Giacomo Meyerbeer – ROBERT LE DIABLE – Valse infernale ‘Noirs démons fantômes’ Kwangchui Youn
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ROBERT LE DIABLE • Opéra en 5 actes • Composer : Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864) • Libretto : Eugène Scribe Casimir Delavigne • First performance : Paris Opéra, 21 November 1831 • SETTING : Palermo (Sicily), 13th century • PLOT : Robert, duke of Normandy, is the son of a devil. Robert’s crimes so excited his vassals that they chased him out of the country. He has taken refuge in Sicily, where he has become engaged to the princess Isabelle. But his arrogance so infuriated the other knights that they were about to kill him when Bertram, a mysterious knight, rescued him. Robert and Bertram have sworn steadfast friendship. However, Bertram is really his father, and wants to damn his son. Following his perfidious advice, Robert gambles and loses his riches, horses and weapons on the eve of the tournament in which he must fight for Isabelle’s hand. The prince of Grenada triumphs in his place and will marry Isabelle. Bertram suggests that Robert use a talisman, a magic branch, to recover all he has lost. This branch must be plucked from the former monastery founded by St Rosalie. There, in the middle of the ruins, ghosts of sacrilegious nuns gather each night for unholy bacchanals. Robert gets the branch, and uses it to overcome Isabelle and her court. Isabelle, however, begs for mercy. Her tears move Robert, who returns to his natural generosity. He breaks the branch, but becomes weak and disarmed. He flees to the cathedral of Palermo. There, Bertram reveals the mystery of his birth and tries to persuade Robert to deliver himself. Alice, Robert’s foster-sister, shows Robert his mother’s testament. Robert cannot make up his mind. At last, the earth opens beneath Bertram’s feet, and Robert, freed from his father’s evil influence, marries the princess. • ‘Robert le Diable’ was the first of Meyerbeer’s Parisian operas, and hugely influential. Chopin proclaimed: ‘It is a masterpiece. Meyerbeer has made himself immortal.’ Berlioz admired the instrumentation; in an article ‘On the Orchestration of Robert le Diable’ for the Revue et gazette musicale, he wrote that the opera ‘provides the most astonishing example of the power of instrumentation when applied to dramatic music’. Liszt and Chopin wrote variations based on the opera, while Wagner’s ‘Tannhäuser’ (1845) owes much to ‘Robert’. • Despite its fame, it is more old-fashioned and less sophisticated than ‘Les Huguenots’ (1836) [ • Giacomo Meyerbeer - LES HUGUENOTS (Ma... ], ‘Le Prophète’ (1849) [ • Giacomo Meyerbeer – LE PROPHÈTE – Prê... ] or ‘L’Africaine / Vasco da Gama’ (1865) [ • Giacomo Meyerbeer - VASCO DA GAMA (L'... ]. It was originally intended as a three act opéra comique, and is closer in spirit to Auber’s ‘Muette de Portici’ (1828) [ • D.F.E. Auber – LA MUETTE DE PORTICI –... ], Rossini’s ‘Guillaume Tell’ (1829) [ • Gioachino Rossini - GUILLAUME TELL - ... ] or Hérold’s ‘Zampa’ (1831) than the later operas. • No. 9 – Récitatif : ‘Encor un de gagné! glorieuse conquête’ • No. 10 – La Valse Infernale : ‘Noirs démons, fantômes’ • Bertram reveals that he is a devil, and prepares to enter the cave where the demons are celebrating an orgy. Soon, Robert will be one of their number. • Bertram, ami du Robert / Robert’s friend (bass): Kwangchui Youn • Conductor: Marc Minkowski • Berlinerstaatsoper Orchestra Chorus • Berlin, 2000
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