Donald Macleod delves into the operas of Giacomo Puccini
Giacomo Puccini was man of the theatre to his fingertips. Born in Lucca in 1858, into a distinguished family of church musicians, Puccini was never destined to follow in his forebears’ footsteps. His fate was sealed when as a teenager he walked thirty miles to hear Verdi’s Aida. He knew immediately that theatre was his calling and from that point on he wrote almost exclusively for the stage.
A perfectionist and an often unreasonable taskmaster, Puccini agonised over each of his operas. Beginning with Manon Lescaut, the opera that launched Puccini internationally, this week Donald Macleod follows the off and the on-stage dramas of La Boheme, Tosca, Madam Butterfly, La fanciulla del West, Suor Angelica, Gianni Schicchi, Il tabarro and the opera he left incomplete at his death in 1924, his final masterpiece, Turandot. The stories on stage are interleaved with events in his personal life, from an early scandal over his affair with a married woman and some very dodgy skulduggery in his business dealings, to the suicide of one of his servants, a tragedy of such proportion, he was plunged in to a deep depression, haunted by the events for the rest of his life.
This week, Donald Macleod celebrates a composer whose music expresses every human emotion, there's a host of landmark recordings, including the voices of Jonas Kaufmann, Angela Gheorghiu, Anna Netrebko and Roberto Alagna. We'll hear Mimì's touching calling card from La Boheme, in the classic Victoria de los Angeles version, while Renato Scotto pours all Madam Butterfly's hopes into the heart-breaking Un bel dì. There's the raw pain of Sister Angelica mourning her dead son, and the dark desperation of a jealous husband in Il tabarro. On Wednesday Callas and Gobbi’s anguished, sadistic torture scene in Tosca still has the power to shock us as much as it did on its first night in 1900. It's high stakes and nail-biting tension in La fanciulla del West as Minnie trades the life of her outlaw lover on the outcome of a card game. Joan Sutherland’s icy Princess Turandot, a magnificent pairing with Luciano Pavarotti’s Prince Calaf comes on Friday along with a certain aria made famous by the 1990 world cup, heard here in the hands of another Puccini specialist, Jussi Björling.
Music Featured:
Manon Lescaut, Act 1: Donna non vidi mai
Le Villi, Act 1: Preghiera: Angiol di dio
Messa di Gloria (Credo)
Crisantemi
Manon Lescaut, Act 2: Dispettosetto questo Riccio!; In quelle trine morbide
Manon Lescaut, Act 4: Sola, perduta, abbandonata; Fra le tue bracce amore
La Bohème, Act 1: Mi chiamano Mimì
La Bohème, Act 1: Pensier profondo!; Legna!; Si può
Capriccio sinfonico
La Bohème, Act 3: Donde lieta uscì; Dunque è proprio finita….Addio, dolce svegliare
Tosca, Act 1 (excerpt)
Tosca, Act 1: Ah! Finalmente (excerpt)
Vissi d’arte, Act 2 (excerpt)
Tosca, Act 2 (excerpt)
Tosca, Act 3 (excerpt)
Madama Butterfly, Act 1 (excerpt)
Madama Butterfly, Act 1: Viene la sera; Vogliatemi bene
Gianni Schicchi (O mio babbino caro)
Gianni Schicchi (excerpt)
Il tabarro (Nulla silenzio!)
La fanciulla del West, Act 1 (excerpt)
La fanciulla del West, Act 2: Una partita a poker!
Suor Angelica (excerpt)
Turandot (Nessun Dorma)
Madam Butterfly, Act 2: Un bel dì vedremo
Madam Butterfly, Act 2: Una nave da guerra; Scuoti quella fronda di ciliegio; Or vieni ad adornar
Turandot, Act 1: In Questa Reggia; Ascolta straniera; Gloria o vincitore!
La Boheme, Act 4: Fingevo dormire
Presented by Donald Macleod
Produced by Johannah Smith
For full track listings, including artist and recording details, and to listen to the pieces featured in full (for 30 days after broadcast) head to the series page for Giacomo Puccini (1858-1924)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0012rn4
And you can delve into the A-Z of all the composers we’ve featured on Composer of the Week here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3cjHdZlXwL7W41XGB77X3S0/composers-a-to-z