Ali Baba (Cherubini)
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Ali Baba, ou les quarante voleurs is a tragédie lyrique in four acts plus a prologue, with libretto by Eugène Scribe and Mélesville and music by Luigi Cherubini. The story is based on Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves from One Thousand and One Nights. It was premiered by the Paris Opera in the Salle Le Peletier on July 22, 1833. It was Cherubini's last opera, though he lived for nearly a decade longer. It is also his longest opera, lasting for about three and a half hours at the premiere.[1]
Some of the music was adapted and rewritten from his Koukourgi (written in 1793, but unproduced; first performed in 2010).
Performance history
It was premiered in Paris on July 22, 1833. It was not successful, with Hector Berlioz calling it "one of the feeblest things Cherubini ever wrote."[2] It ran for five performances.[1] Felix Mendelssohn discussed the opera in his letter of February 7, 1834.
It was resurrected by La Scala in 1963, but again faced negative reviews.[2] A live recording was made and was subsequently issued.
The overture has found a place in the concert repertoire for symphony orchestras.
Roles
Role | Voice type | Premiere cast, 22 July 1833 (Conductor: — ) |
La Scala revival 1963 (Conductor: Nino Sanzogno) |
---|---|---|---|
Ali Baba | baritone | Nicolas Levasseur | Wladimiro Ganzarolli |
Delia | soprano | Laure Cinti-Damoreau | Teresa Stich-Randall |
Morgiane | soprano | Cornélie Falcon | pl |
Nadir | tenor | Adolphe Nourrit | Alfredo Kraus |
Aboul-Hassan | baritone | Alexandre-Aimé Prévost | Paolo Montarsolo |
Calaf | tenor | Jean-Étienne-August Eugène Massol | Piero de Palma |
Ours-Kan | bass | Henri-Bernard Dabadie | Lorenzo Testi |
Thamar | bass | Nicolas-Prosper Dérivis | it |
Phaor | tenor | it |
Synopsis
Nadir is in love with Delia, the daughter of wealthy merchant Ali Baba, but desperate to marry her because he is poor. Ali Baba has promised Delia to the head collector Aboul-Hassan. However, Nadir fortunately found a treasure hidden in a cave by a gang of robbers and asks for Delia's hand. Ali Baba wants to know the secret of Nadir's wealth and is led to the cave, where it remains trapped and is captured by the thieves. While the robbers have taken possession of a load of bales of coffee Ali Baba was smuggling, Aboul-Hassan, furious at the thought of not being able to have Delia, kidnapped her. The robbers then ask a ransom to release Ali Baba and try to storm the house of the merchant hiding in bales of coffee. The situation seems to change for the worse for Nadir and his men, but Aboul-Hassan and his soldiers come and order that the bales be burned and the leaders of the gang arrested.
Releases
- 1963 - Wladimiro Ganzarolli (Alì Babà), Teresa Stich-Randall (Delia), Orianna Santunione (Morgiane), Alfredo Kraus (Nadir), Paolo Montarsolo (Aboul-Hassan), Piero de Palma (Calaf), Lorenzo Testi (Ours-Kan), Agostino Ferrin (Thamar), Virgilio Carbonari (Phaor) - Conductor: Nino Sanzogno - Orchestra and Chorus of La Scala Theater - live recording - LP: E.J. Smith «The Golden Age of Opera» EJS 393; Mauro R. Fuguette MRF C 05; Melodram MEL 170. CD: Nuova Era 2361/2[3][4]
Notes
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References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Ali Baba (Cherubini): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Pages with reference errors
- Interlanguage link template link number
- Interlanguage link template existing link
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from A Dictionary of Music and Musicians with a vb parameter
- Articles incorporating text from A Dictionary of Music and Musicians with Wikisource reference
- Operas by Luigi Cherubini
- 1833 operas