Thursday, February 1, 2018

February 1, 1896: Puccini's La Bohème premiered

Last updated August 31, 2018.

La Bohème

Giacomo Puccini (composer)


Composed: 1896


First Performed: February 1, 1896


Sales: --


Peak: --

Quotable: --


Genre: classical > opera


Parts/Movements:

    Act I:

  1. No. 1a, "Questo Mar Rosso"
  2. No. 1b, "Nei cieli bigi" (Rudolph)
  3. No. 1c, "Pensier profondo! Giusto color!"
  4. No. 1d, "Legna! Sigari! Bordo!"
  5. No. 1e, "Si pou? Chi e la? Benoit!"
  6. No. 1f, "Io resto per terminar l'articolo"
  7. No. 1g, "Non sono in vena. Chi e la?"
  8. No. 1h, "Si sente meglio? Si. Qui ce tanto freddo"
  9. No. 2, "Che gelida manina"
  10. No. 3, "Si. Mi chiamano Mimi"
  11. No. 4, "O soave fanciulla"

    Act II:

  12. No. 5, "Aranci, datteri!"
  13. No. 6a, "Chi guardi?"
  14. No. 6b, "Eccoci qui!"
  15. No. 7a, "Come un facchino"
  16. No. 7b, "Quando me'n vo' soletta la via" (Musetta's Waltz Song)

    Act III:

  17. No. 8, "Ohe, la, le guardie"
  18. No. 9, "Mimi?!... Speravo di trovarvi"
  19. No. 10a, "Marcello... Finalmente"
  20. No. 10b, "Mimi e una civetta"
  21. No. 11, "Donde lieta usci" (Mimi's Farewell)
  22. No. 12, "Addio dolce svegliare"

    Act IV:

  23. No. 13a, "In un coupe?"
  24. No. 13b, "O Mimi, tu piu non torni"
  25. No. 14, "Che ora sia?"
  26. No. 15, "Musetta!... C'e Mimi"
  27. No. 16, "Vecchia zimarra" (Coat Song)
  28. No. 17a, "Sono andati?"
  29. No. 17b, "Torno al nido"
  30. No. 17c, "Oh Dio! Mimi!"

Average Duration: 104:00

Review:

“It was perhaps a common interest in the nineteenth century cultural fad of Bohemianism that led Giacomo Puccini and his contemporary Ruggiero Leoncavallo to decide to compose operas on the theme of Parisian starving artists. Whatever the initial catalysts, an 1893 meeting of the two composers, in which Puccini casually mentioned his La bohème project, induced the composers to publish in the Milanese press notices in which each laid a claim of priority to the subject. The validity of Puccini’s claim is by no means certain. Nevertheless, although contemporary critics received Puccini’s La bohème coolly after its premiere under Arturo Toscanini in Turin on February 1, 1896, it was a hit with the public, and has endured as a favorite in the operatic repertoire.” JH

La bohème was the first libretto for Puccini on which Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa collaborated. By 1893, Puccini was considering composing an opera on Henri Murger's novel Scènes de la vie de bohème. Murger’s work, originally published (1845-1849) as a series of stories in a French journal, led an intermediary existence as a stage play before being transformed into a novel. Murger’s novel enjoyed a favorable reception in Italy shortly after its initial publication and first translation into Italian in 1859.” JH

“Some of Puccini’s loveliest lyrical moments grace La bohème. Rodolfo's first aria Che gelida manina in Act One, introduces a primarily conjunct melody of touching simplicity, conveying the innocence of pure love. This melody returns at the end of Act One, as Mimì and Rodolfo exit, and again, in Act Four as Mimì, on her deathbed, reminisces with Rodolfo on their first encounter. Puccini’s debt to Wagner’s leitmotivic procedure is also evident in his association of the music from Mimì’s Act One aria Mi chiamo Mimì, with Mimì herself, when it accompanies her later entrance in Act Three. This technique of associating music with characters incorporates timbral as well as thematic elements. The magical, sustained string instrumentation for the second-inversion D major triad that announces Mimì’s entrance in Act One is also the principal color in the orchestral accompaniment of her signature aria. Classic Puccinian orchestration and harmonic language mark the depiction of daybreak that opens Act Three. Here, flutes in parallel fifths peck out a modal melody, punctuated at phrase ends by subtle, sustained upper strings over tremolo cellos. A harp solo adds a delicate brilliance to the sparse orchestral palette and foreshadows the hazy timbre of the off-stage women's chorus. Puccini’s expressive use of the orchestra is linked most intimately with the drama in Act Four. After Schaunard tells Marcello of Mimì’s death, the orchestra drops out, leaving only a sustained A in the double bass to convey a sense of dramatic expectation and musical continuity. Even the soloists leave their songful world for one of spoken declamation until the orchestra explodes with C sharp minor triads in the brass, reflecting Rodolfo’s realization of Mimì’s death and accompanying his anguished cries.” JH


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