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Di tanti palpiti: a Whitsun Festival crowned by Rossini’s magic in Salzburg

By , 11 June 2025

The Salzburg Whitsun Festival, celebrating the city of Venice, concluded with a gala concert honoring Gioachino Rossini. The program featured excerpts from operas that premiered in the lagoon city, as well as works whose stories unfold there. The festival’s artistic director, Cecilia Bartoli, is one of the most distinguished Rossini interpreters of recent decades. Having performed many of the mezzo-soprano roles Rossini composed – often for his wife, Isabella Colbran – Bartoli owes much of her illustrious career to the great composer.

Sergey Romanovsky and Cecilia Bartoli
© © SF/Marco Borrelli

Gianluca Capuano conducted an orchestral ensemble combining Les Musiciens du Prince and members of the Würth Philharmoniker, delivering a performance of remarkable style and elegance that reflected his profound insight into Rossini. He knows that a Rossini crescendo doesn’t need to be actively "done" – it unfolds naturally. It's written in the score, in the use of instruments. The musicians need simply to allow it to emerge, and when it does in this way, the result is pure magic.

The concert opened with Bartoli performing "Di tanti palpiti", the celebrated cavatina from Tancredi – Rossini’s first major opera seria, which premiered in Venice in 1813. To this day, the aria remains one of his most iconic melodies. Bartoli, with her peerless legato and flawless coloratura, reaffirmed her mastery in this repertoire, delivering a performance of sheer brilliance.

Cecilia Bartoli
© © SF/Marco Borrelli

Bartoli curated an ensemble of colleagues, each taking turns in presenting Rossini’s arias and scenes. Mélissa Petit brought a silvery, luminous soprano to Amenaide’s cavatina from Tancredi, while later she delivered a transcendent performance of “Giusto ciel” from Maometto II – a radiant prayer that showcased her flawless legato and masterful breath control.

Mélissa Petit
© © SF/Marco Borrelli

Giorgi Manoshvili delivered a robust account of Assur’s mad aria “Il dì già cade” from Semiramide, backed by the chorus. His smooth bass boasted formidable power, though one might have wished for greater refinement – a quality that may yet come with maturity.

Sergey Romanovsky began with “Ah! Sì, per voi già sento” from Otello with some hesitancy but soon gained conviction. Joined by Bartoli, he plunged into the murder scene with harrowing intensity. The sequence opened with Desdemona’s grief-laden willow song, “Assisa a piè d’un salice”, which Bartoli imbued with devastating pathos. Romanovsky’s Otello then erupted in fury, his tenor blazing with violent resonance, high notes flung at Desdemona like daggers. A performance of searing theatricality.

Gianluca Capuano
© © SF/Marco Borrelli

The concert's second half saw the chorus and orchestra shift into higher gear. The triumphant "Ergi omai la fronte altera" from Semiramide and the sweeping overture to Maometto II emerged as highlights, delivered with thrilling precision. The evening culminated in L'italiana in Algeri's famous concertato "Nella testa ho un campanello", taken at a breakneck tempo that electrified the hall. A generous parade of encores – dominated by Il barbiere di Siviglia selections and delivered with sparkling wit – sent the audience home beaming, their heads still ringing with Rossini's irrepressible joy.

****1
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“Bartoli ... reaffirmed her mastery in this repertoire, delivering a performance of sheer brilliance.”
Reviewed at Felsenreitschule, Salzburg on 9 June 2025
Programme to include:
Rossini, La cambiale di matrimonio (The Marriage Contract): excerpts
Rossini, Tancredi: excerpts
Rossini, Semiramide: excerpts
Rossini, La scala di seta (The Silken Ladder): excerpts
Rossini, L'italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers): excerpts
Gianluca Capuano, Conductor
Mélissa Petit, Soprano
Cecilia Bartoli, Mezzo-soprano
John Osborn, Tenor
Ildebrando D'Arcangelo, Bass-baritone
Chœur de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo
Stefano Visconti, Choirmaster / chorus director
Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco
Musicians of the Würth Philharmonic Orchestra
Bartoli's La Cenerentola at the Concertgebouw
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Bartoli celebrates Cenerentola in Dortmund
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Une Bohème de tradition par Jean-Louis Grinda à Monte-Carlo
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Andrea Chénier ou la Révolution française à l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo
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Lakmé par l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo : Sabine Devieilhe à son acmé
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Anna Netrebko et Yusif Eyvazov dans Manon Lescaut à Monte-Carlo
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