Bianca e Falliero, ossia Il consiglio dei tre (English: Bianca and Falliero, or The Counsel of Three) is a two-act operatic melodramma by Gioachino Rossini to an Italian libretto by Felice Romani. The libretto was based on Antoine-Vincent Arnault's 1798 play Les Vénitiens, ou Blanche et Montcassin.

Bianca e Falliero
Opera by Gioachino Rossini
Portrait of the composer
LibrettistFelice Romani
LanguageItalian
Based onLes Vénitiens, ou Blanche et Montcassin
by Antoine-Vincent Arnault (1798)
Premiere
26 December 1819 (1819-12-26)
La Scala, Milan

Performance history

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The opera premiered on 26 December 1819 at La Scala. Giuseppe Fioravanti, a popular basso buffo of the day and the son of composer Valentino Fioravanti, sang in the premiere.[1] Carolina Bassi, Italian contralto considered one of the best in her day, also created a role in this opera.[1]

The work was performed thirty times during the initial season in Milan and was performed throughout Italy and elsewhere to some extent before largely disappearing into obscurity after 1846. It was revived at the Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro in 1986 with Katia Ricciarelli, Marilyn Horne, and Chris Merritt.[2]

The opera is considered very difficult to sing due to the intensity of its coloratura writing.[1]

Roles

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Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 26 December 1819
(Conductors: Gioacchino Rossini
and Alessandro Rolla)[3]
Bianca, daughter of Contareno soprano Violante Camporesi
Capellio, Senator bass Giuseppe Fioravanti
Contareno, Senator tenor Claudio Bonoldi
Costanza, nurse of Bianca soprano Adelaide Ghinzani
Falliero, Venetian general contralto Carolina Bassi
Priuli, Doge of Venice bass Alessandro De Angeli
Pisani tenor Francesco Antonio Biscottini
Loredano, Senator spoken role
Senators, noblemen and women, bailiffs, soldiers, servants

Synopsis

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Bianca e Falliero is a tale of emotional excess and bitter strife within war-threatened Venice. Falliero, the hero, comes home after defeating the enemies of Venice only to find his beloved Bianca promised to a rival and soon to be married.

Place: Venice
Time: 17th Century

Act 1

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Contareno offers his daughter Bianca in marriage to Capellio, a member of a rival clan, in an act of conciliation meant to end a long-standing family feud. Bianca, however, loves Falliero, rumoured to have recently died defending Venice from a military threat. She sings of her love for the young general in the cavatina Della rosa il bel vermiglio. When Falliero returns from the war and Bianca rebels against her father's plan for her, Contareno threatens to ruin Falliero. The wedding ceremony begins, but Bianca refuses to marry Capellio by not signing the marriage certificate. Falliero bursts onto the scene.

Act 2

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Falliero is forced to run from the scene of the wedding to escape the wrath of Bianca's father. Bianca again refuses to continue the ceremony. News arrives that Falliero has been captured and must stand trial for treason, allegedly for his contacts with a foreign power because he was found hiding in the Spanish Embassy. Unfortunately for him, his judges are to be the Council of Three: Contareno, Capellio and Loredano. Although Falliero does not defend his actions, Bianca passionately argues on his behalf. Eventually, Bianca's impassioned pleas convince Capellio that the two lovers belong together. All ends happily.

Recycled and reused music

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The quartet during the trial scene, Cielo, il mio labbro ispira, was reworked several times by Rossini over the years, and its popularity eventually outlasted that of the opera itself.[4] The critic Stendhal considered this quartet to be one of Rossini's finest creations. In the sixteenth chapter of his essay On Love, he wrote that : "A sad and tender tune, provided that it is not too much dramatic, that imagination is not forced to consider action, as it entice oneself only to the daydreaming of love, is a delightful thing for miserable and tender souls; for instance the clarinet's prolonged part, at the beginning of the Bianca e Faliero [sic] quartetto, and the Camporesi's story around the middle of the quartetto." [5]

The composer reused music from the rondo finale of his recent, well-received opera, La donna del lago in this work as well.

Recordings

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Year Cast:
Bianca, Fallerio, Contareno, Capellio
Conductor,
Opera House and Orchestra
Label [6]
1986 Katia Ricciarelli,
Marilyn Horne.
Chris Merritt,
Giorgio Surjan
Donato Renzetti,
London Sinfonietta Opera Orchestra and Prague Philharmonic Choir
(Audio and video recordings of a performance (or of performances) at the Rossini Opera Festival)
Audio CD: Legato Classics
Cat: LCD 138-3
DVD: House of Opera
DVDCC 246
2001 Majella Cullagh,
Jennifer Larmore.
Barry Banks,
Ildebrando D'Arcangelo
David Parry,
The London Philharmonic Orchestra and The Geoffrey Mitchell Choir
Audio CD: Opera Rara
Cat: ORC20
2005 María Bayo,
Daniela Barcellona,
Francesco Meli,
Carlo Lepore
Renato Palumbo,
Orquesta Sinfónica de Galicia and the Prague Chamber Choir
(Audio recording of a performance at the Rossini Opera Festival, August)

(Video/audio 2 DVD set of an identical performance with subtitles in Italian, English, French, German, Spanish, Chinese, or none)

Audio CD: Dynamic
CDS 501/1-3

DVD: Dynamic
1236/1-2 all regions, High Definition

2017 Cinzia Forte,
Victoria Yarovaya,
Kenneth Tarver,
Baurzhan Anderzhanov
Antonino Fogliani,
Virtuosi Brunensis,Camerata Bach Choir,
Recorded live at the Rossini in Wildbad Festival
CD:Naxos Records
Cat:8660407-09

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Warrack & West 1992, pp. ?
  2. ^ Farr, Robert 2005, "The thirty-nine operas of Gioachino ROSSINI (1792–1868): A conspectus of their composition and recordings", MusicWeb International, 16 November 2005. Retrieved on 22 March 2008.
  3. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Bianca e Falliero, 26 December 1819". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  4. ^ Osborne, Richard: "Bianca e Falliero", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Retrieved on 27 March 2008)
  5. ^ Crutchfield, Will, "Opera: Rossini's Bianca", The New York Times, 9 December 1987. Retrieved 31 May 2011
  6. ^ "CLROBIAN.HTM". www.operadis-opera-discography.org.uk. Retrieved 8 April 2022.

Sources

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