Opera Daily đ¶ â La Fille du RĂ©giment
This week's Opera Daily is a throwback featuring a tenor aria from the French opera La Fille du RĂ©giment by Gaetano Donizetti
đ Hello to the new Opera Daily subscribers who have joined us this week. I hope youâre sitting on a plushy couch with a warm beverage and enjoying your weekend. You can check out the complete Opera Daily archives and the playlist on YouTube for more selections. If you were forwarded this email by a friend, join us by subscribing here:
You may have missed this incredible performance if you're new around here.
Letâs get to it.
âAh! mes mis, quel jour de fĂȘte!â, La Fille du RĂ©giment
đ§Â Listen here (4 minute listen): Tenor Lawrence Brownlee singing live âAh! mes mis, quel jour de fĂȘte!â a tenor aria from Act 1 of the French opera La Fille du RĂ©giment by Gaetano Donizetti.
This aria requires the tenor (the highest naturally occurring voice type in adult males) to sing nine high Câs in only two minutes!
I am confident in saying that there are only a handful of tenors who can sing them perfectly. And Larry Brownlee is one of those tenors.
He is singing the role of Tonio here, and as Iâve mentioned in the past, opera is a sport, and Brownlee is a world-class athlete. Larryâs voice is undeniably beautiful, and heâs hands down one of the best bel canto tenors alive. Bel canto (which means âbeautiful singingâ in Italian) is a style that has two main features: 1) very fast melodies that highlight the agility and flexibility of the singerâs voice, 2) slower, more sustained passages that highlight the singerâs stamina and control. You will hear both of these in this aria.
The Daughter of the Regiment (La Fille du RĂ©giment in French) takes place in Tyrol, a region in the Alps, in the early nineteenth century. The story is about Marie, who has fallen in love with Tonio from a rival nation. Tonio joins the regiment to marry Marie, and at the beginning of this aria, he approaches some of the members and explains that he has joined because he loves the regimentâs âdaughterâ.
In the cabaletta âPour mon Ăąmeâ, after asking the members of the regiment to allow him to marry Marie and receiving a resounding âyes!â, Tonio sings about his happiness of finally being united with his love. He promises to take care of her and protect her forever.
What a prospect lies before me!
Her heart is mine and so is her hand!
On happy day!
Here I am, enlisted and engaged!
I am a soldier, I am a soldier,
I can claim her now!
Want more?
The Duchess of Krakenthorp is a speaking role in opera. Several non-singing celebrities have played the part, including Kathleen Turner at The Metropolitan Opera in 2018 and Ruth Bader Ginsburg at Washington National Opera in 2016.
La Fille du RĂ©giment is an example of âopĂ©ra comique,â a genre that features spoken text between individual songs. Unlike recitative (the spoken-like singing used for dialogue in opera), this spoken text is not accompanied by music. Despite the name âcomic opera,â these pieces didnât necessarily have to be funny; Bizetâs Carmen, a famously tragic opera, originally featured spoken dialogue and was labeled an opĂ©ra comique. The term is also the name of an opera house in Paris where operas of this genre were performed and La Fille du RĂ©giment premiered in 1840.
I think the La Fille du Regiment is one of Luciano Pavarotti's greatest recordings. While I prefer Larry(!), hereâs Pavarotti singing the aria:
Grateful for your time and ears,
Michele
PS. Missed our last edition? We featured Cecilia Bartoli singing âLascia ch'io piangaâ from the Italian opera Rinaldo.
â€ïžÂ Enjoyed this piece? Hit the heart to like it. It helps others find Opera Daily.
For me the star of this opera was always the great soprano, Natalie Dessay! Such a powerhouse - a french dynamo!!đ€©đđŒâ„ïž
So enjoyed this - thank you Michele