Opera Daily đ¶ â Love Duets đ
This week's Opera Daily features an OD throwback featuring The Love Duet from Pucciniâs Tosca and The Cherry Duet đ from Lâamico Fritz
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For the summer season, Iâll be publishing some popular Opera Daily throwbacks from time to time.
Todayâs throwback features two of my favorite duetsâ and if youâre new here, you may have missed it.
Letâs get to it.
The Cherry Duet from Lâamico Fritz
Today we are listening to âSuzel, buon dĂŹâŠTutto tace,â (popularly known as âThe Cherry Duetâ ) from Act 2 of the Italian opera Lâamico Fritz by Pietro Mascagni.
Itâs probably the most charming and wholesome love duet ever written. Itâs hypnotizing. If you listen closely, you can hear the cherries being plucked from the tree.
đ§ Listening Example (8 minutes of bliss): Soprano Mirella Freni (Suzel) and Tenor Luciano Pavarotti (Fritz) sing âSuzel, buon dĂŹâŠTutto tace,âfrom Act 2 of the Italian opera Lâamico Fritz by Pietro Mascagni, Orchestra of the Royal Opera Opera
Lâamico Fritz is a simple but beautiful love story, and this duet is the heart of the opera both musically and structurally. You will often hear this duet on the concert stage; the full opera is rarely performed. You might attribute that to its simple storyline (some say weak), but I think the light-hearted nature makes it charming.
Fritz Kobus is an affluent landowner who has vowed to remain a bachelor. However, Fritzâs friend, David, bets him his vineyard that within a year, he will get married. On Fritzâs birthday, Suzel, the daughter of Fritzâs tenant, arrives with a gift of flowers.
Suzel is out picking cherries one day, and Fritz joins her, and they sing this duet, which marks the beginning of the love (or at least the awareness of love) between Suzel and Fritz. (Eventually, with the help of David, Fritz and Suzel get married.)
Want more?
The singer/songwriter Rufus Wainwright uses the melody from âThe Cherry Duetâ in his piece Greek Song. Can you hear it?
Tito Schipa and Mafalda Favero are also worth a listen, and if you are curious, mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli recorded this duet with Pavarotti in 1997.
If you are looking for a full version of the opera, the EMI recording with Pavarotti, Freni, and Vincenzo Sardinero as David with the Covent Garden Orchestra is fantastic. It was recorded in 1968, and both Pavarotti and Freni are in amazing voice.
Pietro Mascagni is an Italian composer who died in 1945. In 1890, he wrote the one-act opera, Cavalleria Rusticana (often paired with Leoncavallo's Pagliacci). In 1891, Lâamico Fritz premiered in Rome (the opera is short and sweetâ1 hour and 30 minutes).
The Love Duet from Pucciniâs Tosca
Tosca is convinced she overheard Cavaradossi talking to another woman in this scene. Then she sees Cavaradossiâs new painting of a woman (that is not her!) and turns super jealous. Cavaradossi attempts to calm her down with âQualâocchio al mondoâ, telling her, âwhat eyes in the world could compare to yours!â She leaves, still demanding that he change the eyes in the painting. đ€Ș
We are featuring Tenor Luciano Pavarotti and Soprano Shirley Verrett in this scene from the 1978 Metropolitan Opera production of Tosca.
đ§ Listening Example (5 minute listen): Tenor Luciano Pavarotti (Mario Cavaradossi) and Soprano Shirley Verrett (Tosca) singing The Love Duet from Pucciniâs Tosca, James Conlon, conductor, Tito Gobbi, director, Metropolitan Opera Production, 1978
TOSCAÂ (insisting) Ah, those eyes...
CAVARADOSSI What eyes in the world can compare
with your black and glowing eyes?
It is in them that my whole being fastens,
eyes soft with love and rich with anger...
Where in the whole world are eyes
to compare with your black eyes?TOSCA (won over)
Oh, how well you know the art
of capturing women's hearts!
(still persisting in her idea)
But let her eyes be black ones!
Want more?
Here are some other interpretations of the piece:
Giuseppe di Stefano, Maria Callas [**HIGHLY RECOMMEND**]
Placido Domingo, Mirella Freni
Jonas Kaufmann, Angela GheorghiuHereâs a link to the full Tosca production with Callas/Di Stefano/Gobbi from 1953.
Thank you for reading (and listening), and feel free to hit reply with feedback. I would love to hear from you.
Michele
PS. If you missed last weekâs selection, we featured a recording of Giuseppe Verdiâs Falstaff w/ Giulietta Simionato, Rosalind Elias, Robert Merrill, Mirella Freni, and Alfredo Kraus.
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Did Fritz ever meet Floria ?