Pianists Antonella Vitelli and Luciano Bellini |
Featuring:
Luciano
Bellini, piano
Antonella
Vitelli, piano
Programme:
Gaetano
Donizetti Lucia di Lammermoor
Giuseppe
Verdi
Romance
sans paroles
La
Traviata
Gioachino
Rossini Il Barbiere di Siviglia
Giacomo
Puccini Tosca
Giuseppe
Verdi
Waltz
in F major
Overture
from La Forza del Destino
My
exposure to the opera for the past year and half finally paid off. My growing knowledge
of this form of live entertainment and its vast repertoire was very much
responsible for my appreciation of the recent Four Hands at the Opera held at
the Cultural Center of the Philippines’
Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino (CCP Little Theater). This concert, featuring the
Italian piano duo of Luciano Bellini and Antonella Vitelli gave the spotlight
to four Italian opera composers especially Giuseppe Verdi who is celebrating
the bicentennial anniversary of his birth this year.
If
not for my recent opera exploits, I would be so lost during most of the concert
where the piano duo played Bellini’s arrangements of various fantasies taken from
works by Gaetano Donizetti, Giuseppe Verdi, Gioachino Rossini and Giacomo
Puccini. My familiarity with the arias made it a lot easier for me to
appreciate not just the music but also the transcriptions and the performances
as well.
It
was indeed very interesting and enlightening to hear how Bellini transcribed
the music which was originally intended for vocalists accompanied by an
orchestra. With four hands and one piano, it is possible to have 20 notes
played at once. But the arrangement managed to retain the levels and it made
the vocal lines float while maintaining the orchestral textures and colors even
if there was just one piano. It wasn’t easy to fall into reverie and imagine
the actually opera in my head.
Highlights
of the performances for me were the Spargi
d’amaro pianto from Lucia di
Lammermoor by Donizetti which is a song I usually associate with French
singer Mado Robin. Hearing Bellini and Antonelli play the opening notes of the
overture from Verdi’s La Traviata
made me reminisce at CCP’s production of it. And if I’m not mistaken, Bellini
opted to have the music arranged in a chronological manner. I regretted once
again missing Il Barbiere di Siviglia
by Rossini when I heard Largo al factotum and Una voce poco fa. And it always pleases me whenever I hear Puccini,
so I was delighted to hear Vissi d’arte
and E Lucevan la stelle from Tosca.
Since
this concert was also a tribute to Verdi, Bellini also played two solo piano
pieces by Verdi that are rarely performed. The Romance sans paroles and Waltz
in F major are two short pieces that served as interludes in between the
fantasies and while not that technically demanding, these two pieces could be
nice pieces for some pianists to learn. To cap the concert, the duo performed
Verdi’s Overture from La Forza del Destino.
For their encore, they played a Bellini composition entitled Corteo dai Carpazi
al Pireo which took music from the Carpathian mountains in
Central/Eastern Europe down to Piraeus ,
the port city in Greece .
I was able to hear Zorba the Greek
music which is the Pireo part but I wasn’t able to grasp what kind of music the
Carpazi represented.
After
the concert, audience members and guests were able to interact with Luciano
Bellini and Antonella Vitelli during the cocktail reception at the CCP’s Silangan Hall.
As much as I want to watch what I eat, the gelato served there was too tempting
and I just had to indulge myself. I was hoping to meet at last the new Italian
Ambassador, Massimo Roscigno during that night but he wasn’t present. Instead,
it was Alfonso Tagliafferi, the Italian Embassy’s First Secretary and Deputy
Head of Mission who delivered the
opening remarks at the concert.
The Four
Hands at the Opera was presented by the Cultural Center of
the Philippines ,
the Philippine-Italian Association, Rustan’s, the Embassy of Italy, in cooperation with the Peninsula Manila, and Ralph’s Wines & Spirits and was staged for the benefit of the PIA Endowment Fund.
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