A vivid demonstration of how widely Fabio Biondi’s musical imagination runs comes with his new recording of Giuseppe Verdi’s work of genius, Macbeth. It is the original Florentine 1847 version of the work, shorn of the Paris revisions more typically found on record, which Fabio Biondi has opted to conduct, the director believing in its greater dramatic and stylistic coherence.
Verdi
was of the opinion that the Shakespearean tragedy was “one of the
greatest creations of the human spirit” and set himself the task of
rendering the fire of its drama into music during and following a period
when his physical health had broken down. With its scenes of murder,
battle and sleep-walking, brindisi and witches’ choruses all
creating a sombre atmosphere drenched with paranoia and a lust for
power, the dramatic flow of the opera places vast demands on the
soloists, notably upon the unhappy title-role couple.
Fabio Biondi’s
version comes with baritone Giovanni Meoni, a leading Verdi specialist
as Macbeth whilst the larger-than-life role of Lady Macbeth is taken by a
noted present-day Salome, Médée (and Medea), the soprano Nadja Michael.
Bass Fabrizio Beggi assumes the part of Banquo, both when alive and as a
ghost. Important also in the work (and as described by Stefano
Russomanno in his accompanying essay) is the chorus, a leading
protagonist for the composer, and here the Podlasie Opera and
Philharmonic Choir.
Critical also is Verdi’s orchestral writing for Macbeth, introducing rare and radical tonal colourings and Fabio Biondi, directing his Europa Galante
from the violin, is just the radical, challenging musical spirit to
breathe new life into Verdi’s masterpiece and its search for dramatic
truth.
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