Les Danaïdes

Les Danaïdes is an opera by Antonio Salieri, in 5 acts: more specifically, it is a tragédie lyrique. The opera was set to a libretto by Leblanc du Roullet and Baron Tschudi, who in turn adapted the work of Ranieri de' Calzabigi (without permission). Calzabigi originally wrote the libretto of Les Danaïdes for Christoph Willibald Gluck, but the aged composer, who had just experienced a stroke,[1] was unable to meet the Opéra's schedule and so asked Salieri to take it over.[2]

The plot of the opera is based on Greek tragedy and revolves around the deeds of the mythological characters Danaus and Hypermnestra.

Contents

Composition

Emperor Joseph II assured that Salieri wrote the music "almost under the dictée of Gluck," in a letter (dated 31 March 1783) to Count Mercy-Argenteau, the Austrian ambassador in Paris. Then Mercy told the directors of the Opéra that Gluck had composed the first two acts, and Salieri supplied the third act's music (Mercy did not realize the opera was in five acts). Even when the libretto was published, Gluck and Salieri shared billing as the composers.[3]

Though flattered, Gluck was not foolish enough to risk too close an association with young Salieri's work[4] and diplomatically informed the press: "The music of Danaïdes is completely by Salieri, my only part in it having been to make suggestions which he willingly accepted."[2] Gluck, who had been devastated by the failure of his last Paris opera, Echo et Narcisse, was concerned that Les Danaïdes would suffer a similar fate. He wrote to Roullet the same day that the opera premiered, crediting Salieri with the entire work, and the press noted this confession.[3] Salieri made a positive twist on Gluck’s statement, claiming that he was "led by [Gluck’s] wisdom and enlightened by his genius".[5][6].

Performance history

The opera was first performed at the Académie Royale de Musique (Paris Opéra) on the 26th April 1784[7] and was, at the time, so great a success that the theatre commissioned two more works from Salieri.[8]. It was subsequently staged by the Paris Opéra over 120 times up to the 1820s, and in the rest of Europe, as well, in no less than four different editions, some of which reduced to four acts instead of the five ones usual at the Opéra, and translated into different languages such as German. On 22 October 1817, in particular, the fourth edition of the opera was directed by Gaspare Spontini, for the Académie Royale de Musique, in the Salle Montansier of the rue Richelieu, with the addition of a "Gran Bacchanale" written by himself and of other music by Louis-Luc Loiseau de Persuis, Henri-François Berton and Ferdinando Paër. It must have been a revival of this edition (or of a similar one) that delighted, some years later, shortly after his arrival in Paris, the young Berlioz, who would later reveal that he had been, at the same time, exceptionally “excited and disturbed” by Spontini's additions [9][10].

Roles

Cast Voice type Premiere, April 26, 1784[9]
(Conductor: - )
Hypermnestre soprano Antoinette-Cécile de Saint-Huberty
Danaüs bass-baritone Henri Larrivée
Lyncée tenor Étienne Lainez
Pélagus, Commanding Officer of Danaüs bass Jean-Pierre Moreau
Plancippe, sister of Hypermnestre soprano
Three officers 2 tenors and a bass Dufresny (1st officer), J.Rousseau (2nd officer),
Louis-Claude-Armand Chardin, "Chardiny" (3rd officer)

Synopsis

Act I

Danaus and his fifty daughters, the Danaïdes, vow loyalty to their enemy Aegyptus, Danaus's brother. Aegyptus dies and is succeeded by his eldest son, Lynceus (Lyncée). He and his brothers each agree to marry one of the Danaïdes; Danaus instructs his daughters to take revenge by killing their husbands on their wedding night.[11]

Act II

Lynceus's wife Hypermnestra (Hypermnestre) is alone in refusing to obey her father's order, even after Danaus confronts her with the prophecy that he will be murdered himself if she fails to satisfy his lust for vengeance.

Act III

After the wedding ceremony, Hypermnestra manages to escape with Lynceus, just as his brothers are being killed.

Act IV

Danaus is enraged when news of Lynceus's escape reaches him, but he is distracted from his anger when Lynceus storms the city, killing all fifty of the Danaïdes except Hypermnestra and burning the palace to the ground.

Act V

The Danaïdes are sent to Hades where their father is seen chained to a rock, his entrails being torn from him by a vulture. The Furies promise an eternity of suffering.

Music

Salieri's use of trombones to delineate infernal moments in the drama has often been viewed of as a precedent for Mozart's similar orchestration in Don Giovanni. Stylistically, Salieri combined the direct simplicity of Gluck's innovations with the concern for melody of Italian composers, though the frequent use of chorus owes much to French traditions, as did the munificent staging, which much impressed Berlioz.

Hypermnestra's soprano, which dominates the opera in a manner that anticipates the soprano-centered opera of Luigi Cherubini and Gaspare Spontini, is technically well written, but, typical of the opera as a whole, Salieri often seemed incapable of developing the basic material beyond the formulas inherited from Gluck. But the fine soprano role, the tremendously grim finale, and the brevity of Les Danaïdes (ten minutes under two hours) have ensured that the opera has made it onto CD.[2]

Salieri was certainly aware of his role in continuing the Gluckian tradition of the tragédie lyrique, with the attention to the relationship between text and music. The orchestral recitatives, choruses, and ballets also follow the model for French opera supplied by Gluck. Furthermore, the music itself is infused with the 'noble simplicity' that characterizes the older composer's reform operas.[3]

At the same time, Les Danaïdes marked a progression from number opera to the dramatically more consequent through-composed scenic opera.[1] A lyricism associated with Niccolò Piccinni and Antonio Sacchini, who also composed for Paris, can also be heard in Les Danaïdes.

Discography

References and sources

  1. ^ a b Oehms Classics CD (OC 909) description
  2. ^ a b c Rough Guide to Opera, 4th ed., Boyden. ISBN 978-1-84353-538-6
  3. ^ a b c University of Texas's music library
  4. ^ Rice, John (1998). Antonio Salieri & Viennese Opera. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 311. 
  5. ^ Journal de Paris, 18 May 1784
  6. ^ According to Caruselli’s Grande Enciclopedia (volume 2 – article: Danaidi, le – p. 328; volume 4 – article: Salieri, Antonio - p. 1092), Gluck’s behaviour was much more unswerving: he had got the commission from the Opéra and, since he was too weak, or anyway not able, to accomplish it, and since his favourite Salieri might not be accepted as a substitute, he secretly handed the commission over to the Italian operist and credited himself for most of the composition and another musician who enjoyed his confidence, for minor interventions. Only after several performances, when the opera had had the chance of being appreciated for its intrinsic value, he sent round the news, and Salieri officially confirmed, that the latter was the sole composer of the music however inspired he might have been by his great German master.
  7. ^ ItalianOpera.org
  8. ^ Classy Classical blog
  9. ^ a b Amadeus Almanac Accessed 7 September 2009
  10. ^ Sadie, Grove Dictionary, volume one – article: Danaïdes, Les – p. 1058
  11. ^ Downs, Philip D. Classical Music: The Era of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. New York City: W. W. Norton and Company, 1992. Print.

External links