Vincenzo Bellini
Catania, 1801 - Puteaux (Paris), 1835
Works in Ricordi Catalogue
Critical Editions
____________________________
Beginnings
The son and grandson of musicians, at the age of three he was already starting
to play the piano and at six he wrote his first composition to a religious
text. Admired while still very young in the salons of Catania as the composer
of both sacred and secular music, he went to the Collegio San Sebastiano in
Naples in 1819 to continue his musical studies, first with Furno and Tritto and
then with Zingarelli. This was the period of his idyll with Maddalena Fumaroli,
a love that was opposed by her father, a magistrate who considered Bellini to
be just a simple "harpsichord player". On completing his studies
(1825), he had his first opera, Adelson e
Salvini, performed in the conservatory theatre: it was praised by Donizetti
and repeated every Sunday for a year. His next opera, Bianca e Gernando (1826), written for the Teatro San Carlo, was
given an enthusiastic reception exceeding his greatest expectations; even the
King infringed etiquette and applauded a duet.
First successes
The impresario Barbaja, intuiting his genius, commissioned an opera from
Bellini for La Scala; the interpreters – who had already been engaged – were
the soprano Meric-Lalande, the tenor Rubini and the bass-baritone Tamburini.
The new opera, Il pirata (1827), to a
libretto by Felice Romani, was Bellini's first important success and became one
of Rubini's favourite roles. In Milan Bellini met Giovanni Ricordi, was welcomed
in the salons of the nobility and was immediately invited to compose an opera
for the inauguration of the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa. But instead of writing a new opera
Bellini presented Bianca e Fernando
(1828), a reworking of Bianca e Gernando.
In a box of the Carlo Felice he met Giuditta Turina with whom he was to have a
long relationship, tolerated in silence by her husband. The following year he
enjoyed successes with La straniera
at La Scala and Zaira in Parma, then in 1830 I
Capuleti e i Montecchi was performed to great acclaim at La Fenice in Venice.
International fame
In 1831 La sonnambula and Norma were born: after their premieres
in Milan they triumphed on all the stages of Europe. Bellini's last opera to be written in Italy, Beatrice
di Tenda, was a failure in Venice
in 1833. Disappointed by this and unhappy because his affair with Turina had
ended, he went first to London, where La sonnambula and Norma triumphed at Drury
Lane with the famous soprano Malibran, then to Paris, where he was enthusiastically
welcomed by that musical world and the Théâtre Italien commissioned a new opera
from him. This was how I Puritani
came into being; five days after the premiere, which took place in January
1835, he was awarded the Légion d'honneur, and later the King of Naples
conferred on him the insignia of the Accademia Borbonica.
The sad, premature end of a
"romantic" composer
Bellini died that same year from an infection of the intestine which had
afflicted him for some time. The whole musical world, led by Rossini and
Cherubini, was grieved by his death. In the Church of the Invalides on 2
October, 350 choristers conducted by Habeneck bade him farewell. The
soloists were Rubini, Ivanov, Tamburini and Lablache.
Operas
- Adelson e Salvini (A.L. Tottola, Naples – Conservatorio San Sebastiano)
- Bianca e Gernando (D. Gilardoni, Napoli – Teatro San Carlo, then Bianca e Fernando in 1828)
- Il pirata (F. Romani, Milan – Teatro alla Scala)
- La straniera (F. Romani, Milan – Teatro alla Scala)
- Zaira (F. Romani, after Voltaire, Parma – Teatro Nuovo)
- I Capuleti e i Montecchi (F. Romani, Venice – Teatro La Fenice)
- La sonnambula (F. Romani, Milan – Teatro Carcano)
- Norma (F. Romani, Milano – Teatro alla Scala)
- Beatrice di Tenda (F. Romani, Venice – Teatro La Fenice)
- I Puritani e I Cavalieri (C. Pepoli, Paris – Théâtre Italien)
And also: sacred music, vocal and instrumental music.
