In recent years, Chelsea Opera Group has become well known for its work in the rarer repertoire, so its concert performance of Verdi’s Il trovatore at the Cadogan Hall was a departure from the norm.
Premiered in 1853, Trovatore was an immediate success, the bewildering and fantastical plot a perfect fit for Verdi's musical and theatrical instincts, unleashing some of his most popular and most tuneful music. The story, though it tries as hard as it can to be tragic, cannot be viewed without incredulous laughter. One advantage of a concert performance of the work is that any questions of staging are dismissed and one can focus entirely on the music. A classic example of his 'galley years', the opera is famous for its need for four spectacular singers, and this has generally restricted productions to major companies which can afford to take such dents in their budget; consequently an initial concern was whether COG would have the resources to assemble such a cast.
In Marianne Cornetti, we had a sensational Azucena. She has sung the role throughout the world and her assumption of the part at this performance was total. She delivered a masterclass in concert performance: singing entirely from memory, she dominated the stage, writhing and glaring and somehow making one forget that Azucena must win the prize for worst mother in the whole of opera. Her voice is enormous – in many respects too big for Cadogan Hall – and her higher register remains as fresh as ever. Cornetti handled the top notes with ease, displaying fine breath control and particularly exquisite raw colouring at the lower levels. My only very minor criticism is that once or twice sheer volume dwarfed any subtlety in her expression. "Condotta ell'era in ceppi" was a superb piece of vocal acting; Cornetti vividly brought Azucena's mental instability to voice.
Sally Silver was a moving Leonora and handled the demands of the role well. Her top notes verged on the shrill at times, but her tone was generally of sufficient purity for the part and she coped with the coloratura reasonably well. Leonora's showcase aria "D'amor sull'ali rosee", often deployed by soprano legends, is phenomenally difficult, but Silver brought both technical skill and great emotion to it, and justified the applause she received. A slight irritant in stage manner was that whilst she very admirably tried to avoid the music stand by placing it to one side, at areas where she was uncertain she often turned her head to consult it for extended periods, to the detriment of many on the other side.