As we know it today, Fidelio,
Beethoven’s only opera, was first performed in 1814. But it had begun
life in 1805 as Leonore, when its premiere in Vienna, to an audience
largely made up of French officers from Napoleon’s occupying army who
could not understand any of the German text, had been a disaster.
Beethoven revised the score immediately, cutting swathes and recasting
the original three acts into two, but he was still unhappy with the
result, which was withdrawn after two performances the following year.
When it emerged again, eight years later, both the music and the words
had been even more substantially altered, and this time the premiere was
a huge success.
et though Fidelio is now a central part of the operatic repertory, some
insist that the 1805 Leonore is the better, more dramatically convincing
work. One of those is John Eliot Gardiner, who in 1997 conducted one of
the three previous recordings of the original score, and another is René Jacobs,
who is responsible for this latest one. According to Jacobs, not only
does the 1805 three-act version have the better, more musically daring
overture (now known in the concert hall as Leonore No 2) but Beethoven’s
revisions and compressions removed first-rate music from the score,
notably an entire aria in the first act for Rocco, and a duet for
Leonore and Marzelline in the second, doing severe damage to the work’s
dramaturgy.
Jacobs’ recording, taken from a live performance in Paris a year ago,
makes his case for him eloquently enough. His tempi are generally on
the fast side, though the superb, crisp playing of the period-instrument
Freiburg Baroque Orchestra ensures they never seem too hectic. But
though the dialogue has been rewritten and apparently abridged, there
still seems an awful lot of it, with the spoken voices just a bit too
far forward in the stereo picture and sound effects rather
self-consciously prominent, too. And if the cast, led by Marlis Petersen
as Leonore and Maximilian Schmitt as Florestan, does not include any
voices to compare to those on some of the great Fidelio recordings of
the last century, their general lightness and flexibility puts the opera
more convincingly into its proper context.
As Jacobs and his singers present it, this is Beethoven’s opera as a descendant of the 18th-century Singspiel
tradition, especially that of Mozart’s Entführung and Zauberflöte.
Leonore may not be the great celebration of political freedom that later
generations have valued in Fidelio, but historically perhaps it’s
something more interesting. (Andrew Clements / The Guardian)
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