- Serse
"Serse" ("Xerxes") (
HWV 40) is anopera seria byGeorge Frideric Handel . Thelibretto is adapted by an unknown hand from that by Silvio Stampiglia for an earlier opera of the same name byGiovanni Bononcini . Stampiglia's libretto was itself based on one byNicolò Minato that was set byFrancesco Cavalli in 1654."Serse" is considered Handel's most Mozartian opera, and one of his finest. Passion is mixed with
farce andsatire ; the folly ofhuman nature is exposed but never ridiculed. The opera is set in Persia in 480 BC and is very loosely based uponXerxes I of Persia , though there is little in either the libretto or music that is relevant to that setting. Xerxes, originally sung by acastrato , is now generally performed as abreeches role ; that is, it is a male role played by amezzo-soprano .The opening aria, "
Ombra mai fu ", a love song sung by Xerxes to a tree ("Platanus orientalis "), is set to one of Handel's best-known melodies, and is often played in an orchestral arrangement, known as Handel's "largo" (despite being marked "larghetto" in the score).Performance history
It was first performed in
London onApril 15 ,1738 but was not a success. It was withdrawn from London'sHaymarket Theatre after only five performances and forgotten for 250 years.A complete recording was made in 1979 and it was revived on stage in the 1980s. A particularly highly acclaimed production, sung in English, was staged by the
English National Opera in 1985, to mark the 300th anniversary of the composer's birth. Conducted bySir Charles Mackerras , it was directed byNicholas Hytner , who also translated the libretto, and starredAnn Murray in the title role, withValerie Masterson as Romilda,Christopher Robson as Arsamene, andLesley Garrett as Atalanta.Roles
ynopsis
King Xerxes is determined to wed Romilda; Romilda loves Xerxes' brother, Arsamene; Arsamene loves Romilda. Romilda's sister Atalanta is determined to make Arsamene hers.
Xerxes banishes Arsamene, who sends a note to Romilda through his servant Elviro, disguised as a flower vendor, pledging his eternal fidelity, but it is delivered instead to Atalanta, who shows it to her sister claiming that it was addressed to Atalanta. Arsamene and Romilda fight.
Xerxes pursues Romilda, and tells her father Ariodate that Romilda must wed, by the king's command, a member of Xerxes' family, equal in blood to himself. Ariodate mistakenly thinks he is referring to his brother Arsamene rather than himself.
Amastre, Xerxes' fiancée, forsaken by him for Romilda, disguises herself as a man and observes Xerxes. After Arsamene and Romilda wed, Amastre reveals herself to Xerxes, who becomes ashamed of his faithlessness. Amastre accepts his apology.
elected recordings
*A DVD recording of the 1980 stage production was made in 1995, when a revival of this production was staged with the same conductor and cast, and issued by Arthaus Musik.
*EMI recording: in 2003 in Italian with Anne Sofie von Otter and Elizabeth Norberg-Schulz with
William Christie conducting the "Les Arts Florissants". This was issued by Virgin Veritas in 2004. (Texts & translations at emiclassics.com)References
*citation|first=Winton|last=Dean|title=Handel's Operas, 1726-1741|publisher=Boydell Press|year=2006
id=ISBN 1843832682 The second of the two volume definitive reference on the operas of HandelExternal links
*
* [http://www.haendel.it/composizioni/libretti/pdf/serse.pdf Libretto in Italian (PDF file)]
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