “le petit allemand“.
Musically, Eugen d‘Albert was self-taught,
with a little teaching occasionally from his father.
Yet at the age of ten he won a scholarship to the
new National Training School (later the Royal
College of Music) in London whose Director
was England‘s most famous opera composer,
Sir Arthur Sullivan. Anton Rubinstein, Hans
Richter and others supported the “wunderkind”;
Franz Liszt compared him with the legendary
pianist Carl Tausig, who died prematurely, and
gave him lessons.
D‘Albert‘s interpretations of the works of
Beethoven and Bach (in his own bold arrangements)
were regarded as outstanding at the
time. Not only as a pianist but also as a
composer
did d‘Albert attract high regard. At least
two of his operas, Tiefland and Die toten Augen
long remained fixed points in the European
operatic repertory. Both are to be regarded as
a departure from the stylistic stamp of Richard
Wagner then all-powerful in Germany, and from
which d‘Albert distanced himself with his own
subtle musical comedies, above all the opera
buffa ‚Flauto solo‘ set in the era of Frederick
the Great.
The light parlando style of this comedy also
finds its way into d‘Albert‘s most-performed
work, Tiefland, but only colours those genre
scenes featuring the tittering and chattering
girls. Despite this light element, the work is
generally and clearly (despite occasional
Wagnerisms) under the spell of Pietro Mascagni
and his Cavalleria. The sharply outlined scenes
of the plot are depicted by the music in the
veristic manner with clear, easily-perceived
sound pictures. Fine psychological outlines
are not altogether the strongest component of
d‘Albert‘s artistry. Where these are called for,
for example in the artful scene between Morruccio
and Tommaso in the first Act, the composer
resorts to a relatively undifferentiated
recitative style. Conversely, great moments
arise in situations of inner contemplation –
above all in Marta‘s monologues – and quite
especially in the whipped-up narratives and
dialogues. Here d‘Albert works in a virtuoso
manner with pregnant individual motifs which
he thrillingly concentrates by means of masterly
repetition and variation. What Leos Janacek
would later bring to perfection in his revolutionary
pieces is already pre-figured here,
even if still in an early stage. D‘Albert is a long
way from Janacek‘s refined metamorphoses in
which a motif can be turned into its opposite
by complete transformation. With him it is rather
the simple recognisability of the sounds which
lend them their dramatic impact. Even the
passionate string figure associated with Marta
as well as Pedro‘s wolf motif, or the sharply
angular chords of Sebastiano are so easily
remembered and well made that they take on
the correct association even at first hearing.
The technique of marking individual scenes
with their own dominant basic motifs gives
the music of Tiefland its structure and solidity,
for all its spontaneous reaction to the dramatic
proceedings. Again and again, for example n
the great decisive confrontation between Marta
and Sebastiano, the form is rounded off by
clearly separated blocks of themes and
unmissable use of repetition.
What explains the lasting success of the
work is that d‘Albert has succeeded in containing
the immediacy, all the naturalistic effects, within
a broader framework, thus freeing his opera
from any accusation of being too much of an
improvisatory gesture.
Nonetheless, Tiefland did not find immediate
favour. The premiere on 15th November 1903
in the German Theatre in Prague was indeed
greeted with 42 curtain-calls and wild cheering,
but did not at first enjoy continued success. At
that point the plot was divided into three Acts.
Convinced by his own publisher, who was
about to print Tiefland, d‘Albert revised the
opera and gave it the familiar shape it has today.
There followed a further highly successful
revival in Magdeburg, but the breakthrough
came only at its first performance at the
Komische Oper, Berlin. Hans Gregor, head of
the youngest Berlin opera house had already
committed himself vigorously to the then far
from frequently performed operas of Mozart
and to contemporary composers. In 1907, with
Tiefland, he achieved a sensational success.
From this point on the main roles in Tiefland
became the favourite parts or several important
singers. Annie Krull, Richard Strauss.s first
Elektra, sang Marta, Richard Tauber loved
Pedro, Emmy Destinn sang the first American
Marta at the New York Metropolitan Opera
where Erik Schmedes was the Pedro. Schmedes
had already sung Pedro at the first Viennese
performance alongside Marie Gutheil-Schoder
and Leopold Demuth. For decades Tiefland
held its place in the seasons of the great
opera houses, mostly with prominent casts, so
that chance led to great singers often having
their first stage experience in performaces of
Tiefland. Later to become the Wagner heroine,
Kirsten Flagstad celebrated her debut in Oslo
as Nuri! And for Maria Callas, appearing
immediately after her start as Tosca in Athens,
Marta was the second role of her life.
Wilhelm Sinkovicz
Translation: John Kehoe