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''Alzira'' is an opera in a prologue and two acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Salvatore Cammarano, based on the play ''Alzire, ou les Américains'' by Voltaire. The first performance was at the Teatro San Carlo, Naples, on 12 August 1845. The contemporary reviews were mixed, and the first run of the opera received only four further performances.〔Schlitzer, Franco, "Verdi's ''Alzira'' at Naples", ''Music & Letters'', 35 (2), April 1954, pp. 125–27.〕 ==Composition history== Following his completion of ''Giovanna d'Arco'', Verdi began on work on ''Alzira'', having been invited by the impresario of the Teatro San Carlo in Naples, Vincenzo Flauto, to write an opera for that house, the invitation having followed the earlier success of ''Ernani''.〔Budden (1984), p. 227–230〕 One of the attractions of the arrangement to Verdi was to have the services of the man who was now - following Felice Romani's virtual retirement - the principal librettist in Italy. This was Salvatore Cammarano, the Naples "house poet" who had been responsible for some of Donizetti's successes, which included ''Lucia di Lammermoor''.〔 Using the publisher Giovanni Ricordi as "a kind of agent" 〔Toye, pp. 33–34 & pp. 43–44. Retrieved 9 April 2013.〕 Verdi's terms were laid out. These included being able to receive one-third more than his fee for ''I Lombardi'' and, more importantly, having a finished libretto from Cammarano in his possession four months before the production. Verdi had received a synopsis of the opera from Cammarano,〔 the subject of which was not his. But, as Budden notes, Verdi adopted a somewhat passive attitude, impressed as he was at being able to work with this librettist.〔 In a letter of 23 February 1845,〔Black, p. 92–94〕 Verdi had expressed his optimism that "Voltaire's tragedy will become an excellent melodrama,"〔in Toye, pp. 33–34〕 with the added hope that if the librettist would "put some passion into your libretto"〔 and that he, Verdi, would write music to match. In their early correspondence, it appears that Cammarano had already sent some sample verses because Verdi's 23 February letter also contained his enthusiasm for receiving more: "I beg you to send me promptly some more verses. It's not necessary for me to tell you to keep it short. You know the theatre better than I do."〔 It is quite clear that Verdi's characteristic requirement for brevity appeared this early on in his career. As far as the libretto went, it was acceptable to Verdi; he was even "highly delighted" with it.〔 However, from Voltaire's play the "intellectual content () reduced to a minimum () religion and politics, the two ''raisons d'être'' of the drama, are scarcely mentioned; and the confrontation of different creeds, different civilizations and different worlds becomes merely another variant of the eternal triangle.〔 In the Spring of 1845 Verdi's health forced a postponement until at least following August, although he was well enough to arrive in Naples by the end of July to oversee rehearsals. In a letter of 30 July, he expresses optimism that the opera will be well received but notes that "if it were to fail, that wouldn't upset me unduly".〔Letter to Andrea Maffei, 30 July 1845, in Budden, p. 230〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Alzira (opera)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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