The Florentine Opera Company logo
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera
An image of the Florentine Opera

Florentine Opera Company Blog

Tweet! Great #CoffeeConnections panel this morning presented by @EastTown, featuring @alkrueger @XorbixTech @WayneBreitbarth. Glad we went!

March 31, 2011 at 9:12 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Hello everyone!

Well, after a nice long break, I am back touring with my friends in “The Billy Goats Gruff”!  Today was out first day back, and we had a great time performing at the Steinway Piano Gallery! (I know my friend Anne, our wonderful accompanist was happy to play on one of those beautiful pianos!) You would think the show would be  little rusty after not doing it for three weeks, but that was not true at all! we all did a really great job, if I do say so myself.  I was so happy to finally be back out there among all my fans, I sure missed it while we were on break (though I admit I did enjoy the R&R).

Last time I posted I promised you all I would tell you about our lovely costumes.

Here we are in our costumes with a couple of our biggest fans!

Here at the Florentine we are lucky enough to have a wonderful costume designer named Karen. She decided what all of us should look like. Then she either bought or made the costume pieces so we would all look perfect! She made me in all pink because that’s my favorite color, and because my BEST friend in the show, the other Lucy, wears pink and I want to look just like her! And on top of all that we also had a wig designer named Dawn who made beards for my co-stars to wear. They are each a little different, and make them look just like real Billy Goats.

Before I go today, I want to let you know that on this leg of our tour we have a lot of public performances that you can come to, if we aren’t coming to your school. Next week Tuesday we will be at the Oconomowoc Arts Center for two performances. We will be at the New Berlin Public Library on Tuesday April 12th, the Schauer Arts Center on Friday April 15th, and the Brookfield Public Library on Saturday April 16th. There is much more information on our website www.florentineopra.org. You should really check it out. we would all be so happy to see you!

Well, I have to go. Must get my beauty sleep before our show tomorrow at Alexandar Mitchell Integrated Arts School.

Happy Tromping!

Lucy D.

We’re proud to introduce you to our new “baby,” Roland the Harpsichord!

Our Chorus Master, Scott Stewart, offers these additional thoughts:

During the resplendent days of the Baroque Period, the harpsichord was the keyboard instrument that colored music with its rich, distinctive tone.  The Florentine Opera can easily enjoy its sophisticated sound and elegant form with our purchase of the Roland Classic Series C-30 Digital Harpsichord. This instrument produces authentically exquisite centuries-old harpsichord sounds, draws inspiration from 21st century ingenuity, and uses digital technology to enhance playability and expressiveness. It is modeled on the virginal, an ancient rectangular type of harpsichord; and is encased in an authentic wooden cabinet with a high quality mahogany finish.

When played, it actually feels as if plectrums connected to the keys are plucking strings. As with an acoustic harpsichord, if you press with a delicately light touch, you get the same key movement that occurs before the plectrum plucks the string.

Just as on traditional harpsichords, the black keys have a distinctive tip shape with flat tops, and a matte finish to provide a comfortable feel, enabling the player to enjoy and experience harpsichord playing as it was centuries ago.  You can easily switch between the built-in French and Flemish types of harpsichord. Both of these have four dispositions — 8’ I (back eight), 8’ II (front eight), 4’ (upper octave), and lute (buff mute) — and each disposition has its own dedicated selection button. You can play with a single disposition or layer more than one. Also, as well as sound sets for two types of small positive organs, a fortepiano is also built in. You can play the Baroque music of Handel and Bach on harpsichord and organ, and then change to fortepiano for the early Romantic music of Mozart and Beethoven.  We can experience playing this historic music with the authentic sound of different period instruments.  “Roland” is a welcome addition to the growing Florentine inventory of keyboards – and a perfect match to the Lueders Opera Center’s grand Steinway.


Tweet! Student rush tix for final performance of Italian Girl in Algiers are now on sale. $15 w/ valid ID, curtain up in 1 hr at Marcus Center.

March 20, 2011 at 12:24 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Only four hours until curtain for opening nite: Hope you are as excited as we are for "The Italian Girl in Algiers"!

March 18, 2011 at 2:32 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Have you seen the amazing "sneak peek" photos of "The Italian Girl in Algiers" on our FB page? http://on.fb.me/fXUXoB

March 18, 2011 at 11:41 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Football players-turned-opera singers in the NY Times: http://is.gd/O4XS2y

March 16, 2011 at 3:27 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

March 15, 2011

Notes from the Maestro: Reflections on The Italian Girl in Algiers

by Maestro Joseph Rescigno

I have exceedingly fond memories of L’Italiana in Algeri – possibly the best among the best by Italy’s comic genius – dating from my childhood. Gioachino Rossini was dubbed “the Italian Mozart” thanks to his gift for melody and ability to churn out scores with the greatest of ease. The comparison also befits the boy who so adored Mozart’s music that he was called Il Tedeschino (the little German) at the conservatory.

This opera belongs to a tradition of works with an East-meets-West theme and even the liberation-from-the-seraglio subgenre. The long line of works in this tradition includes other comedies, as we can see in Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail. However, while comedy is often subversive, note the further subversive plot twist in this libretto: In L’Italiana, it is the girl that rescues the boy from captivity.

The librettist subtitled the work dramma giocosa, a characterization that brings to mind Mozart’s Don Giovanni. But L’Italiana lacks the serious messages – the social commentary – that surround the laughs in Giovanni. L’Italiana more resembles Rossini’s own Il barbiere di Siviglia, labeled a commedia: The sincerity of Lindoro resembles what we find in Il barbiere’s Almaviva, for example, while Isabella’s patriotic speech in the last act of L’Italiana is not going to resonate in quite the same way as it most certainly did with Rossini’s audiences. One’s first guess is that the two composer-librettist teams saw the term dramma giocosa differently.

But history amplifies our understanding. The prominent bel canto authority Philip Gossett, who was part of the editorial committee for Ricordi’s current critical edition, tells me that the characterization of the libretto dates from the original. That original was, in fact, a massive rewrite – words and music – of an earlier work by another composer, also characterized as dramma giocosa. If the contemporaneous reviews are to be believed, the works were truly two different operas. Also, as is common in the history of opera, Rossini’s work underwent further modifications in subsequent productions. Still, the subtitle to the earlier opera, by Luigi Mosca, lingered on.

Audiences at the Florentine, therefore, will find L’Italiana more like Il barbiere than like Don Giovanni, especially since some of the most clownish approaches to Il barbiere have fallen by the wayside. It is to be noted, however, that in L’Italiana, there is some ambiguity about who is the funny man. Of course, it very much depends on the talents of the singers engaged. I have seen Mustafa performed entirely straight with Taddeo as the comic. If Mustafa has comic gifts, Taddeo’s part must be recalibrated, at least a little. For the conductor, there are certainly moments where it matters. A small example: Mustafa’s entrance can be a straight, virtuoso showpiece. However, there is a brief moment of complete silence – a rest – embedded in it, and that rest may be extended a bit for any comic business that Mustafa has to perform.

Apart from attending to a handful of stage concerns, the purely musical issues are similar to those we encounter in Mozart’s work. Everything has to sound crystalline and easy, as dancing on one’s toes looks easy when done by the best. The music is not tremendously tricky, as in Richard Strauss’s works. But precision is important and virtually every note is what we call “exposed.” Without immaculate execution – and this hinges greatly on the right tempo and propulsion from section to section – the whole thing can fizzle rather badly. It is said that comedy is hard; actually, it is fragile: The mood can be shattered in a heartbeat, and timing is everything.

L’Italiana in Algeri, Il barbiere di Siviglia, and La Cenerentola are Rossini’s three comic masterpieces. It is said that Arturo Toscanini eschewed conducting Il barbiere because it had become so laden with bad ideas that had become tradition. L’Italiana benefits somewhat from relatively less of this phenomenon than Il barbiere. At the same time, however, traditions are accruing around all works constantly. So, it is always wise to refresh one’s memory by carefully reexamining the score.

I conducted my first L’Italiana, directed by Leon Major, for the Washington Opera at the Kennedy Center in 1985 (repeated in 1987). For my third L’Italiana in 1994 at the Florentine¸ I can add the warm memory of Viveca Genaux’s first professional engagement to the usual delights of conducting this opera.

I was privileged to be able to discuss this score with my uncle, Nicola Rescigno, before my first L’Italiana. I now benefit from having inherited his copy of the score, which sits beside the one I purchased. (His, in fact, is a printer’s proof, something publishers make available to experts in the field when a book or a score is nearly ready to be placed on the presses.) Such a score confers an immortality something akin to that which other performers achieve with film and recordings. For a conductor to be able to pore over a respected colleague’s markings and marginal notes is to have a direct connection to that person and his or her experience and judgment.

Nicola had introduced me to L’Italiana when I was but twelve years old. It was the inaugural production of the Dallas Civic Opera (as the city’s opera company was then known), which he conducted following a concert starring Maria Callas the night before. The cast was most impressive with Giulietta Simionato as Isabella, Nicola Monti as Lindoro, Paolo Montarsolo as Mustafa, and Giuseppe Taddei as Taddeo. These were masters of their art. But I must also give credit for the hilarity I still remember to a stage director making his American debut: Franco Zeffirelli.

L’Italiana was not widely performed at that time. But my uncle had always taken an interest in early music. He had conducted little-performed works of the Italian repertory for some years in Rome, New York, Chicago, and elsewhere. These included Claudio Monteverdi’s music through that of Domenico Cimarosa. So, for him, it was no great leap to this early work by Gioachino Rossini.  (Rossini was an already successful composer of twenty-one when he wrote this opera, which premiered in 1813. But by the 1950s, little besides Il barbiere di Siviglia was performed, especially in the United States.)

Now that more of Rossini’s works are heard more widely, there rages a healthy debate about their relative virtues. For me, L’Italiana stands up very well. The sparkling ensemble that ends Act I is typical Rossini. But it is also, perhaps, the best of its kind that he ever wrote. And the duet of Mustafa and Lindoro evinces inspiration at the highest level. We can only hope that Rossini’s serious operas will increasingly be heard as interest in opera – including early opera – continues to grow. Semiramide and Tancredi reach the stage a bit; but Otello, Mosè in Egitto, and Guillaume Tell deserve far more attention here in the United States.

Hello friends and fans! I’m back to tell you some more great stuff about my show. Right now we all are getting a well needed break as the Florentine prepares for it’s next  main stage production “The Italian Girl in Algiers”. All of my co-stars are in the show, so you should really check it out! see  www.florentineopera.org for more details.
Now that I have a little time off from touring, I thought I would let you all in on some of the behind the scenes aspects of our show. Today I want to talk about the bridge. At every performance, when we ask for questions from our wonderful audiences, questions about the bridge come up EVERY TIME.

This is what the bridge looked like before it was finished

Our lovely friends at First Stage Milwaukee have made us an amazing set, complete with a colorful full-sized bridge that is just perfect for my friends and I to go over every day during the show.

Here is a picture of all of us on our beautiful bridge with some of our fans!

Making such a beautiful bridge is hard enough, but John from First Stage also had to make the bridge in a way that made it easy for us to travel from school to school. he did a great job. the bridge comes apart into TWELVE pieces! Amazing!

here is a picture of my friends starting to take the bridge apart

Well, I have to run, but I’ll be back to tell you all about our fabulous costumes!
Happy tromping,
Lucy D.

Tweet! Looking through all the apps for our 2011/12 Studio Artists-wow! The future of opera is bright-and interest in the art form is alive & well.

March 4, 2011 at 12:43 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Want posts by email? Powered by FeedBurner


 Older Posts »

The Florentine Opera Company Info

The Florentine Opera Company | Mail to: 700 N. Water Street, Suite 950 | Milwaukee, WI 53202
PH: 414/291.5700 | FX: 414/291.5706 | Email: info@florentineopera.org | Contact us | Site map
©2005 - 2009 The Florentine Opera Company. All rights Reserved. Legal Disclaimer and Privacy Policy