La Finta Giardiniera (Mozart 22)

"My opera ... was such a success that it is impossible for me to describe the applause to Mamma," wrote Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to his mother from Munich on 14 January 1775, the day after the premiere of his new opera buffa, "La finta giardiniera" (The Make-Believe Gardener) K. 196. Written for the Munich carnival season, it is not only the first example of a combination of buffa and seria roles in Mozart's music, but it also carries its plot of pretense, disguise and surprising revelations to the brink of catastrophe. Belfiore believes he has killed his betrothed, Violante, in a fit of jealousy. He flees in panic - which does not prevent him from falling for Arminda, who then spurns her admirer Ramiro in favor of Belfiore. Violante, meanwhile, searches for her lover with her servant Roberto. Under a false name, she takes a post as gardener on the estate of Don Anchise; her servant passes himself off as her cousin. While Anchise pursues Violante, Roberto romances the maid. The labyrinth of pursuit and deception becomes completely entangled when Belfiore, his new conquest Arminda and her persistent admirer Ramiro turn up on the estate... The Mozart 22 production of "La finta giardiniera" was placed in the hands of Doris Dörrie, a noted filmmaker ("Men") and, more recently, director of controversial opera productions ("Rigoletto" in Munich). Asked why she set the work in a garden center, Dörrie replied: "It's a market of emotions! The plants represent feelings, the garden is our little paradise. [...] We all have the same dream ..., which is why we buy so much equipment, chemicals, even weapons to keep our garden under control. It must be kept in its boundaries, for just as an uncontrolled garden can mutate into a wild jungle, so can uncontrolled emotions, proliferating like wild plants, become dangerous to us." The rousing musical underpinnings of this irreverent production are provided by the Mozarteum Orchestra under its principal conductor Ivor Bolton, who has made a name for himself as champion of authentic and spirited interpretations of Handel, Monteverdi, Gluck and, of course, Mozart. In this performance of "La finta giardiniera," Bolton makes it clear that the real dramatic development in this early work is to be found in Mozart's music.

  • No: A04001446
  • Genre: Opera
  • Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Conductor: Ivor Bolton
  • Orchestra: Mozarteum Orchester Salzburg
  • Artists: John Graham Hall, Alexandra Reinprecht, John Mark Ainsley, Véronique Gens, Ruxandra Donose
  • Director: Agnes Méth / Dörrie, Doris
  • Production year: 2006
  • Run time: 02:35:00
  • Producers: UNITEL and BFMI in co-production with CLASSICA in cooperation with the Salzburg Festival