Program Books/The English Concert (2023)

The English Concert

Sunday, November 19, 2023, 3pm
Zellerbach Hall

This performance will include a 20-minute intermission following Act I and a 15-minute intermission following Act II.

The performance will last approximately three hours and 30 minutes, including the two intermissions.

This performance is made possible, in part, by Bernice Greene, The Estate of Ross E. Armstrong, and an anonymous Patron Sponsor.

From the Executive and Artistic Director

Jeremy Geffen

November is always a busy month at Cal Performances, and once again this season, I can’t think of a time period that so clearly displays the impressive depth and breadth of our programming. In the coming weeks alone, we’ll run the gamut of live performance, including classical-music recitals with star instrumentalists cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason (Nov 1) and harpsichordist Jean Rondeau (Nov 5); the brilliant ensemble playing of early-music champions Le Consort (Nov 8) and the Takács Quartet (Nov 12); a return visit by the great San Francisco Symphony, performing under Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen in a concert featuring the world premiere of a new work by Jens Ibsen and a solo turn by the orchestra’s principal clarinetist Carey Bell (Nov 10); a brilliant new program by the always popular Silkroad Ensemble under artistic director Rhiannon Giddens (Nov 17); our annual visit by The English Concert in an all-star concert performance of Handel’s Rodelina (Nov 19); cutting-edge jazz from the legendary trio of pianist Brad Mehldau (Nov 11); and highly anticipated appearances by theater/cabaret sensations John Cameron Mitchell and Amber Martin (Nov 4) and Broadway superstar Kristin Chenoweth (Nov 15).

And that’s only the start! As we continue through the season, you’ll find more than 80 carefully curated events designed to appeal to the eclectic interests and adventurous sensibilities of Bay Area audiences. In total, this year’s schedule features nearly 30 companies, ensembles, and solo artists new to our program, offering a wide range of opportunities to discover unfamiliar performers and artworks. There’s plenty to enjoy, including six world premieres, six Cal Performances co-commissions, nearly one dozen local and regional premieres, and the West Coast premieres of Taylor Mac & Matt Ray’s Bark of Millions and Nathalie Joachim’s Ki moun ou ye (Who are you?).

Cal Performances continues to invest in ongoing relationships with established and acclaimed artistic partners, with upcoming presentations including a landmark collaboration between Germany’s Pina Bausch Foundation, Senegal’s École des Sables, and the UK’s Sadler’s Wells theater in the first-ever Bay Area performances of Bausch’s pioneering The Rite of Spring (1975), as well as the renewal of a multi-season residency by The Joffrey Ballet, which this year will present its first full-length narrative ballet, Anna Karenina, at Zellerbach Hall. And I’m especially pleased that in March 2024, the renowned pianist Mitsuko Uchida will join us as Artist in Residence for two special concerts as well as additional opportunities for the campus and wider Bay Area community to engage with her singular artistry.

A focus of the season will be our multi-dimensional Illuminations programming, which once again will connect the work of world-class artists to the intellectual life and scholarship at UC Berkeley via performances and public programs investigating a pressing theme—this season, “Individual & Community.” Concepts of “individual” and “community” have been at the forefront of public discourse in recent years, with some models increasing polarization and radicalization within our society. Questions have emerged as to how we can best nurture a sense of community and how the groups we associate with impact our own sense of self. Given our fast-evolving social landscape, how can we retain and celebrate the traits that make each of us unique, while still thriving in a world that demands cooperation and collaboration? With the performing arts serving as our guide and compass, our 2023–24 “Individual & Community” programming will explore the tensions that come into play when balancing the interests of the individual with those of the group.

Please make sure to check out our website for complete information. We’re thrilled to share all the details with you, and to welcome you once again to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Jeremy GeffenNovember is always a busy month at Cal Performances, and once again this season, I can’t think of a time period that so clearly displays the impressive depth and breadth of our programming. In the coming weeks alone, we’ll run the gamut of live performance, including classical-music recitals with star instrumentalists cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason (Nov 1) and harpsichordist Jean Rondeau (Nov 5); the brilliant ensemble playing of early-music champions Le Consort (Nov 8) and the Takács Quartet (Nov 12); a return visit by the great San Francisco Symphony, performing under Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen in a concert featuring the world premiere of a new work by Jens Ibsen and a solo turn by the orchestra’s principal clarinetist Carey Bell (Nov 10); a brilliant new program by the always popular Silkroad Ensemble under artistic director Rhiannon Giddens (Nov 17); our annual visit by The English Concert in an all-star concert performance of Handel’s Rodelina (Nov 19); cutting-edge jazz from the legendary trio of pianist Brad Mehldau (Nov 11); and highly anticipated appearances by theater/cabaret sensations John Cameron Mitchell and Amber Martin (Nov 4) and Broadway superstar Kristin Chenoweth (Nov 15).

And that’s only the start! As we continue through the season, you’ll find more than 80 carefully curated events designed to appeal to the eclectic interests and adventurous sensibilities of Bay Area audiences. In total, this year’s schedule features nearly 30 companies, ensembles, and solo artists new to our program, offering a wide range of opportunities to discover unfamiliar performers and artworks. There’s plenty to enjoy, including six world premieres, six Cal Performances co-commissions, nearly one dozen local and regional premieres, and the West Coast premieres of Taylor Mac & Matt Ray’s Bark of Millions and Nathalie Joachim’s Ki moun ou ye (Who are you?).

Cal Performances continues to invest in ongoing relationships with established and acclaimed artistic partners, with upcoming presentations including a landmark collaboration between Germany’s Pina Bausch Foundation, Senegal’s École des Sables, and the UK’s Sadler’s Wells theater in the first-ever Bay Area performances of Bausch’s pioneering The Rite of Spring (1975), as well as the renewal of a multi-season residency by The Joffrey Ballet, which this year will present its first full-length narrative ballet, Anna Karenina, at Zellerbach Hall. And I’m especially pleased that in March 2024, the renowned pianist Mitsuko Uchida will join us as Artist in Residence for two special concerts as well as additional opportunities for the campus and wider Bay Area community to engage with her singular artistry.

A focus of the season will be our multi-dimensional Illuminations programming, which once again will connect the work of world-class artists to the intellectual life and scholarship at UC Berkeley via performances and public programs investigating a pressing theme—this season, “Individual & Community.” Concepts of “individual” and “community” have been at the forefront of public discourse in recent years, with some models increasing polarization and radicalization within our society. Questions have emerged as to how we can best nurture a sense of community and how the groups we associate with impact our own sense of self. Given our fast-evolving social landscape, how can we retain and celebrate the traits that make each of us unique, while still thriving in a world that demands cooperation and collaboration? With the performing arts serving as our guide and compass, our 2023–24 “Individual & Community” programming will explore the tensions that come into play when balancing the interests of the individual with those of the group.

Please make sure to check out our website for complete information. We’re thrilled to share all the details with you, and to welcome you once again to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Synopsis

Upon his death, the King of Lombardy left his domains in equal portions to his three children: Bertarido, Eduige, and Gundeberto. Also aspiring to these lands is Grimoaldo, Duke of Benevento, who is wooing Eduige. The avaricious Gundeberto has now been killed, and it is believed that Bertarido has also died, leaving behind his wife, Rodelinda, as Queen of Milan.

ACT I: In the royal palace, Rodelinda mourns for her husband, along with their son, Flavio. Since Grimoaldo has seized power, she is now his prisoner. Grimoaldo offers the throne back to her if she will marry him. Despite her precarious situation, Rodelinda refuses him. Once pledged to Grimoaldo, the spurned Eduige now vows vengeance on Grimoaldo.

Unbeknownst to anyone except his faithful aide Unulfo, Bertarido is actually alive and in hiding nearby. Unseen, he watches the weeping Rodelinda as she and their son bring flowers to his memorial monument. Grimoaldo’s ruthless councilor Garibaldo arrives with another offer of marriage from Grimoaldo; if she refuses again, her son will be killed. When she finally accepts, the eavesdropping Bertarido is consumed with jealous rage; Unulfo forcefully prevents him from revealing himself.

ACT II: Rodelinda announces her terms for marriage: she will only wed Grimoaldo if he personally kills Flavio before her eyes. Grimoaldo recoils at this, as Rodelinda suspected he would. Garibaldo urges the wavering Grimoaldo to kill the boy, but Grimoaldo refuses. Unulfo rushes to Bertarido to reassure him of his wife’s fidelity.

Eduige finds her brother Bertarido’s hiding place and promises to help him win back his wife and son. Acting as go-between, Unulfo tells Rodelinda that Bertarido is alive and brings them together. Grimoaldo comes upon the happily reunited couple and threatens Bertarido with imprisonment. Rodelinda and Bertarido sing their anguished goodbys before he is led away.

ACT III: Eduige and Unulfo plot Bertarido’s escape from prison. Garibaldo urges Grimoaldo to execute Bertarido. When Unulfo breaks into Bertarido’s prison cell, Bertarido, thinking he is one of the guards, stabs him with his sword. Not seriously wounded, Unulfo leads Bertarido to the secret escape route Eduige has prepared. Finding her way to the empty cell, Rodelinda and Flavio discover Unulfo’s blood on the floor and fear the worst. Rodelinda is overcome with despair.

Meanwhile, Grimoaldo, tormented by his conscience, seeks sleep in the palace gardens. Garibaldi discovers him there and, eager to usurp the throne for himself, is about to kill him. Bertarido leaps from his hiding place and strikes down Garibaldo. Chastened, Grimoaldo now reveals his change of heart and relinquishes the throne of Milan to Bertarido and Rodelinda. And he makes amends to Eduige by offering to wed her. All express their joy and hail a brighter future.

About the Performance

The Making of a Masterpiece
In the mid 1720s, George Frideric Handel, now in his late thirties, was at the peak of his career in London. As noted conductor Jane Glover summarizes in her engaging new biography Handel in London, “There were many positive elements in his life: financial and domestic freedom, court approbation, the Royal Academy of Music, the best singers and musicians in Europe, a supportive team in his workshop, and, for the most part, trusted and invigorating colleagues.”

In 1723, Handel moved into a new five-story townhouse at 25 Brook Street in London’s fashionable Grosvenor neighborhood; there he would live, compose prolifically, and work with his creative team until his death in 1759. The stars were now perfectly aligned for him, and the result was the “Miracle Year” of 1724 and 1725 when he created a trio of his greatest operas: Giulio Cesare (premiered February 24, 1724), Tamerlano (October 31, 1724), and Rodelinda (February 13, 1725).

Not to be confused with today’s British conservatory of the same name, the early 18th Royal Academy was a consortium of prominent Londoners—including King George I, a devoted opera lover—who combined their considerable financial resources to sponsor Italian opera in London. In 1719, they hired Handel as their music director and chief composer and established their new company at the King’s Theatre in the Haymarket.

In writing three operas within such a short period, Handel was not leaning on a formulaic blueprint, for each of these operas is radically different from the others. Set in ancient Egypt, Giulio Cesare is a tragi-comedy—with considerable emphasis on the comic element—of Julius Caesar’s early years as he aids the young Cleopatra in reclaiming the Egyptian throne from her brother Ptolomy. By contrast, Tamerlano is pure tragedy and one of Handel’s darkest works: a story about the Tartar conqueror Tamburlaine and his abuse of his noble Turkish captive Bajazet. Though it also has strong tragic elements, Rodelinda, Regina de’ Longobardi (“Rodelinda, Queen of the Lombards,” to give its full title) is a domestic drama about the power of conjugal love (a theme Beethoven would take up nearly a century later in Fidelio).

Vital to the success of these operas was Handel’s trusty right hand, librettist Nicola Haym, who took unwieldy stories from centuries past and shaped them into compelling dramas. Rodelinda’s plot was derived from the eighth-century’s Paul the Deacon, who chronicled the travails of the Lombardian kings of the seventh century. In 1652, the classical French dramatist Pierre Corneille turned this story into the play Pertharite, roi de Lombards—unfortunately so unsuccessful that it caused him to cease writing plays for seven years! In 1710, Antonio Salvi salvaged this for an opera libretto that was subsequently used by a number of composers. Not satisfied with its ponderous succession of recitatives and arias, Handel directed Haym to drastically overhaul it; the result was an exceptionally swift-moving plot that keeps audiences involved for its duration.

Rodelinda’s Richly Drawn Characters
As biographer Jonathan Keates wrote, “If Handel’s operas, like those of almost every other 18th-century composer, are primarily focused on the singer as vocal artist, they are also concerned with the credible presentation of human feeling.” Handel’s genius for creating multifaceted, fully rounded characters through music far exceeded his many competitors. And this lifelong bachelor also delighted in producing memorable female characters—like Agrippina, Alcina, and Cleopatra—who effortlessly dominate their operas. Though she is more virtuous than those three, Rodelinda is as strong as any of them. She is the courageous heroine in a story that lacks truly heroic men, and she fights fiercely for her son, for the unblemished memory of her supposedly deceased husband, Bertarido, and for her own honor and integrity. “Rodelinda’s dignified resistance in a male-dominated society comes across as unexpectedly modern,” says Harry Bicket.

The composer wrote this magnificent role for his current leading prima donna Francesca Cuzzoni, who had also created Cleopatra. The Italian soprano was peerless in her technique and in the beauty of her sound. A contemporary musician remembered her thus: “It was difficult for the hearer to determine whether she most excelled in slow or rapid airs. …so grateful and touching was the natural tone of her voice that she rendered pathetic whatever she sang …”

In his arias for Rodelinda, Handel capitalized on all these qualities. When we first meet her, imprisoned with her son in a dank apartment, her doleful minor-mode aria “Ho perduto il caro sposo” shows her weighed down by grief for Bertarido and by the apparent hopelessness of her situation. But moments later, when the usurper Grimoaldo arrives with a proposal of marriage, the pride and steel in her character comes to the fore as she rejects him in “L’empio rigor del fato,” an aria lashed by furious violins. Later as she takes her son, Flavio, to visit Bertarido’s memorial monuments, she reveals her vulnerable side in the exquisitely beautiful “Ombre, piante, urne funeste,” an echo aria in which her drooping phrases are imitated by solo flute. To compliment his female protagonist, Handel chose an orchestra that omitted the brass instruments and drums of war, focusing instead on the gentler colors of flutes, recorders, and oboes with strings.


First edition of Rodelinda, 1725

In Act II, Rodelinda is caught in a vise as Grimoaldo forces her to choose between marrying him or letting her son die. Expertly reading the weakness of his resolve, she turns the tables on him by agreeing to his proposal, but stipulating he must first kill Flavio before her very eyes. We know that Handel wrote the text himself for “Spietati,” her extraordinary aria condemning Grimoaldo and his counselor, the more ruthless Garibaldo. Dissatisfied with Haym’s words for this ultimate confrontation between good and evil, he penned a briefer, sharper denunciation. And instead of composing a customary Baroque rage aria bristling with coloratura, he created spare phrases that make each word sting.

When Unulfo tells Rodelinda that her husband is actually alive, the enchanting aria “Ritorna, o caro” shows her softer side and how deeply she loves Bertarido. Set to a lilting siciliano rhythm, it is one of those elegantly simple Handelian melodies that cling in the memory. But in Act III, when the plot to free Bertarido from prison seems to have failed and that he has died in the attempt, Rodelinda is finally reduced to her lowest ebb, no longer wishing to live. Handel portrays her emotional collapse in one of his greatest Largo-tempo laments “Se’l mio duol.” In the orchestra, bassoons and recorders mourn with her.

Balancing Rodelinda is the primo uomo role of her husband, Bertarido, the rightful ruler of the Lombards. Handel wrote this part for the most popular singer of the day in London, the castrato alto Francesco Bernardi who was known profession­ally as Il Senesino for his birthplace of Siena. The composer and flautist Johann Quantz described him: “He had a powerful, clear, equal, and sweet contralto voice, with a perfect intonation and an excellent shake [trill]. His manner of singing was masterly and his elocution unrivaled.”

As a character, Bertarido is impulsive and driven by his emotions, especially his passion for his wife. He tends to alternate between passive self-pity and ill-considered action as when he stabs his true friend, the wise counselor Unulfo, who is always trying to save Bertarido from his worst instincts. Though he is the rightful ruler of a country, he seems little interested in recovering his throne.

If these qualities do not make him a genuinely heroic figure, they do provide Handel with varied opportunities for marvelous arias. The most famous of them—indeed one of Handel’s best-loved arias—is his introductory song in Act I: the meltingly tender “Dove sei?”. Emergin smoothly from the preceding recitative, this is a sublime Largo love song expressing Bertarido’s longing for reunion with his wife. However, at the end of Act I, when he falsely believes she has betrayed him with Grimoaldo, he reveals an uglier side with the furious “Confusa si miri,” an aria of explosive starts and stops in which his jealousy runs wild.


Left: Francesca Cuzzoni who played the role of Rodelinda in the first performance. Right: Known as Senesino, Francesco Bernardi, a celebrated Italian contralto castrato, played the role of Bertarido.

In Act II, Bertarido, known only by Unulfo to be alive, is still morosely skulking in the shadows. And as we hear in “Con rauco momorio,” he is indulging in the pathetic fallacy: Nature’s brooks, caves, and mountains are mourning with him. In the B section of this beautiful aria in pastoral siciliano tempo, recorders and flutes as well as other instruments sympathetically echo his words. However, Handel apparently became concerned about making his leading man too flaccidly passive, and for the opera’s first revival he added the brilliant Act III aria “Vivi, tiranno,” as Bertarido rescues Grimoaldo, kills the evil Garibaldo, and assumes at last his kingly dignity in a burst of energetic coloratura.Perhaps a more fascinating figure is Grimoaldo, the would-be king and putative villain who torments Rodelinda, but, confronted by her blazing integrity, cannot carry out his dreams of absolute power. Handel created this role for his new tenor discovery Francesco Borosini, who was an exceptionally strong and versatile actor; Borosini just months earlier had created the tragic role of Bajazet in Tamerlano. Unlike Garibaldo, Grimoaldo possesses a conscience, that is finally his undoing. In Act III, Handel charts his emotional unraveling in a superb scena of accompanied recitative and aria. The recitative “Fatto inferno è il mio petto” is actually the more musically potent, as driven by a hounding orchestra he wrestles with the furies that torment him. Longing to sleep in peace once more, he then sings a charmingly innocent aria, “Pastorello,” in which he longs to be nothing more than a poor shepherd with no worldly cares.

Of all the extraordinary musical riches in Rodelinda, the one that lingers in the mind longest afterwards is Rodelinda and Bertarido’s heartbreaking da capo love duet “Io t’abbraccio,” which brings down the curtain on Act II. Finally out of hiding, Bertarido has been captured by Grimoaldo, who threatens to put him to death. Having so recently been reunited, husband and wife are torn apart again. In Handel’s favorite key for portraying anguish, F-sharp minor, their voices blend gorgeously above an implacable walking bass line symbolizing the imprisonment and possibly death now awaiting Bertarido.

—Janet E. Bedell © 2023

Janet E. Bedell is a program annotator and feature writer who writes for Carnegie Hall, the Met­ro­politan Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Cara­moor Festival of the Arts, and other musical organizations.

The English Concert
Harry Bicket, artistic director and harpsichord

George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)
Rodelinda, HWV 19, an opera seria in three acts

Lucy Crowe (Rodelinda), soprano
Iestyn Davies (Bertarido), countertenor
Eric Ferring (Grimoaldo), tenor
Christine Rice (Eduige), mezzo-soprano
Aryeh Nussbaum Cohen (Unulfo), countertenor
Brandon Cedel (Garibaldo), bass-baritone

 Lily Arbisser Shorr, supertitles

Violin 1
Nadja Zwiener (leader)
Manami Mizumoto
Anna Curzon
Davina Clarke
Jeffrey Girton
Asuka Sumi

Violin 2
Tuomo Suni
Kinga Ujszázsi
Chloe Kim
Diana Lee
Abel Balazs

Viola
Alfonso Leal del Ojo
Louise Hogan
Joanna Patrick

Violoncello
Joseph Crouch
Jonathan Byers
Alexander Rolton
Cullen Coty O’Neil

Double Bass
Alexander Jones

Flute
Rosemary Bowker

Oboe
Tatjana Zimre
Bethan White

Bassoon
Katrin Lazar

Theorbo
Sergio Bucheli

Harpsichord
Tom Foster

Chief Executive
Alfonso Leal del Ojo

Head of Artistic Planning
Sarah Fenn

Artistic Planning Manager
Lucy Roberts

PR – Rebecca Driver Media Media Relations

www.englishconcert.co.uk
Facebook: Facebook.com/TheEnglishConcert
Twitter.com/englishconcert

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