Clementina (zarzuela)

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Clementina, although wrongly and popularly known as La Clementina,[1] is a zarzuela in two acts by Luigi Boccherini. The Spanish-language libretto was by Ramón de la Cruz. It premiered at the end of 1786 at the Palace Puerta de la Vega, Madrid.

Clementina is the only complete stage work by Boccherini. It was written when the zarzuela was close to the end of its period of greatest success, before this genre, at the beginning of the 19th century, was nearly forgotten in favour of the Italian opera. The librettist of Clementina, Ramón de la Cruz, had attempted to introduce innovations in the zarzuela, using folk elements instead of the more usual mythological subjects.[2] The music is predominantly cheerful and turned towards comical sides, with pathetic fragments when it tries to describe unrequited love.

This work was written on commission of the Duchess-Countess of Osuna-Benavente, a maecenas lover of music and arts who owned a private orchestra, under whose protection De La Cruz worked. Clementina premiered in Madrid in the palace of the Countess, probably performed by amateur singers.[2] Boccherini composed the music in less than one month.[3] A further performance of Clementina took place in 1799, again in Madrid, in the Coliseo de los Caños del Peral, this time with very known artists: Catalina Tordesillas (Clementina), Manuela Monteis (Damiana), Joaquina Arteaga (Narcisa), Lorenza Correa (Cristeta), Vicente Sanchez (Don Urbano) e Manuel Garcia Parra (Don Lazzaro).[2]

In modern times, Clementina was revived in Venice (La Fenice, 18 September 1951[4]), in Munich (Cuvilliés Theatre, 1960[4]) and in Aranjuez (Spain). A further performance was produced in Lucca in 2005.[5]

Roles[edit]

Role Voice type Premiere cast
(Conductor: - )
Don Clemente, widowed and very rich gentleman spoken role
Doña Clementina, supposed daughter of Don Clemente soprano
Doña Narcisa, daughter of Don Clemente, younger than Clementina soprano
Doña Damiana, tutor of Clementina and Narcisa mezzo-soprano
Don Urbano, Portuguese gentleman, suitor of Clementina tenor
Marquis de la Ballesta, suitor of Narcisa spoken role
Don Lazzaro, music teacher baritone
Cristeta, housemaid soprano
A page spoken role

Synopsis[edit]

The daughters of Don Clemente, Clementina and Narcisa, are courted respectively by Don Urbano and by the marquis de la Ballesta, but they do not accept the marriage proposals of their suitors. Don Clemente reveals that Clementina is not his natural daughter, but was adopted when she was a little child. Gradually, Don Urbano realizes that Clementina is his sister, of whom he had lost all trace and for whom he has been in search for long time. The opera ends with the marriages between Don Urbano and Narcisa, the marquis and Clementina, Don Lazzaro and Cristeta.

Orchestration and structure[edit]

Clementina is scored for the following instruments: 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, strings.

Clementina includes the ouverture, 12 arias, 2 obbligato recitatives and 6 ensembles, plus the dialogues.

Recordings[edit]

1958: Alfredo Simonetto, Milan RAI orchestra and chorus (Italian version), Cantus Classics (LC 03982) CACD 5.01226 F (2009)[6]

Clementina: Fiorella Carmen Forti
Narcisa: Graziella Sciutti
Damiana: Angela Vercelli

Don Urbano: Juan Oncina
Don Lazzaro: Franco Calabrese
Cristeta: Vittoria Palombini

1965: Angelo Ephrikian, RSI orchestra and chorus, label Cat (Italian version), Nuova Era 223297[7]

Clementina: Elena Rizzieri
Narcisa: Maria Grazia Ferracini
Damiana: Karla Schean

Don Urbano: Ugo Benelli
Don Lazzaro: Fernando Corena
Cristeta: Luciana Ticinelli

2008: Pablo Heras-Casado, La Compañia del Principe, Música Antigua Aranjuez MAA 008. New Musical Edition by Juan Pablo Fernández-Cortés.[8]

Clementina: María Hinojosa
Narcisa: Sonia de Munck
Damiana: Marta Rodrigo

Don Urbano: David Alegret
Don Lazzaro: Toni Marsol
Cristeta: Elena Rivero

References[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ It is common to mention the title as La Clementina, but this only originated in the Italian translations of this zarzuela (translations that came after Boccherini's composition). The original title of this work, as it was first created in Spain, is indeed Clementina and not La Clementina. See the official records in the Biblioteca Nacional de España, here for the libretto and here for the double disc from Música Antigua Aranjuez Ediciones Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c Marín, La zarzuela Clementina di Luigi Boccherini
  3. ^ Coli (2005)
  4. ^ a b Galleni Luisi (1969)
  5. ^ Toschi, David. "Lucca - Villa Oliva – San Pancrazio: La Clementina" (in Italian). [OperaClick]. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  6. ^ "Luigi Boccherini - La Clementina". Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  7. ^ "Luigi Boccherini - La Clementina - Angelo Ephrikian (1965)". [Operaclass]. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  8. ^ Webber, Christopher. "Clementina. Luigi Boccherini". [Zarzuela.net]. Retrieved 10 February 2015.

Sources

External links[edit]