Semele (Handel)

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Operas by George Frideric Handel

Almira (1705)
Florindo (1708)
Rodrigo (1707)
Agrippina (1709)
Rinaldo (1711)
Il pastor fido (1712)
Teseo (1713)
Amadigi di Gaula (1715)
Acis and Galatea (1718)
Radamisto (1720)
Muzio Scevola (1721)
Floridante (1721)
Ottone (1723)
Flavio (1723)
Giulio Cesare (1724)
Tamerlano (1724)
Rodelinda (1725)
Scipione (1726)
Alessandro (1726)
Admeto (1727)
Riccardo Primo (1727)
Siroe (1728)
Tolomeo (1728)
Lotario (1729)
Partenope (1730)
Poro (1731)
Ezio (1732)
Sosarme (1732)
Orlando (1733)
Arianna in Creta (1734)
Oreste (1734)
Ariodante (1735)
Alcina (1735)
Atalanta (1736)
Arminio (1737)
Giustino (1737)
Berenice (1737)
Alessandro Severo (1738)
Faramondo (1738)
Serse (1738)
Giove in Argo (1739)
Imeneo (1740)
Deidamia (1741)
Semele (1744)

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Semele (HWV 58) is an opera, or oratorio, in three acts by George Frideric Handel.

Contents

[edit] Background

In the early 1740s, the performance of oratorios at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, represented George Frideric Handel’s chief concert activity in London. His biblical oratorios, Israel in Egypt (written 1738), Messiah (1741), Samson (1743) among them, bore some relationship to Greek tragedy, and unsurprisingly he decided to venture into the world of classical drama. He took up William Congreve's libretto for the 1707 John Eccles opera Semele, writing the music over a one-month period (from June 3 to July 4) in 1743.

The work naturally took shape as an opera. Handel, however, eyed a place for it on the Theatre Royal's Lenten concert series the following February. Semele was fashioned therefore for presentation "in the manner of an oratorio." Besides securing the work's first performance, and enabling Handel to get paid, the decision also created a spurious identity for Semele as a concert piece, one much championed and "claimed" by choral groups.

That the work is in reality more an opera than an oratorio, is implicit in playwright Congreve's libretto, amplified by Alexander Pope, and in the score. As Harewood put it:

" ... the music of Semele is so full of variety, the recitative so expressive, the orchestration so inventive, the characterization so apt, the general level of invention so high, the action so full of credible situation and incident — in a word, the piece as a whole is so suited to the operatic stage — that one can only suppose its neglect to have been due to an act of abnegation on the part of opera companies."

[edit] Performance history

The work was first performed on 10 February 1744 at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London. However Handel's camouflaging failed. The audience for the concert series, held yearly during Lent at London's Theatre Royal, Covent Garden expected Bible-based subject matter. Most oratorios, including most of those by Handel, would have met this expectation. But the amorous topic of Semele, which is practically a creation of the late Restoration Period, transparently drew on Greek myths, not Hebrew laws. It displeased those who attended the Lenten seasons for a different kind of uplift, and, being in English, likewise irritated the supporters of true Italian opera. As Winton Dean suggested in his book Handel’s Dramatic Oratorios:

"The public [in 1744] found [Semele's] tone too close to that of the discredited Italian opera and set it down as an oratorio manqué; where they expected wholesome Lenten bread, they received a glittering stone dug from the ruins of Greek mythology."

As a result, only four performances took place. The cast on February 10, 1744, included Elisabeth Duparc (‘La Francesina’) in the title role, Esther Young as Juno (and Ino), and John Beard as Jupiter. Henry Reinhold sang the bass roles. Handel seems to have interchanged some of the music between singers.

Pandering to his critics, Handel did rustle up two further performances, in December 1744, at the King’s Theatre, London. Changes and additions were made, including interspersed arias in Italian (for the opera crowd) and the excision of sexually explicit lines (for the devoted). Then Semele, perhaps unsurely matched to the spirit of its time, fell into long neglect.

[edit] Modern revivals

Handel's Semele had its first stage performance in Cambridge, England, in 1925 and its London stage première in 1954. It was produced on four occasions by the Handel Opera Society under Charles Farncombe (1959, 1961, 1964 and 1975), entered the repertory of the English National Opera (then Sadler’s Wells Opera) in 1970, and returned — after a 238-year wait — to the Royal Opera House in 1982, conducted on the latter two occasions by Charles Mackerras. The American stage première took place at the Ravinia Festival near Chicago in 1959. Semele was performed again in Washington, DC, in 1980, and at Carnegie Hall, New York, with John Nelson conducting, in 1985.

A new production opened at New York City Opera on September 13, 2006, directed by Stephen Lawless and replete with comparisons of Semele to Marilyn Monroe, Jupiter to U.S. President John F. Kennedy, and Juno to Jacqueline Kennedy. Elizabeth Futral sang Semele, Vivica Genaux portrayed Juno (and Ino), and Robert Breault sang Jupiter.

[edit] Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, February 10, 1744
(Conductor: Georg Friedrich Handel )
Jupiter tenor John Beard
Cadmus, King of Thebes bass Henry Reinhold
Semele, daughter to Cadmus, belov'd
by and in love with Jupiter
soprano Elisabeth Duparc "La Francesina"
Athamas, a prince of Bœotia, in love
with, and design'd to marry Semele
alto Daniel Sullivan
Ino, sister to Semele, in love with Athamas mezzo-soprano Esther Young
Somnus bass Henry Reinhold
Apollo tenor John Beard
Juno mezzo-soprano Esther Young
Iris soprano Christina Maria Avoglio
High priest bass Henry Reinhold
Chorus of priests, augurs, loves, zephyrs, nymphs, swains and attendants

[edit] Arias

  • "Hence, hence, Iris hence away!"
  • "Hymen, haste, thy torch prepare!"
  • "I am ever granting, you always complain"
  • "Leave me, loathsome light"
  • "Myself I shall adore"
  • "No, no, I’ll take no less"
  • "Oh Jove, in pity teach me which to choose"
  • "Oh sleep, why dost thou leave me?"
  • "Where'er you walk"
  • "Above measure is the pleasure"

[edit] Selected recordings

  • Anthony Walker, conducting the Sirius Ensemble, with the Cantillation chorus and the soprano Anna Ryberg as Semele, mezzo-sprano Sally-Anne Russell as both Juno and Ino, and tenor Angus Wood as Jupiter. Smaller roles are sung by sopranos Belinda Montgomery and Shelli Gilhome, countertenor Tobias Cole, and bass Stephen Bennett. Taped live in Sydney, Australia in December, 2002. ABC Classics 980047-0.

[edit] E-book

Score of Semele (ed. Friedrich Chrysander, Leipzig 1860)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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