Armide (Lully)

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Lully's Armide at the Palais-Royal Opera House in 1761, watercolor by Gabriel de Saint-Aubin

Armide is an opera in five acts by Jean-Baptiste Lully. The libretto by Philippe Quinault is based on Torquato Tasso's poem La Gerusalemme liberata (Jerusalem Delivered). The work is in the form of a tragédie en musique, a genre invented by Lully and Quinault.

Critics in the 18th century regarded Armide as Lully's masterpiece. It continues to be well-regarded, featuring some of the best-known music in French baroque opera and being arguably ahead of its time in its psychological interest. Unlike most of his operas, Armide concentrates on the sustained psychological development of a character – not Renaud, who spends most of the opera under Armide's spell, but Armide, who repeatedly tries without success to choose vengeance over love.

Performance history[edit]

Armide was first performed on 15 February 1686 by the Paris Opera at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal, with scenery by Bérain, in the presence of the Grand Dauphin. The subject for the opera was chosen for Lully by King Louis XIV of France.[1] However, the king would not attend the première or any of the following performances,[2] possibly because Lully was involved in a homosexual scandal.[3] The opera was well received by the Parisians and was revived by the Paris Opera in 1703, 1713–14, 1724, 1746–47, 1761, and 1764.[4] Between 1686 and 1751 Armide was mounted in Marseilles, Brussels, Lyon, Lunéville and perhaps Metz, and was also produced abroad in The Hague, Berlin (with revisions by Carl Heinrich Graun) and apparently, in two concert performances, in Rome.[5]

On 5 November 2005, almost 320 years later, Opera Atelier of Toronto gave Armide its North American premiere under conductor Andrew Parrott and music director David Fallis.[6][7]

Roles[edit]

Title page of the score's first edition, Paris 1686
Role Voice type Premiere cast,[2][5] 15 February 1686
(Conductor: Pascal Collasse)
Allegorical Prologue
La Gloire [Glory] soprano
La Sagesse [Wisdom] soprano
Main Plot
Armide, magician, niece of Hidraot soprano Marie Le Rochois
Renaud, a knight haute-contre Louis Gaulard Dumesny
Phénice, a confidante of Armide soprano Marie-Louise Desmatins
Sidonie, a confidante of Armide soprano Françoise Fanchon Moreau, la Cadette
Hidraot, magician, King of Damascus basse-taille (bass-baritone) Jean Dun père[8]
Aronte, guard of Armide's captive knights basse-taille
Artémidor, a knight taille (baritenor)
La Haine [Hatred] taille M. Frère
Ubalde, a knight basse-taille
The Danish Knight, companion of Ubalde haute-contre
A Demon in the form of a Water Nymph soprano
A Demon in the form of Lucinde, the Danish Knight's beloved soprano
A Demon in the form of Melisse, Ubalde's beloved soprano
Heroes who follow Glory; nymphs who follow Wisdom; people of Damascus; demons disguised as nymphs, shepherds and shepherdesses; flying demons disguised as Zephyrs;
followers of Hatred, the Furies, Cruelty, Vengeance, Rage, etc.; demons disguised as rustics; Pleasures; demons disguised as happy lovers
Rinaldo and Armida by Nicolas Poussin, 1629

Synopsis[edit]

One of Jean Bérain's designs for the first staging of Armide, 1686

During the First Crusade, Armide ensnares her enemy the Christian knight Renaud with her magic spells. At the moment she raises her dagger to kill him, she finds herself falling in love with him. She casts a spell to make him love her in return. Upon returning to her castle, she cannot bear that Renaud's love is only the work of enchantment. She calls on the Goddess of Hate to restore her hatred for Renaud, but fails to escape from her feelings of love for him. The Goddess condemns Armide to eternal love. Before Armide can return to Renaud, two of his fellow soldiers reach Renaud and break Armide's spell. Renaud manages to escape from Armide, who is left enraged, despairing, and hopeless.

Scene from act II, engraving from a score, 1700

History and analysis[edit]

Roughly eight decades following Monteverdi's L'Orfeo, Jean-Baptiste Lully produced Armide with his longtime collaborator, playwright Jean-Philippe Quinault. Together they had developed the tragédie en musique, or tragédie lyrique, which served as a new form of opera that combined elements of classical French drama with ballet, the French song tradition, and a new form of recitative. Armide was one of Lully's last operas and is therefore extremely developed in style.

The opera's instrumental overture is divided into two parts, all with the same highly professional sound, as if to accompany the entrance of a highly revered authority. It is in fact, according to the Norton Anthology of Western Music, a "majesty suitable to the king of France, whose entrance into the theater the overture usually accompanied when he was in attendance".[9] At points it is playful and bouncy, while always remaining ceremonious. The first section of the overture is in duple meter and comparatively sounds slower than the second section, when the meter changes into compound. These two different styles switch off until the conclusion of the piece (in duple meter).

Engraving of the composer, from the score's frontispiece

The most famous moment in the opera is Act II, scene 5, a monologue by the enchantress Armide, considered "one of the most impressive recitatives in all of Lully's operas".[9] Armide, accompanied by only continuo, alternates between glorying in her own power and succumbing to piercing angst. Clutching a dagger, she expresses her unyielding desire to kill the knight Renaud, who has foiled her plan to keep the knights of the Crusades in captivity. Though not elaborate in terms of orchestration, the techniques of dramatic interpretation of rhythm, impressive use of stressing on downbeats, and exaggerated use of rests beautifully complicate this piece.

Renaud had taken on the heroic and courageous duty of freeing these knights, much to the vexation of Armide, who now plans to murder him as quickly and swiftly as she can, while he is fast asleep under her magical spell. A stark sense of hesitation washes over her, and her voice grows softer and more full of doubt as she finds herself unexpectedly falling in love with her sworn enemy. Her passion for revenge, to which she was originally so committed, gives way to her new-found love: "Let us get on with it… I tremble! Let us avenge… I sigh! / My rage is extinguished when I approach him / He seems to be made for love." The exaggerated use of rests is exemplified perfectly here, in measures 38–42, amidst her rage and vengefulness. Armide is struck by her contradictory and confusing feelings of love, and the use of ellipses conveys this dramatic hesitation and inner turmoil.

She reaches a decision far more humane than murdering Renaud, by casting a further spell to make him fall in love with her. The bass amplifies and is much more emphatic in this part, while the supporting dynamic harmony permits a more melodic style. The idea is elaborated with accompanying music that evokes love and idealism, similar to the structure of a minuet. Repetition is also prevalent with the orchestra first introducing the entire melody, and Armide echoing its sentiment. A variation begins with Armide's changing emotions, resulting in a dance-like feel that contains orchestral preludes and a pair of recitative styles.

Ubalde et le chevalier Danois Louis Jean Francois Lagrenée

Film[edit]

A segment in the 1987 anthology film Aria is based loosely on the plot of Armide. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard, it is set in a gym and uses a selection of music from Philippe Herreweghe's first recording of the opera with Rachel Yakar in the title role. ("Ah! Si la liberté...", "Enfin, il est en ma puissance", "Venez, venez, Haine implacable").[10]

Recordings[edit]

Apart from Herreweghe's two recordings, mentioned above, there are two other recordings: a budget version on Naxos [3] and Christophe Rousset's account, released on the Aparté label in 2017.

A 2008 video recording of William Christie's staging of Armide at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées has been released on DVD.[11]

See also[edit]

  • Rinaldo, 1711 opera by Handel to a related libretto
  • Armide, 1777 opera by Gluck to Quinault's libretto, with some changes added

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^ Anderson, Nicholas (August 1993). "Armide (record review)". Gramophone. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Magazine de l'opéra baroque (archived copy)". Archived from the original on 1 March 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2011..
  3. ^ a b Rosow, Lois (2003). "Armide: Lully's ultimate triumph". Archived from the original on 10 August 2016. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  4. ^ Lajarte, p. 52 f.
  5. ^ a b Rosow (Grove).
  6. ^ Haskell, Richard. "Opera Atelier". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Opera Atelier. Toronto opera company specializing in Baroque repertoire (17th and 18th centuries), founded in 1985... Artistic staff have included set designer Gerard Gauci, music director David Fallis... Opera Atelier has become one of North America's pre-eminent Baroque opera companies.
  7. ^ Citron, Paula. "The North American premiere of Lully's Armide". Opera Canada. Vol. 46, no. 3 (Fall 2005). It is a fact that current opera repertoire is moving backwards in time faster than it is moving forwards. One of the generals leading the retreat, so to speak, is Toronto-based Opera Atelier. The company is celebrating its 20th anniversary season this November with the North American premiere of Jean-Baptiste Lully's Armide, a French Baroque masterpiece written in 1686.[...] Although a great deal is known about the original production, putting it on 300 years later still has its problems. OA resident music director David Fallis is conductor Andrew Parrott's rehearsal supervisor for Armide."
  8. ^ According to Rosow (Grove), the role of Hidraot might have been performed either by Dun père or by François Beaumavielle.
  9. ^ a b Norton Anthology of Western Music, p. 520.
  10. ^ Herreweghe made another recording in the 1990s. See Anderson, Nicholas (August 1993). "Armide (record review)". Gramophone. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  11. ^ Tim Ashley (8 December 2011). "Lully: Armide – review". Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
Sources

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