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Sunday, May 2, 2010

Intermezzi


In I Gioielli della Madonna there are two Intermezzi, one of which is torn from the material of the rest of the score, the other as though it were a piece from his trunk. Not that either one is inappropriate, but these Intermezzi were a feature of verismo operas, rather like the ballet in French opera. The first and most famous (discounting Carmen and La Traviata, of course), was that from Cavalleria Rusticana, Mascagni's 1890 shot over the bow for realism. That intermezzo had been written in 1888, two years before the opera was composed, but Mascagni had seen the Verga play in 1884 - and may have considered setting it as far back as that date. However, in the manuscript of the earlier intermezzo to Cav, which does differ slightly from the published version, it says as a tempo marking "imitating the prayer" - referring to the "Regina Coeli" ensemble of which this intermezzo is a reminiscence. So literally, did Mascagni write the intermezzo first and then retrofit everything else around it? Not unheard of.

In Wolf-Ferrari's case, there is no evidence that the slower intermezzo was written earlier, but it sounds as though it were referring to something else altogether. There are several YouTube versions of it. The Serenata Intermezzo which imitates not the prayer, but the ribald serenade that Rafaele sings to Maliella in the second act of the opera, seems more at home in the score, but is evocative in a playful way that seems to say that the composer is taking the side of the ruffian, not the moral center of the drama. That version is also rife on the Tube. (Thinking back to Bizet, it is hard not to compare this piece with one of the last Entrac'tes in Carmen, even down to the last two notes.) Perhaps each intermezzo is, then, a reflection of the characters in the opera, the men who are keen on gaining the attentions of Maliella.

Were there any doubt that the opera has moments of orchestral brilliance, there is also a Camorrist dance -- think of that, a sort of mafioso apache dance--that keeps the excitement up. Again, on line. Tell me that first part of it doesn't sound like it came from a draft of Carmen! (You may feel, 'all this needs is a tambourine' -- you don't have long to wait.)

Well, let us hope that the audience doesn't agree with the characters that sing in La Bohème, "Quest'intermezzi me fai morrir d'inedia."

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