Donizetti’s Anna Bolena premiered at Milano’s Teatro Carcano on December 26, 1830, and is considered the composer’s first major success in serious opera, which brought him to the attention of all Europe. In terms of production, in Italy he was an anomaly, in that he remained actively involved in the evolution of his works and the performances of them, and went on making modifications to those works. Written expressly for the interpretative and vocal talents of great singers like Giuditta Pasta and Giovan Battista Rubini, the historically-based “lyrical tragedy” by librettist Felice Romani is a classic of Lombard Romanticism, alongside historical novels like Manzoni’s I promessi sposi (The Betrothed), which appeared in 1827, and artists the likes of painter Francesco Hayez, who moved to Milano in 1822. This was noted by Giuseppe Mazzini in 1836. The critical edition Anna Bolena takes its cue from the manuscript (housed in the Ricordi Archives, the libretto for the premiere, printed editions of voice and piano parts from the period, and additional scores handwritten by Donizetti. Besides doing away with cumbersome instrumentation, and uncovering the original articulations and dynamics, instrumentational and even melody-harmony solutions, here we see for the first time all of Donizetti’s music, and in particular those sections crossed out or replaced either immediately before or after the first performances. There is also a detailed reconstruction of the birth of Anna Bolena, with a description of sources and critical comment.
- ISBN: 9788875929282 (8875929289)
- ISMN: 9790041403571 (M041403571)